Iraq approves U.S. airstrike that kills 14
Baghdad, Iraq ? A U.S. airstrike authorized by Iraqi interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi hit purported trenches and fighting positions in Fallujah used by al-Qaida-linked foreign fighters, killing 14 people early Sunday, Iraqi officials said.
Word that Allawi approved the early-morning attack was a clear attempt to show that the Iraqi government has taken full sovereignty from the Americans and has firm control, despite its deep reliance on the 160,000 foreign troops, mainly from United States.
“We worked with the government, the government was fully informed about these matters, agreed with us on the need to take the action, we conducted the action,” Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage said during a news conference here. “We didn’t just strike off on our own, a sovereign nation had to agree.”
Also Sunday, Philippine leaders said they would finish withdrawing their small contingent of troops from Iraq as early as Monday in keeping with the demands of kidnappers holding a Filipino truck driver hostage.
Since the Marines pulled back from Fallujah — a focal point of resistance to the U.S. occupation — after besieging the city for three weeks in April, the U.S. military has been limited to using missiles attacks and airstrikes to hit potential targets there.
The nature of Sunday’s target, like those hit in previous attacks, was in dispute.
The U.S. military said it had destroyed trench lines and fighting positions used by fighters loyal to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al-Qaida linked Jordanian militant blamed for masterminding car bombings and other attacks in Iraq. The military said 25 al-Zarqawi fighters were at the site just moments before.
A group close to al-Zarqawi has posted a $280,000 reward for the killing of Allawi, according to a statement posted Sunday on an Islamic Web site. The group Khalid bin Al Walid Brigade called the prime minister an “American stooge” and said its assassins were ordered to kill him and other Iraqi leaders.
Fallujah Mayor Mahmoud Ibrahim al-Jirisi said the attack hit a site for civilians supporting the Fallujah Brigade, a militia of local residents that took responsibility for security in the city when the Marines left.

Iraqi National Guard soldiers unload a stockpile of old Iraqi military weapons from a truck near Basra, Iraq. The weapons were destroyed soon after in a controlled explosion. On Sunday in Fallujah, U.S. forces bombed what commanders said was a militant stronghold for supporters of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
“There are no Arabs or foreigners with them,” he told the pan-Arab television station Al-Jazeera.
Explosions from the 2 a.m. strike Sunday rocked the city. Scores of people ran to the scene and dug through the wreckage looking for survivors. Body parts were scattered at the scene; some were stacked and covered by a gray blanket.
The attack, the sixth U.S. strike on the city in roughly a month, killed 14 people and injured three, according to Saad al-Amili, a Health Ministry official.
After a July 5 airstrike, Allawi, who has promised strong security cooperation with the Americans, issued an unprecedented statement saying his government had provided intelligence for the strike.
After this attack, he went far further, saying that he had authorized the strike.
| Baghdad, Iraq (AP) — A car bomb blast rocked a Baghdad suburb today, with both witnesses and Iraqi police reporting several casualties.The U.S. military said that the car bomb killed at least 6 people and wounded 40.Ambulances and Iraq police raced to the Seidiyeh neighborhood in the southwest of the capital and firemen worked to douse the flames.The blast occurred near a local police station. Among the dead were at least three police officers.The blast occurred around 8:20 a.m. (11:20 p.m. CDT).Militants also fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a fire station in the Baghdad neighborhood of al-Salihiya, the U.S. military said. One person was wounded.No further details were available before press time this morning. |
“The multinational force asked Prime Minister Allawi for permission to launch strikes on some specific places where some terrorists were hiding,” an official in Allawi’s office said Sunday on condition of anonymity. “Allawi gave his permission,”
The U.S. military also issued a statement confirming Allawi had authorized the attack.
Since the U.S. occupation government handed over sovereignty to the interim government June 28, officials from both nations have emphasized that Iraq was now a sovereign nation able to make its own decisions, despite the huge U.S. troop presence and the massive, U.S.-financed reconstruction programs.
Armitage, the highest-ranking U.S. official to visit since the handover, emphasized the independence of the interim government.
“We’re not in the front seat anymore with our hand on the steering wheel. We are a supporting partner to a sovereign government,” he said during a news conference.
Armitage also expressed regret at the decision of the Philippines government to pull its forces out in the face of the hostage crisis.
The pullout, engineered to save the life of Angelo dela Cruz, was scheduled to end as early as today, when the 22 remaining members of the humanitarian contingent were to make an “exit call” on the new Polish commander at their base south of Baghdad, Philippine Foreign Minister Delia Albert said.






