Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Attack on US base in Iraq kills more than 20

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Attack on US base in Iraq kills more than 20

    Attack on US base in Iraq kills more than 20

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 21, 2004 Tuesday 6:03 PM GMT

    BAGHDAD Dec 21 -- More than 20 people were killed in a rocket attack
    Tuesday that turned a dining hall at a US base in the Iraqi city of
    Mosul into a fireball, one of the deadliest strikes against US-led
    forces in the country.

    The attack, claimed by Al-Qaeda linked militants, was swiftly condemned
    by US President George W. Bush who said it was aimed at derailing
    the transition to democracy in Iraq.

    "More than 20 have been killed and more than 60 wounded," said
    Brigadier General Carter Ham, the US-led coalition commander for the
    Mosul area.

    "The killed include US military personnel, US contractors, foreign
    national contractors and Iraqi army," he said. "It is indeed a very,
    very sad day."

    An embedded reporter from the Richmond-Times Dispatch described the
    scene of carnage at the Mosul base as soldiers sat down for lunch
    and were suddenly hammered in a rocket attack.

    "The force of the explosions knocked soldiers off their feet and out
    of their seats. A fireball enveloped the top of the tent, and shrapnel
    sprayed into the men," journalist Jeremy Redmon reported.

    "Amid the screaming and thick smoke that followed, quick-thinking
    soldiers turned their lunch tables upside down, placed the wounded
    on them and gently carried them into the parking lot. 'Medic! Medic!.
    soldiers shouted."

    The attack was claimed by Al-Qaeda linked Ansar al-Sunna, which
    broke away from another radical group called Ansar al-Islam, both
    of which are believed to have links with Iraq's most wanted man Abu
    Musab al-Zarqawi.

    "One of the mujahedeen of the Army of Ansar al-Sunna carried out
    a martyrdom-seeking (suicide) operation in a restaurant of the
    infidel occupation forces at the Ghazlani camp in Mosul," said the
    website statement from the group, whose authenticity could not be
    independently confirmed.

    Bush condemned the attack and mourned the loss of life, saying it
    believes it shows the desperation of insurgent forces, White House
    spokesman Scott McClellan said.

    "The terrorists and Saddam loyalists are desperately seeking to
    derail the transition to democracy and freedom in Iraq," he said.
    "They will be defeated."

    Iraq's intelligence chief Mohammed Abdullah al-Shahwani said in October
    that Mosul has been turned into a major base for militants linked to
    Zarqawi, a Jordanian-born militant who has a 25 million dollar price
    on his head.

    Mosul, 370 kilometres (250 miles) north of Baghdad, was once considered
    a success story of the defunct US occupation in Iraq, but has been
    transformed into a battleground between insurgents and US forces.

    The city, home to Islamists and staunch loyalists of the ousted Baath
    party regime, was the site of almost daily assassination attempts on
    suspected US collaborators before the city boiled over in violence
    last month.

    On June 24, insurgents mounted a one-day street battle against US
    forces and set off five car bombs, killing more than 50 people,
    in a prelude to November's fierce uprising by insurgents.

    The US military has been conducting operations in Mosul, Iraq's
    third largest city, since coordinated attacks by insurgents on
    police stations prompted most of the local police force to quit on
    November 11.

    Around 80 bodies have been found in and around Mosul since the
    beginning of December, most of which authorities say belong to security
    forces executed by insurgents.

    Christian churches in the city have also come under attack.

    Mosul, whose name in Arabic means the link, is one of the most
    ethnically diverse cities in Iraq with Arabs, Syriac people, Armenians,
    Kurds, Turkmen, Jews, Christians, Muslims and Yazedis all calling
    the city home.

    Sunni Muslims in Mosul, together with the minority Turkmen community,
    fear Kurdish calls for an expanded autonomous region in districts
    immediately bordering the northern metropolis, a city of about 1.5
    million people.
Working...
X