Clashes, Deaths Mark A Baghdad Anniversary

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Philadelphia Inquirer
April 10, 2008 As fighting went on in Sadr City, the U.S. reported the loss of five more troops.
By Kim Gamel, Associated Press
BAGHDAD -- Errant mortar shells slammed into houses and a funeral tent yesterday, leaving three children among the dead during clashes in a Shiite militia stronghold under siege by U.S. and Iraqi forces on the fifth anniversary of the U.S. capture of the capital.
The fighting came as the U.S. military announced the deaths of five more soldiers. That raised the number of U.S. deaths to 17 since Sunday.
Many Iraqis said hopes that followed the U.S.-led ouster of Saddam Hussein had been quashed.
"On this day five years ago we were dreaming of a bright future, but now we know that our dream has turned into a long nightmare," said Khalid Ibrahim, 45, a teacher from the Sunni area of Azamiyah.
In many ways, Baghdad resembles a war zone more than it did on April 9, 2003, when American Marines stormed into the capital and pulled down a bronze statue of Hussein with the help of dozens of Iraqis.
The city of six million has largely been carved up along sectarian lines, creating a patchwork of neighborhoods surrounded by 10-foot-high concrete walls and dotted with checkpoints.
Violence declined last year and early this year after a cease-fire by Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, an influx of 30,000 additional American troops, and a Sunni revolt against al-Qaeda in Iraq. But a recent government crackdown on Sadr's Mahdi Army militia has provoked fierce retaliation, underscoring the fragility of the security gains.
To prevent violence in connection with the anniversary, Baghdad authorities banned traffic citywide from 5 a.m. to midnight.
The streets around Firdous Square - where Hussein's statue used to stand - were largely empty. A few pedestrians passed through, carrying plastic shopping bags. Police officers sat at a checkpoint, ready to stop any unauthorized vehicles.
Street battles continued yesterday in Sadr City, a sprawling district of 2.5 million.
At 10 a.m., two mortar shells apparently fired by suspected Shiite extremists against the security forces fell short and instead struck a funeral tent and a house, killing seven people including three children, and wounding 27, according to police and hospital officials.
The U.S. military's death announcements do not usually specify the locations of attacks. But many - including a soldier who was killed by a roadside bomb yesterday - have been in northeastern Baghdad, a mainly Shiite area that includes Sadr City.
One other U.S. soldier died Tuesday in a roadside bombing to the east of Baghdad and another yesterday to the north of the capital.
Two soldiers assigned to the division in Baghdad also died yesterday of injuries not related to combat. The deaths, which occurred about an hour apart, were announced separately in statements that provided no further details, saying the incidents were under investigation.
 
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