http://www.comcast.net/news/index.jsp?cat=GENERAL
<http://www.comcast.net/news/index.jsp?cat=GENERAL&fn=/2007/05/12/661360.htm
l&cvqh=itn_iraq> &fn=/2007/05/12/661360.html&cvqh=itn_iraq

Attack Kills 5 Troops in Iraq, 3 Missing





BAGHDAD - Seven U.S. soldiers and an Iraqi army interpreter came under
attack Saturday morning during a patrol in a Sunni insurgent stronghold
south of Baghdad, leaving five dead and three missing, the military said.

Troops were searching for the three missing, using drone planes, jets and
checkpoints throughout the area, according to the statement. Soldiers were
also asking local leaders for information.

After the pre-dawn attack near Mahmoudiya, which is about 20 miles south of
Baghdad in a Sunni insurgent stronghold dubbed the Triangle of Death, nearby
units heard explosions and a drone plane later observed two burning
vehicles, the statement said.

Troops who arrived later found five of the soldiers dead. The other three
members of the patrol were gone, according to the statement, from Maj. Gen.
William Caldwell, the chief U.S. military spokesman in Iraq.

The military refused to specify whether the Iraqi interpreter was among
those killed or among the missing, citing security.

"Make no mistake: We will never stop looking for our soldiers until their
status is definitively determined, and we continue to pray for their safe
return," Caldwell said.

The attack occurred nearly a year after two American soldiers went missing
following a June 16 attack in the same area. Their bodies were found tied
together with a bomb between one victim's legs several days later.

In the Iraqi capital, police on Saturday closely guarded two bridges damaged
by suicide car bombers in what appears to be a new strategy by suspected
Sunni insurgents of targeting crossovers in the capital.

Friday's attacks in predominantly Shiite areas of the city brought to five
the number of bridges that have been targeted by large explosions in Baghdad
since March 21.

It remains unclear whether the main goal of Iraqi insurgents is to spark
sectarian violence by targeting bridges that unite predominantly Shiite and
Sunni areas of the city, or to knock out vital supply and transportation
links in the capital.

Friday's suicide car bombers attacked two bridges that cross the Diyala
River, a tributary of the Tigris, and are located about 2 1/2 miles apart in
southeastern Baghdad.

The two attacks, within moments of each other,killed at least 23 Iraqis and
wounded 57, including police at checkpoints and civilians driving or walking
across the bridges, police said.

On Saturday, the old Diyala bridge, which American forces had rebuilt after
destroying it at the start of the Iraq war, had one of its two lanes open to
traffic and pedestrians. Police kept everyone away from a large hole blown
through the concrete span over the Diyala River. Blood stains from the
bombing could still be seen at some points on the bridge.

Nearby, on the two-lane new Diyala bridge, remnants of the truck that a
suicide attacker apparently used were located near a large hole in the
concrete crossover, exposing large rods of steel. The hole in the low-lying
bridge was filled with water.

In another development, The New York Times reported Saturday that a draft of
a new American government report says that between 100,000 and 300,000
barrels of Iraq's declared oil production of 2 million barrels a day over
the past four years is unaccounted for and could have been siphoned off
through corruption or smuggling. Using an average of $50 a barrel, the
report says the discrepancy was valued at $5 million to $15 million daily,
the paper said.

The U.S. and Iraqi governments are under pressure to show progress in Iraq
by raising oil production, which has been well below the U.S. goal of 3
million barrels a day. Virtually the entire economy of oil-rich Iraq is
dependent on oil revenues.

The New York Times said the draft U.S. government report it obtained was
prepared by the U.S. Government Accountability Office with the help of
government energy analysts. The paper says the report is expected to be
released within the next week.

It does not conclude what happened to the missing fraction of the roughly 2
million barrels pumped by Iraq each day, but its findings are expected to
reinforce long-standing suspicions that smugglers, insurgents and corrupt
officials control significant parts of the country's oil industry, the paper
said.

It said the draft report also covered alternative explanations for the
billions of dollars worth of discrepancies, including the possibility that
Iraq has been overstating its oil production.

In other violence reported by police, a parked car bomb struck a gas station
in the mainly Sunni town of Madain, 14 miles southeast of Baghdad, killing
two people and wounding four others who were waiting in line for fuel.

A bomb also exploded near a Shiite mosque in northeastern Baghdad late
Friday, killing at least one worshipper and wounding six.

 



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