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Two
Iraqi boys raise Iraq's flag over their home's roof
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BAGHDAD,
June 11 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - A U.S. paratrooper was
killed and another seriously wounded in a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG)
attack Tuesday, June 10, at a weapons collection centre in Baghdad,
bringing the death toll of U.S. soldiers in Iraq to a total of 30 since
May 1, when U.S. President George W. Bush declared
the war on Iraq effectively over.
"The
soldiers were evacuated to a field medical facility for treatment, and
one soldier later died of his injuries. The injured soldier is listed in
critical condition," the U.S. Central Command said.
"The
soldiers were manning the weapons collection point when a van with four
passengers stopped in a nearby alleyway approximately 250 meters (yards)
from their location," it added.
"Two
attackers exited the van, and each fired a rocket-propelled grenade at
the squad," elaborated the Centcom, noting that the attackers fled
down the alleyway.
It
said that U.S. forces launched a search of the area for the attackers,
while the names of the casualties were withheld pending notification of
the next of kin, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The
paratroopers were from the 82nd Airborne Divisions 2nd Brigade Combat
Team, Centcom said.
Concerned
As
the Iraqi resistance gained momentum over the past weeks, U.S. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld warned Tuesday that the U.S.-led forces in
Iraq would need many more months to eliminate the armed resistance.
Speaking
in Lisbon, Portugal, at the start of a four-day tour of Europe, Rumsfeld
blamed the attacks that have claimed mounting U.S. casualties on former
Iraqi security forces, including the paramilitary Fedayeen Saddam.
"I
would say the remnants of the Iraqi regime -- the Fedayeen Saddam and
Baathists and very likely the special Republican Guard -- are still
there.
"They
are the ones that are periodically attacking coalition forces, sometimes
successfully," Rumsfeld said.
"Do
I think that's going to disappear in the next month or two or three? No.
Will it disappear when two or three divisions of coalition forces arrive
in the country? No," said Rumsfeld.
"It
will take time to root out the remnants of the Saddam Hussein regime and
we intend to do it," he argued.
The
U.S. defense secretary said the mix of U.S. forces in Iraq is now being
altered to create a more visible military presence on the ground in the
face of the attacks, but denied that his visit to Europe was an effort
to drum up more international troops for Iraq.
Amid
fears over the flagging morale of U.S. troops in the face of the
attacks, the U.S. army launched a glossy patriotic magazine with a
circulation of 5,000 -- called "Liberator" -- to rally its
Third Infantry Division.
'Embarrassing'
In
an embarrassing move, the U.S.-led administration in Iraq admitted it
had been forced to print hundreds of thousands of Iraqi banknotes
bearing the portrait of Saddam -- in defiance of its own ban on the
public display of his image.
The
U.S. administrator of Iraq Paul Bremer acknowledged Tuesday that the
decision was embarrassing for him personally.
"Since
I issued the instrument telling people to do away with images of Saddam
Hussein, I guess you could say it's not a joy anyway," Bremer told
a news conference in Baghdad.
He
said his administration had come under enormous pressure from Iraqis to
remedy the shortage of 250 dinar notes, as the 10,000 dinar bill, the
only other one in circulation, trades at a sharply reduced rate against
the dollar.
Meanwhile,
Bremer said $100 million in seized Iraqi funds would be allocated for
stopgap public works projects to create thousands of jobs in a country
where, unemployment was unofficially at more than 50 percent.
"These
are short-term projects because they do not in and of themselves create
sustainable economic activity," he argued.
On
the political landscape, Bremer shrugged off threats by Iraq's main
political factions to boycott an advisory council after he announced
that he would lead its selection through informal consultations.
"It
is really up to the people we have been talking to whether they want to
take part in this consultation process or not," he said.
"If
parties decide they don't want to take part in this, that's their
choice. It's a free country."
Established
parties which led the resistance against the ousted Iraqi regime from
exile have expressed anger at Bremer's plans to
sideline them.
Scrapping
plans for an interim government in the near future, the American
administrator had decided to appoint
Iraqis to a council that would advise him on policy decisions.
'Swift
Transition'
For
his part, the head of the Iraqi National Congress (INC), Ahmad Chalabi,
urged Tuesday a swift transition of political power to the Iraqi people,
saying it would promote the search for Iraq's alleged weapons of mass
destruction.
Speaking
at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in New York, Chalabi
criticized the "reluctance" of the occupying forces in Iraq to
open the political process to Iraqis immediately.
He
also raised concerns over the decision by Bremer to scrap the promised
national conference to form an interim government.
"It
is not possible to manufacture leaders," Chalabi said.
"Leaders
will emerge through a process of political debate. And the best way to
have Iraqi leaders emerge is to have this political process started
right away."
He
also argued that opening the political process would speed up the search
for wanted members of Saddam's regime and, in turn, weapons of mass
destruction he insisted were still hidden in the country.
Finding
the weapons, and indeed Saddam himself, was "a matter of
information," Chalabi said, stressing that Iraqi cooperation was
crucial to the hunt.
"It's
a matter of knowing who to talk to and how to find these people,"
he argued.
Asked
whether he would welcome the return of U.N. weapons inspectors, Chalabi
claimed : "I don't think international inspection teams are very
good at this."
'Saddam
In Iraq'
Chalabi
further alleged that Saddam was alive and operating in northern Iraq,
and is using $1.3bn allegedly looted from the central bank to offer
bounty for all American soldiers who are killed, the Independent newspaper
reported Wednesday, June 11.
"The
former dictator intends to have his revenge, in the belief that he can
sit it out and get the Americans going," the daily quoted him as
telling the CFR.
In
recent weeks, Saddam had been spotted several times, moving in an arc
from Diyala, north-east of Baghdad, around the Tigris River toward his
home town of Tikrit and into the Dulaimi areas to the west of the
Tigris, according to the INC leader.