 |
|
U.S. forces are facing stepped up Iraqi resistance
|
BAGHDAD,
June 13 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - An Iraqi oil pipeline
was burning Friday, June 13, after being attacked by twin bomb
attacks, despite an offensive by U.S.-led forces against opponents of
their occupation regime.
Fires
blazed on the major pipeline from Iraq's northern oilfields after what
residents said were twin bomb attacks aimed at sabotaging exports
through Turkey, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
An
AFP correspondent saw two separate fires on the pipeline, 15
kilometers (nine miles) from the key refinery town of Baiji, close to
the main highway between Baghdad and the northern regional capital of
Mosul.
U.S.
military helicopters hovered overhead. Local residents said the
pipeline had been attacked by Iraqis using explosives around 8:45 pm
(1645 GMT) Thursday, the same day Iraq awarded its first post-war oil
export contracts.
"It's
to stop the Americans taking the oil out to Turkey," said Khidr
Aziz.
Less
than an hour's drive north of Saddam Hussein's native city of Tikrit,
the region around Baiji was considered a stronghold of his ousted
regime.
On
Thursday, Iraq's U.S.-led administration awarded a raft of contracts
to international oil companies to lift crude, the first since the war
which ousted Saddam in April.
A
coalition spokesman said the contracts were for exports from the
southern oilfields around Basra and the lifting of crude already in
storage at the Turkish Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.
Four
European companies, a Turkish firm and the U.S. company ChevronTexaco
were awarded contracts to buy 9.5 million barrels of Iraqi oil,
returning it to the international market after a three-month
suspension, industry sources said.
However,
the Iraqi resistance appeared on the rise. Even as reconstruction
plans advanced, a U.S. Apache attack helicopter was shot down when
U.S. troops struck at what officials called a "terrorist training
camp" in western Iraq early Thursday.
The
helicopter's two crew members were rescued and no coalition troops
were wounded or killed in the operation, the U.S. Central Command
said.
The
assault came three days after elements of the 4th Infantry Division
launched a massive sweep through areas north of Baghdad, capturing 400
“suspected Saddam supporters” and seizing arms and ammunition.
 |
|
Iraqi oil facilities are being targeted now
|
"Coalition
forces in Iraq are aggressively seeking out individuals or groups that
oppose our mission," ground forces chief Lieutenant General David
McKiernan said.
But
the U.S. overseer of Iraq, Paul Bremer, said Thursday he has seen no
evidence that ongoing attacks on U.S. troops north and west of Baghdad
are being orchestrated.
"These
are groups that are organized, but they are small," he told
Pentagon correspondents in Washington via a video link from Baghdad.
Bremer
claimed resistance to U.S. troops is coming from loyalists of Saddam's
dissolved Baath party, former Fedayeen militiamen and some
remnants of the elite Republican Guard still loyal to Saddam.
Earlier,
in Mosul, several hundred former members of the Iraqi army demanding
their pay tried to storm the government building and traded fire with
police as US helicopters circled overhead, witnesses said.
A
Kurdish official said initial reports indicated three demonstrators
were killed, but there was no definitive casualty toll.
The
administration of the multi-ethnic city of 1.5 million had refused to
pay former members of Saddam's now-banned army, but did distribute
April salaries to civil servants.
Bremer
said U.S.-led forces have now captured more than half of the
individuals on the coalition's list of the 55 most-wanted members of
Saddam's former regime.
Bremer
said his office is seeking advice from "responsible Iraqis"
on how best to deal with them, and he signaled that this may involve
some kind of criminal tribunal.
But
Saddam and his two sons are still missing, as are his alleged weapons
of mass destruction, which were cited as a primary cause for the war
to overthrow him.
The
Washington Post said Friday a covert, specialized U.S. Army unit
scoured Iraq for weapons of mass destruction, even before the war, but
has come up empty handed.
Task
Force 20 "found no working non-conventional munitions, long-range
missiles or missile parts, bulk stores of chemical or biological
warfare agents or enrichment technology for the core of a nuclear
weapon," said the daily.
But
the force sent "a stream of initially promising reports" to
a small group of Washington officials, which prompted U.S. President
George W. Bush and his senior security advisers to feel optimistic
about the eventual discovery of illegal weapons in Iraq.
Bush's
administration and British Prime Minister Tony Blair's government have
been seriously embarrassed by the failure to come up with any weapons
of mass destruction or even proof that they existed.
As
the violence continued, Washington welcomed Madrid's decision to
contribute 1,100 troops to a division-size peacekeeping force,
alongside 2,300 Poles and 1,700 Ukrainians.
Along
with the Spanish contingent will be 840 military doctors, nurses and
engineers from Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and the Dominican
Republic, officials from those countries said.