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Iraqi
fighters fired RPGs at an American convoy
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BAGHDAD,
Aug 1 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – In what has become an
almost daily practice, Iraqi resistance fighters fired Friday, August
1, several rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) and then opened
machine-gun fire at a U.S. convoy west of Fallujah wounding a yet
unknown number of U.S. soldiers, while a key gas pipeline in northern
Iraq was still ablaze after a sabotage attack overnight.
"Several
rockets were fired on a convoy and two jeeps and three armored
personnel carriers caught fire," witness Mohammad Hamad
al-Halboussi told Agence France-Presse (AFP) at the scene.
"The
attackers ran away and then came back to open fire with Kalashnikovs
and pistols on the American soldiers," he added.
The
attack, which began at 7:00 am (0300 GMT), and the subsequent gun
battle lasted about 90 minutes, in the village of Albu Alwan, seven
kilometer west of Fallujah, said Majid Ibrahim Allawi, adding that
three Iraqi men were arrested.
"I
was arrested for two hours by American forces and I saw 12 (U.S.)
soldiers on the ground.
"They
were driven in the direction of camp al-Habani," a former base of
the Iraqi army now used by U.S .occupation forces.
Al-Jazeera
channel reported, quoting eyewitnesses, that a number of American
soldiers were killed and wounded in the double attack.
Fallujah,
50 kilometers west of Baghdad, is the scene of frequent attacks on the
occupation forces in Iraq and relations in the town have been strained
since U.S. troops shot dead at least 16 demonstrators in April.
Polish
Force Attacked
Meanwhile,
a base housing Polish troops in Iraq came under mortar fire overnight
but there were no casualties or damage, the Polish Defense Ministry
said Friday, adding that U.S. special forces had tried but failed to
capture the attackers.
The
ministry said a total of five mortar shells were fired in the early
hours at a logistics base in the town of Hilla, near Baghdad, but all
of them fell at the edge of the facility.
"Our
men were immediately evacuated to a shelter, while U.S. special forces
and gendarmes set off to chase the assailants," said ministry
spokesman Eugeniusz Mleczak, adding the attackers had escaped.
The
attack was the first reported against Polish troops in Iraq, where
some 300 military personnel are working to prepare for the deployment
of a multinational division under Polish command.
Pipeline
Afire
A
gas pipeline supplying a key Baghdad power station was on fire Friday
near the northern Iraqi refinery town of Baiji after a sabotage attack
overnight, reported an AFP correspondent on the scene.
"It
is an attack, a sabotage," a high-ranking Baiji police officer,
who did not want to be identified, told AFP.
"It
could be the Fedayeen (militia), or supporters of the old regime, or
criminals," he added.
"It
was a gas pipeline going from Kirkuk to Tadji" power station, an
engineer in Baiji told AFP on condition of anonymity.
U.S.
military helicopters were seen hovering over the fire four kilometers
west of Baiji, site of strategic pipelines in Iraq's massive oil and
gas sector.
Witnesses
said they heard an explosion Thursday night near Baiji, some 200
kilometers north of Baghdad.
"Last
night after 8:00 pm (1600 GMT) prayers we heard one loud explosion
here," said Ali Jassan near Baiji.
Sabotage
and looting have plagued the oil and gas sectors, with pipelines
suffering crippling damage, while just 150 of 700 oil wells are in
working order, officials have said.
Iraq's
oil reserves, the second largest in the world, are estimated at 112
billion barrels, while its gas reserves are the world's 10th largest,
according to the U.S.-led occupation.
While
the fire was on a gas line, the incident heightens concerns over
Iraq's capability to maintain safety and security in its lucrative oil
industry.
The
U.S. occupation authority is banking on sales of 3.4 billion dollars
this year, which would supply half the six-billion-dollar state budget
it announced earlier in the month.
Baiji
is part of the so-called Sunni triangle known for its support of
ousted president Saddam Hussein.
Only
a day earlier, U.S. officials hailed the expected reopening early this
month of the country's main oil pipeline from the petroleum centre of
Kirkuk to the Turkish Mediterranean terminal of Ceyhan, wrecked in a
post-war sabotage attack.