BAGHDAD,
October 1 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The US military said
it killed over a hundred and wounded 180 others during a massive
assault Friday, October 1, on the Iraqi city of Samarra, northern
Baghdad, while Iraqis blasted the “needless” onslaught, saying
women and children were killed and wounded.
The
US military said the attack was aimed at reclaiming one of the
resistance-held areas in the Sunni Muslim triangle ahead of nationwide
parliamentary elections planned for January.
Samarra
inhabitants and some Iraqi officials, however, described the offensive
as needless, arguing talks were close to finding a peaceful resolution
to an ongoing crisis in the city, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Local
Iraqi officials, moreover, warned that the US offensive on the city
would wreck violence into other neighboring Iraqi cities.
“I
have ... warned the Americans if there is any violence in Balad and
Duluiya it is because of what is happening in Samarra,” said
governor of Salahuddin province Hamed Hamud Al-Qaissy.
“We
were in talks with Prime Minister Iyad Allawi about the situation in
Samarra including reaching an agreement to allow Iraqi forces to enter
the city. We were surprised by this military offensive,” AFP quoted
Khaled Naji al-Samarrai, leader of the Samarra political association,
as saying.
The
US military said the offensive was in response to what it called
“repeated and unprovoked attacks by anti-Iraqi forces” (the term
US military uses for resistance activists) in the city, where US
troops have been largely absent since June.
Some
2,500 US forces and 1,000 Iraqi army and national guardsmen, backed by
armored vehicles and warplanes stormed the city before dawn Friday.
Smoke
was seen rising from the area around the Imam Ali Al-Hadi and Imam
Hassan Al-Askari shrine, raising fears for one of the holiest sites
for Shiite Muslims.
By
mid-day, US forces were posted at the city hall and police stations,
while Iraqi troops were in full control of religious and cultural
sites including the famous spiraling Al-Malwiya mosque, built in the
9th century AD on Samarra's outskirts.
But
fighting persisted and scholars called for holy war from the
loudspeakers of mosques.
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The US onslaught caused massive destruction in Samarra
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AFP
reported that ambulance driver Ahmad Yassin said US troops wouldn't
let him drive the wounded out of the city's Al-Qadisiyah district,
where many homes had been reduced to rubble.
The
US military said troops had killed 109 “insurgents” and wounded
one in the fighting.
Samarra
medical officials gave almost matching tallies for the dead.
“The
death toll is 90 killed and 180 wounded,” said Dr Khalid Ahmed at
Samarra's main hospital.
A
US helicopter was hit by enemy fire but landed safely at a US base,
the military said, adding there were no casualties.
A
US soldier was also killed in the onslaught and four others wounded.
“A
First Infantry Division soldier was killed at around 1:00 pm (1000
GMT)” as Iraqi Security Forces and Multi-National Forces secured
areas throughout Samarra,” a US military statement said.
Armed
clashes flared up late Thursday in the predominantly Sunni Muslim city
as the US occupation forces moved into the heart of the city to take
control over key buildings.
Terrified
Residents
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The US military insists on ignoring the existence of a strong Iraqi resistance
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As
the US forces fiercely pounded the city, residents cowered in their
homes.
“We
are terrified by the violent approach used by the Americans to subdue
the city,” Associated Press quoted Mahmoud Saleh, a 33-year-old
civil servant as saying.
“My
wife and children are scared to death and they have not been able to
sleep since last night. I hope that the fighting ends as soon as
possible.”
The
new US offensive came a day after the war-torn Iraq was rocked by a
string of car bombings, killing at least
50 people , most of them children, and scores wounded.
The
US military raids on the Iraqi cities drew worldwide rebukes.
On
September 18, Amnesty International blasted the US for its barbaric
raids on the Iraqi cities.