Search: [ Go ]
Sunday, October 12, 2008
  • Homepage
  • International
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Opinion
US warplanes strike Fallujah after US marines killed
By Pierre Celerier (AFP)
Published: December 14, 2004
TOOLBAR
Print Story
Add Comments
US forces launched airstrikes on Fallujah on Monday after eight US marines were killed in weekend clashes with Iraqi rebels in Anbar province despite claims that the insurgency was being defeated.

Warplanes pounded northeastern Fallujah, the backbone of the rebellion in Anbar, sending columns of black smoke into the sky, said an AFP correspondent embedded with the marines.

The strikes followed fighting that has killed eight marines and at least 17 suspected rebels in Anbar since Friday, the US military said, without specifying whether the marines' deaths occurred in Fallujah itself.

Seven marines assigned to the Ist Marine Expeditionary Force were killed in two separate operations on Sunday, the marines said in a statement that gave no further details. Another marine was killed on Saturday.

The fighting erupted in Fallujah after days of relative calm following last month's blistering assault on the Sunni Muslim city by US and Iraqi troops.

Coalition troops killed hundreds of fighters during the attack, which began on November 8, but have continued to face resistance, often in parts of the city they had previously cleared.

"They hole themselves up in houses and they wait for the chance to kill an American," said Lieutenant Rex McIntosh.

Many of those fighters still hiding in Fallujah's ruined neighborhoods had escaped previous sweeps by the marines, he added.

"There's a fairly effective cordon around the city but not every unit has been doing a full clearing," he said, as his unit searched house-to-house for rebels or weapons caches on Sunday.

Marines from the battalion found themselves in a running battle with insurgents that raged on Friday and Saturday.

"We had very, very heavy contact against a group... which was bypassed in previous sweeping operations," McIntosh said. "By the end of Saturday afternoon we counted 17 dead rebels."

It was unknown who the dead fighters were but many of them appeared to be foreigners, he said.

"Sometimes we find a pile of passports in a cache or a house, but the identification process is often difficult due to the condition of the bodies."

The fighting marked an escalation in violence after days of relative calm, forcing the marines to call in both tanks and fighter jets.

Clashes erupted again on Sunday as marines battled fighters in northeast Fallujah, according to one marine, who said that the area was supposed to have been cleared of insurgents.

Large explosions could be heard and flashes lit the sky on Sunday night as jets roared overhead, the correspondent said.

Marines had earlier said that rebels were creeping back into previously cleared city blocks, and the military was in a race to seize weapons caches before they could be used against them.

"They are just like rats, no matter the amount of poison you spread around, they keep on coming back into the house," said one marine.

Large numbers of weapons, mostly assault rifles and mortars, continue to be found in abandoned homes. At least 70 rifles and other weapons, including rockets and grenades, were seized by marines patrolling the city on Sunday.

As US and Iraqi forces try to restore order in the devastated city, hundreds of thousands of residents driven out by the fighting wait to return to their homes.



© 2004 Agence France-Presse

To add a comment,
Please log in:

E-mail:
Password:
 remember me
[ Login ]

Forgot your password?

Don't have an account?

Register now to comment on stories and stay up to date on important events and issues in the Middle East with our newsletter.
[ Register Now ]

Advertisement:
MOST POPULAR
  • Israel Caught Between Islamist Crossfire: Lebanon Pays Price
  • Eight Men Face Jail in Egypt for Sexual Assault
  • Mob Attacks Women in Egypt's Second Eid Incident
  • The Power of Human Greed
  • House Cleaning in Damascus?
  • Does Syria Want War?
Advertisement:
Contribute to the Middle East Times | Classifieds | My METimes | Advertise | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 News World Communications Inc.