| Arab News
BAGHDAD, 29 June 2003 — US forces in Iraq recovered the bodies
of two soldiers missing for three days after apparently being
abducted, the military said yesterday, while a separate attack left
one soldier dead and four wounded.
The bodies of the two soldiers were found around 35 km northwest
of Baghdad, near where they went missing on Wednesday, Lt. Col.
Martin Compton told AFP, without elaborating.
The discovery came after the latest in a series of anti-US
attacks in which one soldier was killed when the convoy he was in
was ambushed in Baghdad late on Friday, spokesman Sgt. Ist Class
Patrick Compton said.
An Iraqi translator was also injured in the ambush, he said. It
followed a rocket-propelled grenade attack in Fallujah, the flash
point town, which according to witnesses destroyed a US armored
vehicle.
There were no reports of US casualties in that attack. Almost
daily attacks and the rising death toll prompted US Secretary of
State Colin Powell to urge Americans to be patient, while the
tactics used by former Baathist militia showed worrying signs of
diversifying.
US soldiers patrolling the country have regularly been targeted
by snipers, gunmen and attackers using rocket-propelled grenades,
but the apparent abduction of two soldiers further added to the
climate of insecurity.
The soldiers went missing in Saddam Hussein’s former heartland
north of Baghdad.
Three people had been arrested in connection with their apparent
abduction, the military said Friday.
Coalition forces meanwhile announced that they had detained more
loyalists of Saddam Hussein. “In the last week, we have detained
more than 900 former regime loyalists, former Fedayeen and other
criminals that are out there subverting our efforts,” a senior
coalition military official said, asking not to be named. He said
some of those arrested had been released, but did not specify how
many remained in detention.
“Under Operation Desert Scorpion, we continue to conduct raids
as we get intelligence to be able to take down these subversive
elements that remain,” he added.
“We are suffering casualties... the war hasn’t ended... but
these casualties that we are encountering are not causing us to
falter in any way,” he added.
Another US military spokesman, speaking before the two soldiers
were found dead, refused to concede that attacks on US troops were
intensifying, after a week in which 11 British and US soldiers were
killed.
“I think it’s probably too early to tell if we’re seeing an
increase,” Maj. William Thurmond said, adding that some attacks
may have been a reaction to the Desert Scorpion campaign to wipe out
remnants of the ousted regime.
Meanwhile, British troops moved back into the Iraqi town of Al-Majar
Al-Kabir, where six of their comrades were shot dead during clashes
with the local population, the Defense Ministry said yesterday.
British forces in Iraq said that while their priority was to win
back the hearts and minds of local people, they would also seek to
catch those responsible for the killings.
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