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Deadly fighting erupts in Baghdad

The violence paralyzes Sadr City and kills three U.S. troops. Two others are killed elsewhere.

The World

April 07, 2008|Ned Parker and Raheem Salman, Times Staff Writers

BAGHDAD — Rocket attacks killed three American soldiers in Baghdad on Sunday, while fighting between Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr's Mahdi Army militia and U.S.-led forces paralyzed the capital's Sadr City neighborhood and left up to 22 Iraqis dead.

Just hours before the violence erupted, the Iraqi government issued a call for the radical cleric to dissolve his militia. Two U.S. military personnel were killed when rocket fire hit the Green Zone, home to the Iraqi government and the American Embassy. An attack on the Rustamiya base in east Baghdad claimed the life of a third soldier, the military said. The attacks wounded 31 people.


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A fourth U.S. soldier died in a roadside bombing in the northeastern province of Diyala, while a fifth was killed in a noncombat incident, the military said.

At least 4,018 American soldiers have been killed in Iraq since March 2003, according to the independent website icasualties.org.

Shiite Muslim militants have pounded the Green Zone with mortar rounds and rockets since Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki launched a crackdown on Shiite gunmen in the southern port of Basra late last month.

The violence in Sadr City erupted in the early morning and lasted until late afternoon. Witnesses said U.S. and Iraqi forces traded fire with Sadr's Mahdi Army on the perimeters of the Shiite slum, home to 2.5 million people and a bastion of support for the cleric.

Medical sources from Sadr City hospitals, which are under the militia's de facto control, put the toll at 22 civilian deaths and 96 wounded. The U.S. military said it fired two missiles at 8 a.m. that killed nine militants who had been launching rocket-propelled grenades at Iraqi soldiers. The differences in the accounts could not be immediately resolved.

The fighting was the most serious between the sides since Sadr called on his followers to silence their weapons last Sunday after nearly a week of combat in Basra, other parts of southern Iraq and in Baghdad.

Shops in Sadr City were closed and streets desolate. U.S. military vehicles blocked the entrances to the sprawling neighborhood, where American and Iraqi forces have prevented vehicles from coming and going for days. Civilians who could fled the neighborhood, and described themselves as having lived under siege since the Mahdi Army rebelled after Maliki launched his Basra offensive March 25.

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