English 版 (精华区)
发信人: Systems (MIMO, SI and AC), 信区: English
标 题: Iraqi Threatens More Suicide Bombings
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2003年03月30日11:18:29 星期天), 站内信件
Iraqi Threatens More Suicide Bombings
Sunday March 30, 2003 4:10 AM
IN THE IRAQI DESERT (AP) - A bomber posing as a taxi driver summoned America
n troops for help, then blew up his vehicle Saturday, killing himself and fo
ur soldiers and opening a new chapter of carnage in the war for Iraq.
Iraq's vice president said such attacks would be ``routine military policy''
in Iraq - and, he suggested chillingly, in the United States. Saddam Hussei
n gave the bomber a posthumous promotion to colonel and two medals - Al-Rafi
din, or The Two Rivers, and the Mother of All Battles, state TV reported.
``We will use any means to kill our enemy in our land and we will follow the
enemy into its land,'' Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan said at a Baghdad
news conference. ``This is just the beginning. You'll hear more pleasant ne
ws later.''
U.S. officials said the bombing occurred at about 10:40 a.m. at a U.S. check
point on the highway north of the holy city of Najaf.
A taxi stopped close to the roadblock; the driver waved for help. When soldi
ers approached the car, it exploded, Capt. Andrew Wallace told Associated Pr
ess Television News, killing the driver and four soldiers from the Army's 1s
t Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division.
Within minutes of the bombing, three other taxis tried to bolt through anoth
er checkpoint on the road to Najaf, and Bradley armored vehicles destroyed t
hem, killing an unknown number of Iraqis, a New York Times correspondent wit
h the unit said.
Col. William F. Grimsley, the commander of the 1st Brigade, said it did not
appear that those taxis were packed with explosives, but he noted, ``it cert
ainly happened near simultaneously.''
The names of the Americans were not immediately released. But Ramadan identi
fied the bomber as Ali Jaafar al-Noamani, a noncommissioned army officer and
father of several children.
``It's the blessed beginning,'' the television report said of the suicide at
tack. ``He wanted to teach the enemy a lesson in the manner used by our Pale
stinian brothers.''
It claimed that 11 American soldiers were killed in the attack, two APCs des
troyed and two tanks damaged.
``After he kissed a copy of the Quran, he got into his booby-trapped car and
went to an area where enemy armored cars and tanks were gathered on the fri
nges of Najaf and turned his pure body and explosives-laden car into a rocke
t and blew himself up,'' the statement said.
Ramadan said Iraq cannot match American weaponry and has the ``legal right t
o deal with the enemy with any means.''
``They have bombs that can kill 500 people, but I am sure that the day will
come when a single martyrdom operation will kill 5,000 enemies.''
Thousands of Arab volunteers have been pouring into Iraq since the start of
the war, he said, adding that Iraq will provide them with what they need to
fight the allied forces.
This was the first such attack since the invasion began. It was, said Maj. G
en. Gene Renuart of the U.S. Central Command, ``a symbol of an organization
that's starting to get a little bit desperate.''
At a Pentagon news conference Saturday, Maj. Gen. Stanley McChrystal of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff said suicide attacks would not change the way U.S.-led
forces proceed in the war, except that they would take more care in vulnera
ble locations like checkpoints.
``We're very concerned about it. It looks and feels like terrorism,'' he sai
d.
Grimsley, commander of the brigade that was hit, said force protection remai
ned the highest priority, ``but that doesn't mean we're going to back into l
ittle holes and hide.''
``The local population that's here and happy that we're here - they tell us
all the time, they've been feeling the same kind of terrorist repression for
years and now unfortunately it's hit American soldiers. I think it only tig
htens the resolve of why we're here.''
The 3rd Infantry Division is based at Fort Stewart, near Hinesville, Ga., an
d news of the attack hit the town hard.
``It's not the deaths, it's the way it was done,'' said Ellen Seider, a loca
l print shop owner who spent Friday night helping Army wives stamp out butto
ns printed with photos of their husbands.
``There are bad people, there are mean people and there are evil people,'' s
he said. ``And Saddam Hussein is pure evil.''
The attack did not come without warning.
Iraqi dissidents and Arab media have claimed that Saddam has opened a traini
ng camp for Arab volunteers willing to carry out similar bombings against U.
S. forces in Iraq.
Al-Qaida mastermind Osama bin Laden also urged Iraqis in an audio tape on Ar
abic television last month to employ the tactic, used frequently by Palestin
ian militants against Israeli soldiers and civilians.
Though the Iraqis said the bomber was an Army officer, Lt. Col. Ahmed Radhi,
an exiled Iraqi officer in Cairo, Egypt and former commander of an army bri
gade, said he did not believe it. The claim, Radhi said, was ``a stupid meth
od to raise morale among the army.''
If a soldier was involved, Radhi insisted, he either did not know his car ca
rried a bomb or was acting under duress.
In 1970, Saddam sent a group of security officers with a booby-trapped car t
o kill Kurdish leader Mustafa Barzani, father of Massoud Barzani, current ch
ief of the Kurdistan Democratic Party. The car exploded prematurely, killing
the security officers while Mustafa Barzani survived.
The biggest suicide attack against the U.S. military abroad was in Lebanon,
when a truck packed with explosives drove into a U.S. Marine base in Beirut
and exploded in the early morning of Oct. 23, 1983, as the troops slept. The
attack killed 241 American servicemen and leveled the base. A simultaneous
suicide attack on a Beirut base for French soldiers killed 58 paratroopers.
The Americans and the French were in Lebanon as part of an ill-fated peaceke
eping mission to end Lebanon's civil war. Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim milit
ants were blamed for the attacks.
In 1996, a truck bomb at the Khobar Towers barracks in Saudi Arabia killed 1
9 U.S. servicemen.
--
I am looking outside into the rain
through the blurred window, in front
of which you seem to be there.
※ 来源:·哈工大紫丁香 bbs.hit.edu.cn·[FROM: 218.242.70.146]
Powered by KBS BBS 2.0 (http://dev.kcn.cn)
页面执行时间:2.574毫秒