US and Iraqis dispute account of raid

IRAQ: Iraqi and US officials disputed each other's accounts of an overnight raid and air strike yesterday that killed up to …

IRAQ:Iraqi and US officials disputed each other's accounts of an overnight raid and air strike yesterday that killed up to 20 people in a new sign of friction over allegations of American troops killing civilians.

The US military said ground forces with air support killed 20 suspected al-Qaeda militants, including two women, in an area north of the capital where the Sunni Arab insurgency is strong.

Police and officials in Ishaqi, 90km north of Baghdad, said the bodies of 17 civilians, including six women and five children, were found in the rubble of two homes.

"The Americans have done this before but they always deny it," Ishaqi's mayor Amer Alwan said. "I want the world to know what's happening here."

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Complaints that unjustified killings by US troops are common have soured Iraqis' sentiment toward the US presence in Iraq and prompted Shia prime minister Nuri al-Maliki earlier this year to say he was losing patience over such reports.

More than 2,900 US troops have died since the 2003 US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein and tens of thousands of Iraqis have been killed.

In Ishaqi, grieving relatives showed the bodies of five children wrapped in blankets to journalists.

The houses, surrounded by open fields, were flattened in the raid, leaving little but rubble and twisted steel rods.

The US military said the operation in Salahaddin province followed intelligence reports that al-Qaeda militants operated in the area.

It said rocket-propelled grenades and explosive suicide vests were found.

Only a handful of complaints involving civilian deaths in Iraq have led to criminal investigations by the US military.

"I can promise you that in every one of these incidents, they will be fully investigated," Lieut Gen Peter Chiarelli, the second-ranking US general in the country, told Pentagon journalists by video-link. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan warned violence in Iraq made a regional war in the Middle East a growing possibility.

Meanwhile, in the largest operation of its kind since the US invasion, British and Danish troops backed by tanks seized five suspects accused of attacks on coalition forces in the southern city of Basra, the British military said.

Some 1,000 troops, including amphibious assault teams, launched pre-dawn raids on five homes in the densely populated northern al-Hartha district of Basra, where rival Shi'ite militias are battling for control of the city's oil wealth and coalition troops are sometimes attacked.