Targeting Americans with new audacity, insurgents hiding in a date palm grove
shot down a Chinook helicopter carrying dozens of soldiers heading for home
leave Sunday, killing 16 and wounding 20 in the deadliest strike against U.S.
forces since they invaded Iraq in March.
Witnesses said the attackers used missiles — a sign of the increasing
sophistication of Iraq's elusive anti-U.S. fighters.
Three other Americans were killed in separate attacks Sunday, including one
1st Armored Division soldier in Baghdad and two U.S. civilians working for the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Fallujah. All three were victims of roadside
bombs, the military said.
A U.S. Army helicopter flies near the area
after a U.S. Chinook helicopter, right, believed to be carrying dozens of
soldiers to leaves abroad was struck by a missile and crashed west of
Baghdad, near Fallujah, Sunday, Nov. 2, 2003, killing 16 soldiers and
wounding 20 others, the U.S. command and witnesses reported.
[AP]
Sunday's death toll was the highest for
American troops since March 23 — the first week of the invasion that ousted
Saddam Hussein — and the attack represented a major escalation in the campaign
to drive the U.S.-led coalition out of the country.
The giant helicopter was ferrying the soldiers on their way for leave outside
Iraq when two missiles streaked into the sky and slammed into the rear of the
aircraft, witnesses told The Associated Press. It crashed in flames in farmers'
fields west of Baghdad.
"It's clearly a tragic day for America," Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
said in Washington. "In a long, hard war, we're going to have tragic days. But
they're necessary. They're part of a war that's difficult and complicated."
Like past attacks on U.S. forces and a string of suicide bombings that killed
dozens in Baghdad the past week, U.S. coalition officials blamed either Saddam
loyalists or foreign fighters for the strike outside Fallujah, a center of Sunni
Muslim resistance to the U.S. occupation.
U.S. President Bush was at his Texas ranch, out of public sight Sunday. "Our
will and resolve are unshakable," said a White House spokesman traveling with
him.
L. Paul Bremer, the head of the occupation in Iraq, repeated demands that
Syria and Iran prevent fighters from crossing their borders into Iraq.
"They could do a much better job of helping us seal that border and keeping
terrorist out of Iraq," he told CNN. The "enemies of freedom" in Iraq "are using
more sophisticated techniques to attack our forces."
U.S. officials have been warning of the danger of shoulder-fired missiles,
thousands of which are now scattered from Saddam's arsenals, and such missiles
are believed to have downed two U.S. copters since May 1. Those two crashes — of
smaller helicopters — wounded only one American.
The loaded-down Chinook was a dramatic new target. The insurgents have been
steadily advancing in their weaponry, first using homemade roadside bombs, then
rocket-fired grenades in ambushes on American patrols, and vehicles stuffed with
explosives and detonated by suicide attackers.
In the fields south of Fallujah, some villagers proudly showed off blackened
pieces of the Chinook's wreckage to arriving reporters.
Though a few villagers tried to help, many celebrated word of the helicopter
downing, as well as a fresh attack on U.S. soldiers in Fallujah itself. Two
American civilians working under contract for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
were killed and one was injured in the explosion of a roadside bomb, the
military said.
"This was a new lesson from the resistance, a lesson to the greedy
aggressors," one Fallujah resident, who would not give his name, said of the
helicopter downing. "They'll never be safe until they get out of our country,"
he said of the Americans.
The downed copter was one of two Chinooks flying out in formation from an air
base in Habbaniyah, about 10 miles from the crash site, carrying troops to
Baghdad on route for rest and recreation — R&R.
The missiles semed to have been fired from a palm grove about 500 yards away,
Thaer Ali, 21, said. At least one hit the Chinook, which came down in a field in
the farming village of Hasai, a few miles south of Fallujah, witnesses said.
The missiles flashed toward the helicopter from the rear, as usual with
heat-seeking ground-fired missiles. The most common model in the former Iraqi
army inventory was the Russian-made SA-7, also known as Strelas.
Hours later, thick smoke rose from the blackened, smoldering hulk as U.S.
soldiers swarmed over the crash site, evacuating the injured, retrieving
evidence and cordoning off the area.
Yassin Mohamed said he heard the explosion and ran out of his house, a
half-mile away.
"I saw the helicopter burning. I ran toward it because I wanted to help put
out the fire, but couldn't get near because of American soldiers," he said.
The U.S. military would not confirm that the aircraft was struck by a
missile, but a spokesman, Col. William Darley, said witnesses reported seeing
"missile trails."
In Baghdad, Darley said the CH-47 helicopter belonged to the 12th Aviation
Brigade, a Germany-based unit that supports the 82nd Airborne Division Task
Force operating west of Baghdad.
The two Chinooks were carrying a total of more than 50 passengers to the U.S.
base at Baghdad International Airport, from which they were to fly out on leave,
U.S. officials said. Darley said some of the casualties were from medical units,
but officials did not provide a breakdown of their units.
A spokesman at Fort Carson, Colo., said the Chinooks were carrying soldiers
from Fort Carson; Fort Sill, Okla.; Fort Campbell, Ky.; and Fort Hood, Texas.
Lt. Col. Thomas Budzyna said some Fort Carson troops were among the injured
but he did not know the units or bases of the other casualties.
"Many were looking forward to a break in the action," Budzyna said.
"Unfortunately, they faced something else."
The Pentagon announced Friday it was expanding the rest and recreation leave
program for troops in Iraq. As of Sunday, it said, the number of soldiers
departing daily to the United States via a transit facility in neighboring
Kuwait would be increased from 280 to 480.
Fallujah lies in the so-called "Sunni Triangle," a region north and west of
Baghdad were most attacks on American forces have taken place. The downing and
the soldier's death in Baghdad brought to at least 138 the number of American
soldiers killed by hostile fire since President Bush declared an end to combat
on May 1.
Around 376 U.S. service members have died since the beginning of military
operations in Iraq.
The death toll Sunday surpasses one of the deadliest single attacks during
the Iraq war: the March 23 ambush of the 507th Maintenance Company, in which 11
soldiers were killed, nine were wounded and seven captured, including Pfc.
Jessica Lynch. A total of 28 Americans around Iraq — including the casualties
from the ambush — died on that day, the deadliest for U.S. troops during the
Iraq war.
Meanwhile, in Abu Ghraib on Baghdad's western edge, U.S. troops clashed with
townspeople Sunday. Local Iraqis said U.S. troops arrived in the morning and
ordered people to disperse from the marketplace. Someone then tossed a grenade
at the Americans, who opened fire, witnesses said.
The newest deaths capped a week of extraordinary carnage in and around
Baghdad. On Oct. 26, a rocket slammed into a hotel housing hundreds of coalition
staffers, killing one and injuring 15.
A day later, four coordinated suicide bombings in Baghdad killed three dozen
people and wounded more than 200. Daily attacks against U.S. forces have
increased in the last three weeks from an average of the mid-20s to 33.