Two months after the U.S. handed sovereignty back
to Iraq amid hopes of reduced violence, more than 110 U.S. troops have
been killed and much of the country remains hostile territory. The toll
of U.S. dead since the war began last year is fast approaching 1,000.
Although attention in recent weeks has focused on Najaf, where U.S.
forces battled Shiite Muslim militiamen, most of the deadly
confrontations for American troops in newly independent Iraq have
occurred in the Baghdad area and the so-called Sunni Triangle to the
north and west. The concentration of attacks in those areas is a
reminder that the fiercest and most organized opposition to U.S. forces
and the U.S.-backed interim government continues to be in
Sunni-dominated cities, such as Fallouja. Nationwide, U.S. forces are
being attacked 60 times per day on average, up 20% from the three-month
period before the hand-over. The occupation of Iraq has technically
ended, but a U.S.-commanded multinational force of more than 150,000 is
still there, tasked with providing security to the fledgling
government. more ] Pictured above:
A masked Iraqi Sh'ite militiaman dashes across a street, carrying a
rocket propelled grenade launcher, near a graffiti reading in Arabic
'No Bush' in the east Baghdad suburb of al Sadr city . [more ]
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