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Bomb Kills Female Soldier in Iraq
Christian Berthelsen, The Los Angeles Times
November 4, 2007
Baghdad - The U.S. military said Saturday that a female soldier died
Thursday in a roadside bomb attack on her patrol south of Baghdad, the
90th American servicewoman killed since the invasion.
Servicewomen are not assigned to offensive combat
missions in Iraq, but they often participate in raids, patrols and
other active duty in a variety of roles, such as flying helicopters or
dealing with Iraqi women during U.S. operations.
Because of that, fatalities among servicewomen have
been relatively rare, constituting fewer than 3% of military deaths
among the U.S.-led coalition forces, according to the website
icasualties.org, which tracks fatalities in the Iraq war.
Still, women have seen more combat during the Iraq
war than in any previous U.S. engagement, and the causes of death are
largely the same as those of their male counterparts, including
roadside bombs, mortar attacks, suicide bombings and the downing of
helicopters.
The soldier killed Thursday was identified as 2nd
Lt. Tracy Alger, 30, of New Auburn, Wis., according to an Associated
Press report quoting the soldier's mother. U.S. officials did not
confirm the name of the soldier Saturday.
On Oct. 5, Army Reserve Spc. Rachael L. Hugo, 24, of
Madison, Wis., died in Baiji, 125 miles north of Baghdad, when
insurgents attacked her unit with a roadside bomb and small-arms fire.
The most recent death of a woman in a hostile fire
incident was that of Army Staff Sgt. Lillian Clamens, 35, of Lawton,
Okla., who was killed Oct. 10 in a rocket attack on Camp Victory, the
main U.S. military base in Iraq. Clamens, an administrative clerk, had
three children and died two days before she was scheduled to return
home.
Also Saturday, the U.S. said five terrorism suspects
believed to have ties to the militant group Al Qaeda in Iraq were
killed in an airstrike on a suspected hide-out south of Mahmoudiya,
about 20 miles south of Baghdad. Officials said they had detained 10
others in three operations Friday night and Saturday in northern and
central Iraq.
The U.S. also announced that Iraqi forces captured
two terrorism suspects Saturday in one of Sunni Islam's holiest
mosques, Abu Hanifa in the Adhamiya area of east Baghdad. The two were
suspected of involvement in roadside bombings, kidnappings, slayings
and attacks on Iraqi and U.S. security forces throughout Baghdad. They
were believed to be using the mosque as a base of operations. Ten
others were detained.
On the floor of Iraq's parliament Saturday, lawmaker
Jalaluddin Saghir accused Iraqi soldiers of killing two teenagers while
participating with U.S. forces in raids in northwest Baghdad, and said
a third was killed in a later raid. A spokesman for the U.S. military
said he had no immediate record of the incidents.
A delegation of Kurdish politicians announced what
they said was a successful visit in Najaf with Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani, the most revered Shiite cleric in Iraq, in a bid to marshal
broader support for northern Iraq's Kurdish region and opposition to
Turkish incursions to fight guerrillas there.
"We got what we came for," said Adnan Mufti, speaker
of the Kurdish parliament. "Mr. Sistani stressed that the military
solution is not good, and we have to achieve the common interests."
In Baghdad, police said a series of bombings and
shootings killed two and wounded 12, including three Iraqi policemen.
Gunmen attacked a minibus of Shiite pilgrims visiting a shrine in
Kadhimiya, wounding three, and a car bomb exploded in the parking lot
of a Mansour supermarket whose name translates to "Mr. Milk."
Mansour, once an upscale shopping district on
Baghdad's west side, was devastated by fighting over the last few years
but has begun to recover, as have many of the capital's neighborhoods.
Mr. Milk had been bombed at least once before.
Gunmen killed an Iraqi police officer and wounded
two others near Salman Pak, southeast of Baghdad. In Hillah, 60 miles
south of Baghdad, roadside bomb and gunfire attacks left two Iraqi
police officers dead and three injured Friday night and Saturday,
police said. Suspected assailants in one of the cases were arrested.
A roadside bombing targeted the convoy of the Basra police commander Saturday morning, wounding two guards.
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