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An Ambush on U.S. Troops and an Election

A Rush of Wounded

Moments later, a chest-thumping blast rocked the Stryker's 19 tons, and black smoke obscured the blue sky above the open hatch. Sgt. Donald Kraft, a 22-year-old from Stockton, Calif., who had been standing in the hatch, dipped into the stuffy Stryker with a slightly blackened face.

"Am I all here?" he asked.


U.S. soldiers in the Stryker convoy guide an injured colleague to a Humvee after a bomb exploded nearby. (Namir Noor-eldeen -- Reuters)

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Scott Wilson The Washington Post's Scott Wilson discusses a sudden attack on a U.S. military convoy in Mosul.
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Iraq Casualties

Iraq Casualties

Total number of military deaths and names of the U.S. troops killed in the Iraq war as announced by the Pentagon yesterday: 1,278

Fatalities In hostile actions: 1,003

In non-hostile actions: 275

Cpl. In C. Kim, 23, of Warren, Mich.; 9th Communications Battalion, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Pendleton, Calif. Killed Dec. 7 in noncombat vehicle accident in Anbar province.

Total fatalities include three civilian employees of the Defense Department.

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SOURCE: Defense Department's www.defenselink.mil/newsThe Washington Post

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About 20 feet away, an improvised bomb had detonated near the pickup truck carrying the National Guardsmen, leaving it a fireball. Automatic-rifle fire, rocket-propelled grenades and mortar rounds rained down on the convoy, and the Strykers fired back with the deep hum of their rooftop .50-caliber machine guns. Clouds of dust erupted from a row of mud-brick houses 50 yards away.

Within minutes, the camouflaged legs and arms of petrified Iraqi guardsmen jutted through the Stryker's hatch as the wounded men desperately sought cover. Seven wounded Iraqis spilled into the Stryker, whose submarine-like interior filled with the smell of fresh blood, singed hair and burned skin.

After criticizing them sharply only moments earlier, the U.S. soldiers now set about busily bandaging the terrified Iraqis, who lay on the narrow strip of floor between benches or hunched under the control panel. One held his head in his hand, blood dripping off the tip of his nose into a dark mustache. He stared at the floor.

The wounded pressed into the Stryker, and the whole team shifted to make space. This correspondent tied a bandage around the head of one Iraqi, who soon after went into shock. His black vinyl jacket had been singed by the blast and was smoldering. I doused a small flame with my hands. Blood spilled onto the floor, staining my pants and the camouflage of the others inside. I helped to pick the wounded off the floor and get them outside when the critically injured were transferred to another vehicle.

The U.S. soldiers gave the guardsmen water and tried to calm them. But they shared no common language, so gratitude was expressed in different ways. One guardsman, bleeding from behind his ear, tried to kiss Muse on the cheeks. The young soldier pulled away.

Mortar rounds began landing within 30 yards of the Strykers, keeping U.S. soldiers from retrieving what appeared to be the body of an Iraqi guardsmen still inside the flaming truck. U.S. officials said later that a dozen guardsmen had been wounded -- several critically -- but some soldiers said the one that remained inside the truck was dead.

A half-hour later, the Strykers reached an Army field hospital, where doctors awaited the wounded as they limped off or were carried out of the vehicles. The U.S. soldiers loaded back up, restocking the convoy with ammunition and bandages. After a 10-minute break for cigarettes and PowerBars, the men ducked into the Strykers again and headed back to the traffic circle.

Struggle to Secure Vote

In the past month, more than 160 bodies have been discovered in and around Mosul, the commercial and cultural heart of northern Iraq. Many of them are believed to be the mutilated remains of U.S.-trained Iraqi National Guardsmen, an often tough if unskilled force struggling to fight alongside U.S. troops.

U.S. military officials say only several hundred U.S.-trained police officers remain in this city of 1.2 million people after the force largely dissolved in the face of insurgent attacks a month ago. Ideally, U.S. officials say, 4,000 to 5,000 police officers will be on the force by election day. But they acknowledge that they will be lucky to have 1,200, stationed in a series of desolate compounds manned now by squads of U.S. soldiers.

This week, one U.S. soldier was severely wounded when mortar fire pounded a station in west Mosul, the volatile Arab half of a city with a sizable Kurdish population. On the same day, after less than a month on the job, Mosul's police chief resigned in fear.

"The security is going to have to come from the Iraqi National Guard because the police force is absolutely incapable," said Lt. Col. Erik Kurilla, 38, of Minneapolis, commander of the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment of the 25th Division's 1st Brigade, which is responsible for west Mosul. "We're going to be the guys behind the scenes with the big stick."

The insurgency's campaign against Iraqi security forces, steady strikes against U.S. troops and blanket threats against Iraqis who participate in the elections have set back planning for the vote. Every Iraqi who received monthly food rations under Saddam Hussein -- roughly 80 percent of the voting-age population -- is automatically registered. But Kurilla and other U.S. officials say information about the elections, which will select a 275-member National Assembly that will appoint a new government and oversee the drafting of a constitution, has reached hardly any Mosul residents.

U.S. military officials have yet to identify the Mosul representative of the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, and no voter instruction booths now appearing in other cities have opened here. Last month, insurgents torched the election materials sent from Baghdad to help with voter registration.

The risky, round-the-clock military effort to secure this city is being carried out by several companies responsible for west Mosul, far and away the most violent district. For the January vote to be perceived as credible, Sunni Muslims here will likely have to cast votes in large numbers or at least be free to do so, and that will depend largely on the progress of the U.S. military in the next six weeks.

"Any success on our part to show government control is a failure on their part," Maj. Mark Bieger, 35, the battalion's intelligence officer, said of the insurgents. "It's tough. We've got to establish security as best we can, we've got to establish control and, more important, we've got to communicate that control to the people."

The 24th Infantry Regiment arrived in October and, within weeks, faced an insurgent assault that drove off more than three-quarters of the city's police force. Kurilla, a big, bluff commander with a napalm-in-the-morning swagger, said his soldiers killed scores of militants in early November. The insurgents, a mix of former Iraqi military officers, Islamic radicals and a few foreign Arab fighters, carried out a grisly campaign to isolate U.S. forces from any would-be Iraqi supporters.

Most of the Iraqi National Guardsmen whose bodies have been discovered in wastelands on the city's edge were leaving posts after payday, heading to rural homes to settle bills in a country without a working banking system. The insurgents' deadly campaign has become part of the black humor common among the troops here: Before heading out on a midnight search mission this week, two young soldiers played rock-paper-scissors to determine who would have to put any discovered corpse in the body bag strapped to the roof.

The elections have barely registered in the frightened day-to-day life of most people here. Kurilla said that Iraqi guardsmen are distributing pamphlets about the vote but that U.S. soldiers are prohibited from discussing it with people on the streets for fear of being accused of trying to influence the outcome.

"We're trying to figure out what they know, and what we have found out is that they don't know anything about it at all," Kurilla said.


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