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Wednesday, Dec. 24
The Indiana Daily Student

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7 soldiers injured in grenade attack

Incident occurs hours after Americans shot at Iraqi protesters

FALLUJAH, Iraq -- Attackers lobbed two grenades into a U.S. Army compound Thursday, wounding seven soldiers just hours after the Americans had fired on Iraqi protesters in the street outside, a U.S. intelligence officer reported.\nThe incident came as President Bush prepared to address the American public from a homeward-bound aircraft carrier, declaring that major combat in Iraq is finished.\nNone of the injuries to soldiers of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment in Fallujah was life-threatening, said Capt. Frank Rosenblatt.\nThe troops inside the walled compound opened fire on men fleeing the area, but no one was captured or believed hit, said Rosenblatt, whose 82nd Airborne Division is handing over control of Fallujah to the Armored Cavalry. Officers said the attackers' identities were unknown.\nThe attack, at 1 a.m. Thursday, came after soldiers in the compound and in a passing Army convoy opened fire Wednesday on anti-American demonstrators massed outside. Local hospital officials said two Iraqis were killed and 18 wounded.\nAmerican officers said that barrage was provoked when someone fired on the convoy from the crowd.\nWednesday's march was to protest earlier bloodshed Monday night, when 16 demonstrators and bystanders were killed and more than 50 wounded, according to hospital counts. In that clash, an 82nd Airborne company, whose members said they were being shot at, fired on a protest outside a school occupied by U.S. soldiers.\nSome Fallujah residents said they had heard relatives of victims vow to avenge Wednesday's shootings.\nBrig. Gen. Dan Hahn, the Army V Corps chief of staff, said U.S. forces had solid intelligence that the "bad actors" in Fallujah were members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party who were using crowds as cover during demonstrations.\n"The people in the city want to get rid of this problem. We have people in the city coming up to tell us who the bad actors are," Hahn said. "In every instance, our soldiers have shown discipline and restraint."\nIn the future, he said, tear gas and other riot control measures might be used to quash violent demonstrations.\nFallujah, a city of 200,000 people 30 miles west of Baghdad, benefited more than most Iraqi towns from Saddam's regime.\nThe regime built chemical and other factories that generated jobs for Fallujah's workers and wealth for its businessmen. Many of its young men joined elite regime forces such as the Republican Guard and Special Republican Guard.\nU.S. military officials met Wednesday with local religious and clan leaders on the security situation.\n"We asked the commanding officers for an investigation and for compensation for the families of the dead and injured," said Taha Bedaiwi al-Alwani, the new, U.S.-recognized mayor of Fallujah.\nResidents told reporters they were troubled by soldiers looking at Fallujah women, and some believed the Americans' goggles or binoculars could "see" through curtains or clothing.\nDespite the clashes in Fallujah, U.S. military commanders in Baghdad said the overall situation in Iraq is improving.\n"If you look at the country as a whole, it is stable," Hahn said. However, he said the massive amount of arms and ammunition being uncovered daily across Iraq posed a major problem.\n"The entire country is almost like an ammunitions and weapons dump. And they've placed them in places you would not expect," he said. "There are weapons here from every country in the world that makes weapons."\nIn the northern city of Mosul, 153 arms caches had already been found, one containing 1.2 million mortar rounds and 65,000 artillery shells. Some 150 arms and ammunition sites have been discovered in Baghdad, officials said.\nIn a radio broadcast Thursday, the commander of U.S. ground forces in Iraq urged citizens to help move the country forward by going back to work, stopping looting and cooperating to improve postwar security.\nLt. Gen. David McKiernan made the statement through Information Radio, the U.S.-led coalition's station, which is being broadcast across Iraq.\n"I call for putting an end to all acts of sabotage and criminal acts including plundering, looting and attacking coalition forces," he said in remarks read by an announcer in Arabic.\nInformation Radio has been running frequent announcements exhorting Iraqis to accept U.S. forces, and warning any foreign fighters in Iraq to leave or face arrest.\nMcKiernan also said that any checkpoints not supervised by coalition forces are unauthorized.

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