BAGHDAD -- American forces freed 42 kidnapped Iraqis -- some of whom had been hung from ceilings and tortured for months -- in a raid yesterday on an Al Qaeda hide-out north of Baghdad, the US military said.
Military officials said the operation, launched on tips from residents, showed that Iraqis in turbulent Diyala Province were turning against Sunni insurgents and beginning to trust US troops.
"The people in Diyala are speaking up against Al Qaeda," said Major General William Caldwell, the top US military spokesman in Iraq.
Elsewhere in Diyala, a US soldier was killed when an explosion hit his vehicle and a second soldier was killed in an explosion in Baghdad, the military said. The deaths brought the number of troops killed this month to at least 102, putting May on pace to become the deadliest month for Americans here in more than 2 1/2 years.
Also yesterday, US forces decided to run DNA tests on a body that could be that of one of the remaining two missing American soldiers seized in an ambush on May 12 south of Baghdad, The
Military officials told the Times that the body, found yesterday at an undisclosed location, did not initially appear to fit descriptions of either of the two missing soldiers, Specialist Alex R. Jimenez, 25, of Lawrence, Mass., and Private Byron W. Fouty, 19, of Waterford, Mich. But they said the discovery of the body was significant enough to require DNA tests.
In other violence yesterday, a barrage of mortar rounds struck houses in a Shi'ite village just northeast of Baghdad, killing three women and a child and wounding seven other children, police said.
A suicide car bomber attacked an army checkpoint in Musayyib, about 40 miles south of Baghdad, killing two Iraqi soldiers.
Gunmen also killed renowned Baghdad calligrapher Khalil Mohammed al-Zahawi in a drive-by shooting in a Shi'ite-dominated area in eastern Baghdad, police said. Zahawi, 52, who was also a lecturer at Baghdad University, was waiting for a taxi on a main road when the gunmen sped past.
US military officials have said they expected insurgents to step up attacks as US-led forces worked to crack down on violence in Baghdad and the surrounding areas during their 14-week-old security operation.
As part of the crackdown, the military sent 3,000 more US troops to Diyala, a turbulent province north of Baghdad that has seen heavy fighting in recent weeks. Yesterday's raid, the military said, was a sign that the increase was working.
"The more contact we have [with] the Iraqi citizens, the more confidence that they develop in us, and in the Iraqi police and the Iraqi Army. That leads to greater cooperation from the Iraqi citizenry," said Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Garver, a US military spokesman.
Some of the men suffered broken bones. Some had been captive for as long as four months. One said he was 14 years old, Caldwell said.
The 42 freed Iraqis marked the largest number of captives ever found in a single Al Qaeda prison, he said.
Meanwhile, in Kut, 100 miles southeast of Baghdad, 70 police officers resigned from an elite police unit and handed over their weapons, saying they were afraid of the Mahdi Army militia of the radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, police said.
Earlier this week, Mahdi Army militants captured at least seven members of the police rapid deployment force during a gun battle, police said. The militants beat the police officers and warned them to stop their offensive against the militia or they would kill them, an officer said on condition of anonymity because he feared retaliation.
Some officers had their houses firebombed, their children kidnapped, and their relatives killed, he said.
"I fear reprisals, I want to keep my family and relatives safe," he said.
Another officer who resigned said the Mahdi Army threw a grenade at a colleague's house, killing his mother and wounding his brother.
"We don't have sufficient weapons, just a rifle," he said, refusing to give his name as well.
Iranian and US diplomats are scheduled to hold rare talks in Baghdad today on how to end the violence here. US officials accuse Shi'ite-ruled Iran of training, financing, and arming militants -- including the Mahdi Army -- to fan sectarian tensions. Iran denies the charge and blames the presence of US forces for the violence.
US and Iraqi troops raided Baghdad's Sadr City slum yesterday morning, arresting a suspect believed to be involved in smuggling armor piercing bombs from Iran, the military said. The suspect was part of a cell that also sent Iraqi militants to Iran for training, the statement said.
In the southern city of Basra, British forces on a raid to arrest Shi'ite militants came under fire and killed three of their attackers, the British military said. No British forces were injured, it said.
Sadr, who emerged from months in hiding last week, met yesterday with leaders of his movement in an apparent effort to restore discipline to the group, which had shown signs of splintering in his absence.
He repeated his demands for a quick US troop withdrawal, Salah al-Obeidi, a senior aide to Sadr, told reporters.![]()