|
BEIJING, Nov. 6 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. defense officials said on Wednesday the
Pentagon would begin ordering thousands of fresh troops to prepare for service
in Iraq, on a day guerrillas launched a series of attacks on U.S. troops on
northern Iraq.
Three Iraqis were killed and at least 12 people -- including
five American soldiers -- were wounded in the attacks in Mosul.
In Washington, defense officials said the Pentagon would issue call-up
orders immediately for thousands of additional active-duty and reserve troops,
including Marines, to prepare to serve in Iraq early next year.
Marine Corps General Peter Pace, vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, stressed that the troops would be part of a 2004 Iraq rotation plan, and
that the 132,000 American troops now there could decrease to just over 100,000
in May.
Pace also told the House of Representatives Armed Services Committee that
the Bush administration had put off much of the planning for the aftermath of
the Iraq war -- launched on March 20 -- out of concern such planning would bring
on the conflict.
"We did not want to have planning for the post war make the war inevitable.
We did not want to do anything that would prejudge or somehow preordain that
there was definitely going to be a war," he said.
The United States, meanwhile, rejected Russian and U.N. proposals that
international inspectors return to Iraq to look for weapons of mass destruction,
none of which have so far been found.
WEAPONS CITED FOR WAR
President Bush and his closest ally in the war, British Prime Minister Tony
Blair, cited the alleged existence of such weapons as the reason for war.
In Mosul, a hand grenade was thrown at two U.S. vehicles in the center of
town on Wednesday afternoon. Hospital officials said the blast killed a boy aged
10 and wounded at least seven Iraqis. The U.S. military said one soldier was
wounded.
Later, a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) was fired at a U.S. convoy in
southern Mosul. Witnesses said the grenade fell short of the convoy and killed
two Iraqi men in a civilian car. The U.S. 101st Airborne Division said one
soldier was wounded.
A separate RPG attack wounded two U.S. soldiers in the city, and another
soldier was wounded in a roadside bomb attack, Sergeant Robert Woodward of the
101st Airborne told Reuters.
In a raid in the volatile town of Falluja, west of Baghdad, U.S. troops
captured two former generals in Saddam Hussein's army, the American military
said. It said the two were seized in a raid on Tuesday that also netted a large
weapons cache.
"The two generals were suspected of being key financiers and organizers of
anti-coalition fighters operating in and around the city of Falluja," the U.S.
Army said in a statement.
At least 138 U.S. soldiers have been killed in action since Washington
declared major combat over on May 1. During the war in March and April, 114 U.S.
troops were killed in combat.
(Agencies) |