U.S. Soldier Among 43 Killed In Iraq

Mostly Shiite Targets Hit In Baghdad; 3 Sunni Professors And 1 Student Dead





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Corruption, Waste In Iraq

As violence continues in Iraq, a new report outlines waste of American aid dollars and possible corruption within Iraq's police force. Aleen Sirgany reports. | Share/Embed


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(CBS/AP) Car bombs struck mostly Shiite targets in Baghdad on Wednesday, and the bodies of three Sunni professors and a student were found days after they were seized while leaving their campus in a Shiite part of the city.

At least 43 people were reported killed across Iraq, including a U.S. soldier.

The violence underscored the extreme difficulties facing the capital's 6 million residents as they try to go about their daily lives as U.S. and Iraqi forces gear up for a planned security sweep to clear the city of Sunni insurgents and Shiite militias who are blamed for many of the attacks.

Maamoun Abdel-Hadi said he was standing with a friend near his car when a mortar shell fell on the predominantly Sunni neighborhood of Azamiyah in northern Baghdad. The area was hit by nine mortar shells that damaged houses, shops and streets, killing six people and wounding 20, police and hospital officials said.

"We fell on the ground ... I saw four wounded persons lying on the ground and screaming for help. We put them in the car and rushed them to the hospital," Abdel-Hadi said. "We are peaceful people who have nothing to do with any militias or armed groups. What is the guilt of innocent children, women and men who were walking in the street?"

Jamal Ahmed mournfully examined his Mitsubishi car that had been burned in the attack.

"Repairing my car will cost me a fortune, yet I thank God because I am safe and unhurt," he said.

The mortar attack struck about 2 p.m., hours after car bombs hit Shiite targets elsewhere in the capital in what has become a common pattern in the violence plaguing Baghdad.

In other developments:

  • Two suicide bombers blew themselves up Thursday in a crowded outdoor market in the Shiite city Hillah, 60 miles south of Baghdad, killing 45 people and wounding 150, police said. The attackers strolled into the Maktabat outdoor market as shoppers were buying food for their evening meals. Police thought one of the men appeared suspicious and stopped him, according to police. The bomber detonated his explosives and was followed by the second attacker, who was walking behind him, police added.

  • A U.S. soldier also was killed and another was wounded Wednesday in fighting in the mainly Sunni Salahuddin province north of Baghdad, while three others troops died in combat the day before west of the capital, the military said.

  • The U.S. government wasted tens of millions of dollars in Iraq reconstruction aid, including scores of unaccounted-for weapons and a never-used Baghdad training camp with an Olympic-size swimming pool, investigators say. The quarterly audit by Stuart Bowen Jr., the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, is the latest to paint a grim picture of waste, fraud and frustration in an Iraq war and reconstruction effort that has cost taxpayers more than $300 billion.

  • Two former secretaries of state are weighing in on the Iraq war, and both have criticisms of different aspects of President Bush's policy. Henry Kissinger and Madeleine Albright have been testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. In her prepared testimony, Albright opposes the idea of sending more troops. She says she could have supported it if the increase had been tied to "a clear, important and achievable mission." Kissinger told the committee the U.S. should always be ready to negotiate, even with countries such as Iran and Syria. He's proposing that a regional conference be organized.

  • Two senators leading separate efforts to put Congress on record against President Bush's troop buildup in Iraq joined forces Wednesday, agreeing on a nonbinding resolution that would criticize the plan. Sens. John Warner, R-Va., and Carl Levin, D-Mich., had been sponsoring competing measures, with Warner's less harshly worded version attracting more Republican interest. The new resolution would vow to protect funding for troops while keeping Warner's original language expressing the Senate's opposition to the troop buildup.

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