Saturday February 8th, 2025 10:34AM

9 U.S. soldiers dead in Black Hawk crash in Iraq

BAGHDAD, IRAQ - A U.S. Black Hawk medivac helicopter crashed Thursday near a stronghold of the anti-American insurgency, killing all nine soldiers aboard, the U.S. military said.

Also Thursday, a U.S. soldier died of injuries suffered in a mortar attack a day earlier that wounded 33 other troops and a civilian west of Baghdad.

Hundreds of angry Iraqis, meanwhile, waited outside Baghdad's infamous Abu Ghraib prison for a much-publicized release of detainees that did not occur by late afternoon.

There were no survivors among the nine American soldiers aboard the medical evacuation helicopter that crashed about 2:20 p.m. near the city of Fallujah, said Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt. The cause of the crash was unknown, he said. Fallujah, west of Baghdad, is a flash point of the resistance against the U.S. occupation where rebels previously have shot down U.S. helicopters.

A U.S. helicopter was shot down Jan. 2 in the same area, killing one soldier, and military officials said it almost certainly was shot down by rebels.

In the deadliest single attack on U.S. forces since the Iraq invasion began in March, 17 soldiers were killed Nov. 15 when two Black Hawk helicopters collided above Mosul in what the military called a likely grenade attack.

On Nov. 2, a Chinook helicopter was shot down near Fallujah, killing 16 American soldiers and injuring 26. The military believes a SA-7 shoulder-fired missile slammed into one of the chopper's rear-mounted engines.

Wednesday's mortar attack occurred at Logistical Base Seitz about 12 miles west of Baghdad in the tense "Sunni Triangle" that is home to hard-line supporters of ousted leader Saddam Hussein.

The mortars hit "a living area where they have their sleeping quarters," a military spokesman said.

Seven of the wounded were treated and returned to duty and the others were hospitalized at the base, the military said.

Also Thursday, an attack was foiled on Baghdad's police headquarters by chasing away men preparing to launch rockets near a soccer stadium, according to Maj. Roger Hedgepeth of the 18th Military Police Brigade. Authorities confiscated the rockets.

At Abu Ghraib, hundreds of people waited in frustration for hours, hoping relatives would be among the first detainees that coalition officials said would be freed in what U.S. officials portrayed as a goodwill gesture.

U.S. guards said they had no orders to release anyone, and an Iraqi lawyer, Mohammed al-Tamimi, expressed doubt anyone would be freed Thursday from Abu Ghraib, where Saddam's regime tortured and murdered political opponents.

There was more confusion when three truckloads of prisoners were driven out of the prison and those waiting rushed out into the street after them, stopping traffic.

But an official said that was a routine release that had nothing to do with the amnesty that was announced Wednesday by U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer.

"This has nothing to do with Bremer's announcement," Lt. Col. Roy Shere said.

Shere, a spokesman for the 800th Military Police Brigade which operates prisons in Iraq, said the unit had not received any order to release prisoners under the amnesty.

Bremer had said they would release 506 of some 12,800 detainees and that the first 100 would be freed Thursday from Abu Ghraib.

The rest were expected to be freed from camps all over the country in the coming weeks.

A spokesman for the 800th Military Police Brigade, which operates prisons in Iraq, said the unit had not received any order to release prisoners Thursday morning.

Bremer said that before they are released the prisoners must first sign a statement renouncing violence and have a community or tribal leader accept responsibility for their conduct.

U.S. and coalition troops have rounded up thousands of people suspected of attacks or of funding the anti-American insurgency in Iraq.

Relatives at the prison said people were being arrested unjustly and there were dozens of tales of men detained because they were near the scene of an attack.

Coalition officials said those to be released were low-level "associates" of insurgents who had not been directly involved in any attacks.
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