4 U.S. Marines killed in action in western Iraq



An Iraqi child was killed in the bombing of a terrorist cell's headquarters.
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Four U.S. Marines were killed in a Sunni Arab insurgent stronghold west of Baghdad, and pressure mounted in parliament Sunday to replace the interior minister because of the security crisis in the capital.
Also Sunday, a U.S. F-16 jet dropped two precision-guided bombs on a building near Baghdad used by militants affiliated with a group believed responsible a mortar-and-rocket attack in Baghdad's mostly Shiite district of Karradah last week that killed at least 31 people, U.S. officials said.
Two militants and a child were killed in the airstrike, and four suspects were arrested, the United States said. American officials expressed regret about the child's death and said "terrorists continue to deliberately place innocent Iraqi women and children in danger by their actions and presence."
"We do everything possible to avoid civilian casualties during these operations," U.S. spokesman Lt. Col. Barry Johnson said. "We deeply regret the loss of an innocent life while eliminating a group responsible for targeting so many other innocent Iraqis.
"We believe that countless more Iraqis would have been at risk had we not taken immediate action to eliminate this terrorist cell when we discovered their exact location."
U.S. officials did not specify where the airstrike took place, but it appeared to have been in the area around Youssifiyah that has long been a stronghold of al-Qaida and other extremist groups.
Marine deaths
The Marines, from Regimental Combat Team 7, died Saturday in Anbar province, the heavily Sunni Arab region west of Baghdad that includes such flashpoints as Ramadi and Haditha, a U.S. statement said without further details.
So far this month, 44 U.S. service members have died in Iraq -- including 10 in Anbar province during the past week. That underscores the threat to U.S. troops from Sunni insurgents, despite the attention paid to recent sectarian violence between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in Baghdad.
The U.S. command is moving 3,700 troops from Mosul to Baghdad to cope with the crisis in the capital, raising concern that violence could flare up again in that northern city as American forces scale back.
Political pressure
With violence on the rise, several key Iraqi parliament members are pressing to replace Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani, who is responsible for police and paramilitary commandos at the forefront of the fight against extremists in the capital.
"Some changes will take place in Cabinet during the coming days," said Hassan al-Suneid, a member of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Dawa party.
"There is talk among the Cabinet, the [Shiite] alliance and parliament about changing the interior minister because he is unqualified."
Bassem Sharif, a lawmaker from the Shiite party Fadhila, confirmed there were moves under way to demand changes in the Cabinet, including the Interior Ministry.
"The structure of the Interior Ministry is not right -- unmarked cars, no checkpoints formed yet ... So far they have done nothing," Sharif said. "There are only excuses."
Al-Bolani, a Shiite, was chosen for the sensitive post after protracted negotiations among the various religious and ethnic parties within the national unity government.
The interior and defense posts were not filled until June 8 -- nearly three weeks after the rest of the Cabinet.
Al-Maliki told reporters the government was preparing a "comprehensive reform plan" for both the interior and defense ministries, but he did not mention replacing any ministers.
The Interior Ministry, which controls the police, and the Defense Ministry, which manages the army, are the two most important and sensitive Cabinet posts.
Diplomacy
In an attempt to mollify the two major sects, the Defense Ministry post went to a Sunni while the Interior Ministry was given to a Shiite. But the Americans demanded the jobs go to people without ties to avowedly sectarian parties -- a tall order in a country where politics is organized along sectarian and ethnic lines.
The U.S. demand was aimed at pacifying Sunni Arabs, who accused the Interior Ministry of widespread abuses against civilians when the post was held by Bayan Jabr, a key member of the biggest Shiite party.
After the parties failed to agree on a choice, al-Bolani, 46, got the job despite no background in security or high-level administration. He was an engineer with the Iraqi air force until 1999.
In a speech to parliament, the embattled minister acknowledged that "disloyal and corrupt elements" had infiltrated the police and government and were "not performing their duties in a proper manner."
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