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U.S. troops hand Najaf over to Iraq

By Robert H. Reid (The Associated Press)

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Published: Tuesday, September 6, 2005

Updated: Friday, January 9, 2009

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Iraqi soldiers jubilate during the handover ceremony in Najaf, Iraq on Tuesday. The U.S. Army handed over its base in Najaf, giving Iraqis full control of the city as a first step in transferring security across the country so multinational forces can begin to go home.

BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. jets struck targets Tuesday near the Syrian border where al-Qaida has expanded its presence, and civilians fled fighting in the northern city of Tal Afar, complaining they were running short of food and water.

To the south, U.S. troops handed the Iraqi army control of a Shiite city that saw bitter fighting last year - a sign of the uneven pattern of insecurity in this fragmented country.

The U.S. command also said four more Americans had been killed in action.

The airstrikes took place near Karabilah, about 185 miles west of Baghdad and one of a cluster of towns near the Syrian border used by foreign fighters to slip into Iraq.

In the first attack, Marine F/A-18 jets dropped bombs shortly after midnight on two bridges across the Euphrates River that the U.S. command said insurgents used to move fighters and arms toward Baghdad and other cities.

Hours later, a Marine jet destroyed a building used by insurgents to fire on U.S. and Iraqi troops, a U.S. statement said. One Iraqi soldier was wounded when Marines and Iraqi soldiers stormed the building, killing two foreigners and arresting three, it said.

Late Tuesday, Iraqi civilians reported a suicide bomber struck a checkpoint in Haditha, 60 miles east of Karabilah. There were no reports of casualties.

The airstrikes occurred about six miles east of the border city of Qaim, major parts of which have fallen under control of al-Qaida-linked foreign fighters.

Iraqi officials and residents say al-Qaida in Iraq, led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, took over parts of Qaim after residents fled fighting between tribes supporting and opposing the insurgents.

The U.S. military maintains a presence in the area, but U.S. officers have complained privately that they don't have enough American and Iraqi troops to secure Qaim.

Elsewhere, thousands of civilians fled Tal Afar, a predominantly ethnic Turkomen city 260 miles northwest of Baghdad where U.S. and Iraqi soldiers are trying to wrest control from insurgents.

Plumes of smoke rose from the city, which sits along a major trade and smuggling route to Syria. Ambulances were seen carrying at least 10 wounded civilians toward nearby Mosul.

Some of those who fled sought refuge in the village of Taha, where local officials scrambled to provide for about 700 families. Some of the refugees disputed claims by Iraqi officials that foreign fighters had joined local insurgents in the fighting inside Tal Afar.

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