Four
American soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter were killed in the May attack,
and three U.S. soldiers were kidnapped. The body of one was found later, and
two other soldiers are still missing.
Friday's
raid was intended to begin establishing a "sustained coalition
presence" in the region, Martin said.
A military
statement said U.S. soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st
Airborne Division, and 150 Iraqi soldiers were transported in four waves by
two CH-47 Chinooks and eight UH-60 Black Hawks.
Marines
and U.S. soldiers helped secure the landing zone and 70 "concerned
local citizens" helped secure the outlying perimeter. Troops moved
through villages and started building a bridge across the Euphrates
River.
Before the
air assault, U.S. F-16 fighter jets dropped two 2,000-pound bombs on a
Euphrates island thought to be used by al Qaeda for staging attacks.
Other
developments
U.S. troops in Iraq on
Saturday targeted Sunni and Shiite militants, killing seven suspected
insurgents and detaining at least 10 others across Iraq, the military said.
Forces targeting al
Qaeda in Iraq killed six and detained 10 during raids northeast of
Samarra, in Baghdad, and southwest of Kirkuk, the military said. Troops also
killed a suspected terrorist in a raid in the Rashidiya area north of
Baghdad, the military said.
A mass grave with the
remains of at least 35 people thought to be Shiites was discovered in a
southern Baghdad Sunni district, Iraq's Interior Ministry told CNN. The Dora
Sunni Awakening Council and Iraqi police discovered the remains at a farm in
the Dora Sunni district in southern Baghdad on Friday. The official said
that the local Iraqi police believe that the victims had died within the
past three years
A reporter for an Iraqi
satellite television channel was kidnapped while on his way to work in
central Baghdad Friday morning, according to an Iraqi journalists group.
Muntadher al-Zaidi, 26, works for al-Baghdadiya, a Cairo-based channel that
is often critical of the Iraqi government and the U.S. military in Iraq,
according to the Journalistic Freedoms Observatory, a non-governmental group
that monitors attacks on media workers in Iraq.
No demands were given or conditions for his release set, the journalists
group said.
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