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(回答先: 続報:自殺爆弾攻撃で米兵に何人かの死傷者。3人のイラク人が死亡。【Reuters.com】 投稿者 Sちゃん 日時 2003 年 12 月 12 日 02:04:48)
ラマディの82空挺師団のキャンプで自殺爆弾攻撃。
米兵1人死亡、14人負傷。アタッカーと思われる3人のイラク人も死亡。
基地内に家具を運ぶトラックに偽装されて爆弾が運び込まれた模様。
負傷した米兵14人のうち3人が病院に運ばれ、残りの11人はそのまま任務に戻った。
防護壁とセキュリティ対策の改良が被害を最小限にとどめたと、軍は声明を発表した。
(★そのわりにはチェックがザルなのでは?)
BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3310837.stm
Last Updated: Thursday, 11 December, 2003, 19:47 GMT
Attackers strike US base in Iraq
One US soldier has been killed and 14 injured in a suicide attack on a US base in the Iraqi town of Ramadi.
Three Iraqi attackers also died in the incident, which took place at the 82 Airborne's Champion Base at 1330 local time (1030GMT), military sources say.
The bombers were reportedly disguised as deliverymen taking furniture to the base, the Associated Press reports.
The incident took place in an area that has been the scene of frequent attacks on US troops in the past few months.
The area, known as the Sunni Triangle, was the heart of ousted leader Saddam Hussein's power base.
US soldiers have come under attack there nearly every day, the BBC's Tristana Moore in Iraq says.
Ramadi is about 100km (60miles) west of Baghdad.
Three of the soldiers injured in the attack were taken to hospital, while the other 11 returned to duty, reports say.
A US military statement was quoted as saying that improvements in barriers and other security measures at the base had minimised injuries.
Iraqi target
A pro-American Iraqi leader was the target of a bombing in Ramadi last month.
Sheikh Amer Ali Suleiman - a leader of the Duleim tribe, one of the main Sunni tribes in Iraq - survived the attack, but at least one child was killed in the car bombing.
Thursday's attack on the base at Ramadi comes only days after a suicide bomber drove up to the gates of a base near the northern town of Mosul and detonated his explosives.
That attack wounded about 60 US soldiers.
That attack, in conjunction with Thursday's incident, could represent a change in tactics by the Iraqi insurgents, who have previously relied on road-side bombs and drive-by shootings, our correspondent says.