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ROMMANA, Iraq (AP) - For nearly a week, this dusty farming village near the Syrian
border was surrounded by armored troop carriers on the ground and helicopter gunships
overhead. Then, suddenly, the fighting stopped.
The U.S. military declared a major offensive against followers of Iraq's most
wanted terrorist officially over Saturday, and farmers here went back to tending
their potatoes and pistachios.
Flattened homes, bullet-pocked walls and two charred personnel carriers at
the entrance to the Sunni Arab village stood as testimony to the violent upheaval.
One of the walls of the local mosque had collapsed, and dozens of buildings
were damaged by shells and machine-gun fire.
A gaping crater in the bridge linking Rommana and Husaybah reduced traffic
to a crawl across the Euphrates River.
The U.S. military said it ``neutralized'' an insurgent haven in the remote
desert region of western Iraq used by supporters of Jordanian-born militant
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. But residents here remained defiant.
``The village witnessed heavy fighting, but despite that they (the Americans)
were not able to enter it,'' said one man, who gave his name only as Abu Abdullah.
The U.S. military said it killed an estimated 125 insurgents during the campaign
through villages along the Euphrates River to the Syrian border. Nine Marines
also died, but the civilian toll remains uncounted.
Dr. Hamid al-Alousi, director of the hospital in nearby Qaim, said at least
35 Iraqis were killed and more than 70 wounded in Rommana and nearby Karabilah,
where fierce clashes took place. But his claim could not be verified, and it
was impossible to tell how many of the victims were fighters.
The U.S. military said insurgents also fought among themselves during the offensive,
trading mortar, rocket and gunfire almost nightly in Qaim, the largest town
in the region about 200 miles northwest of Baghdad.
Insurgents have been using the region as a staging area where foreign fighters
slipping across the border from Syria received weapons and equipment to launch
deadly attacks in Iraq's major cities, according to the U.S. military.
But residents insisted there were no foreign fighters here - only Iraqis defending
their homes against U.S. forces.
U.S. forces extended a conciliatory hand Sunday, dropping leaflets from a helicopter
promising a better future.
``Prosperity will prevail in Rommana and Husaybah,'' one of them read. ``We
thank residents for their calls on the local number which helped us capture
armed groups,'' read another.