Flush with intelligence, the US military moved quickly Friday to take 
advantage of the power vacuum left by the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, 
carrying out nearly 40 raids in an effort to stop his terror network from 
regrouping.
 
 
   An Iraqi soldier mans a checkpoint in central 
 Baghdad, Iraq Friday, June 9, 2006, after the Iraqi capital is subjected 
 to a vehicle ban in an effort to prevent reprisal attacks from suicide car 
 bombs after the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in a US airstrike 
 Wednesday night. The vehicle ban will be in effect from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 
 Friday in Baghdad, and from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. for three days starting 
 Friday in Diyala, according to the Iraqi Interior Ministry. 
 [AP] | 
 
A US military search of the destroyed safehouse where the al-Qaida in Iraq 
leader was killed Wednesday yielded documents and information storage devices 
that are being assessed for potential use against his followers, a military 
officer said.
An M-16 rifle, grenades and AK-47 rifles also were found, according to the 
officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because results from the search 
have not been announced. The U.S.-made M-16 was fitted with special optics.
They also found documents and unspecified "media," which the officer 
indicated normally means information storage devices such as computer hard 
drives and digital cameras or other data storage devices.
US military spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said 39 raids were conducted 
across Iraq late Thursday and early Friday, including some directly related to 
the information they obtained from the strike against al-Zarqawi. Those were in 
addition to 17 raids carried out immediately after the terror leader was killed.
Caldwell displayed digital photographs of recovered items that he said 
included a suicide belt, a flak vest, passports and identification cards, 
vehicle license plates, ammunition belts, rifles and other guns and a 
night-vision device. He said they were found under the floorboards of a 
building; he did not identify the location, except to say it was in and around 
Baghdad.
He said at least 24 people had been detained and one person killed in the 
raids.
In Ghalbiyah, near where al-Zarqawi was killed, five civilians were killed 
and three were wounded in a firefight. The circumstances of their deaths were 
unclear.
AP Television News video footage showed a destroyed house, while another 
house had bullet holes on the wall and burned furniture inside.
The military also revealed that al-Zarqawi was alive after two 500-pound 
bombs were dropped on his hideout, though he could barely speak.
"He mumbled something, but it was indistinguishable and it was very short," 
Caldwell said, adding that al-Zarqawi tried to get away after being placed on a 
stretcher by Iraqi police.
Caldwell said it was possible that al-Zarqawi was not inside the safehouse 
when it was attacked, a scenario which might explain why only he among six 
people killed in the raid initially survived the bombing.
Asked whether al-Zarqawi was shot after US ground troops arrived at the 
scene, Caldwell said he could not give a definitive answer.
An official in the Iraqi prime minister's office confirmed that the Iraqi 
forces arrived first, followed by the Americans. "I think our announcement was 
very clear yesterday and we don't have anything to add," the official said, 
speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the 
media.
Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani, a Shiite who was named to the key security 
post Thursday, said al-Zarqawi's death came after a painstaking effort to 
collect accurate data and investigate every clue.
"The killing of al-Zarqawi didn't occur by chance," al-Bolani told al-Arabiya 
TV. "His killing will raise the morale of the people as well the morale of the 
security services."
The death of Iraq's most feared terrorist was the subject of Friday's 
religious sermons in Iraq.
"The killing of the Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi does not mean 
the end of terrorism in Iraq," Shiite Sheik Abdul-Mahdi al-Karbalai said in the 
southern city of Karbala. He called on the government to "kill all the symbols 
of terrorism and kill all of (al-Zarqawi's) associates to get rid of terrorism 
in our beloved country." 
Many believe al-Zarqawi was among a minority of foreign fighters and that 
Iraqis make up the heart of the insurgency — Sunni Arab extremists and loyalists 
of former leader Saddam Hussein and his ousted Baath Party. 
"Despite the crimes of al-Zarqawi, the source of terrorism is the Baathists 
who had supplied him with secure dens and safe havens," Imam Sadr al-Din 
al-Qupanchi said at a Shiite mosque in Najaf. 
Biological samples from al-Zarqawi's body were delivered to an FBI crime 
laboratory in Virginia for DNA testing. The results were expected in three days. 
At the news conference, the US military also provided a revised death toll 
from the attack. 
Gen. George Casey, the top US commander in Iraq, had said four people, 
including a woman and a child, were killed with al-Zarqawi and the terrorist's 
spiritual consultant. 
But Caldwell said three women and three men, including al-Zarqawi and 
spiritual adviser Sheik Abdul-Rahman were killed, but he cautioned that some 
facts were being sorted out. 
The spiritual adviser was initially believed to be Abu Abdul-Rahman al-Iraqi, 
but analysts said al-Iraqi is a different man — the group's deputy leader who 
signed the al-Qaida statement announcing al-Zarqawi's death. 
American military officials have said that tips from within al-Zarqawi's own 
terror network helped the US locate and bomb the safe house where the al-Qaida 
leader was meeting in secret with top associates. 
A top Jordanian security official said Thursday that Jordan had been tracking 
al-Zarqawi's movements in Iraq since the triple hotel bombings in Amman last 
November and had provided information to the Americans about his whereabouts. 
He said the success of the Jordanian intelligence effort was partly a result 
of information obtained following Jordan's arrest last month of Ziad Khalaf Raja 
al-Karbouly, an Iraqi al-Qaida operative linked to al-Zarqawi. 
"The information provided by Karbouli allowed for the success of the 
operation" against Zarqawi, the Jordanian security official said. 
President Bush said al-Zarqawi's death "helps a lot" with security problems 
but won't bring an end to the war. He also said it was unclear when Iraqi 
security forces could take control and let US troops go home. 
In a bid to prevent reprisal attacks, Iraqi authorities imposed a driving ban 
in Baghdad and Diyala province to the north, where al-Zarqawi and the others 
were killed. 
It was a relatively quiet day in Baghdad, a day after at least five car bombs 
killed nearly 40 people and wounded dozens. 
But a roadside bomb hit a police patrol in the northern city of Mosul, 
killing one person and wounding two, and three oil refinery workers were shot to 
death near Tikrit. Eight bullet-riddled bodies were found floating near Kut, and 
a firefight west of Baqouba killed five civilians and wounded three. 
Whether the bloodshed continues depends in part on who succeeds al-Zarqawi 
and the new leader will continue killing Shiite civilians with the intention of 
sparking a civil war that pits Sunnis against Shiites. 
Caldwell said Egyptian-born Abu Ayyub al-Masri — who was named in a 
most-wanted list issued in February 2005 by the US command and has a $50,000 
bounty on his head — would likely take the reins of al-Qaida in Iraq. 
He said al-Masri and al-Zarqawi met for the first time at an al-Qaida 
training camp in Afghanistan in 2001, and al-Masri came to Iraq first. Al-Masri 
is believed to be an expert at making roadside bombs, the leading cause of US 
military casualties in Iraq. 
Al-Masri also has had "communications" with Osama bin Laden's chief 
lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahri, Caldwell said. 
Al-Zawahri praised al-Zarqawi in a videotape broadcast Friday but did not 
mention his death in a US air strike, suggesting the tape was made earlier.