BAGHDAD - US and Iraqi troops searched 
house-to-house and combed fields with their bare hands Saturday after American 
troops and their Iraqi interpreter came under attack in the notorious "triangle 
of death" south of Baghdad, leaving five dead and three missing. 
 The military said the patrol was struck in a pre-dawn explosion 
near Mahmoudiya, about 20 miles south of Baghdad -- an al-Qaida area where two US 
soldiers were found massacred after disappearing at a checkpoint nearly a year 
ago. 
 
 
   Iraqi soldiers take defensive position while on the joint 
 search mission with the US troops near Youssifiyah, 20 kilometers (12 
 miles) south of Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, May 12, 2007. [AP]
   | 
A nearby unit heard the blast and the search was launched after communication 
could not be established with the patrol, the military said. Shortly after the 
blast, a drone observed two burning vehicles. 
An emergency response unit arrived at the scene and found five members of the 
team dead and three others missing. 
Checkpoints were established throughout the area, while helicopters and jets 
buzzed overhead. AP Television News footage showed Iraqi soldiers picking 
through cattails and other weeds as they searched fields and canals for clues. 
Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, a US military spokesman, said the search would 
continue throughout the night. 
"A lot of our vehicles have thermal capabilities, which sometimes work better 
at night than they do during the day," he said. 
The military refused to specify whether the Iraqi interpreter was among those 
killed or missing and would not give more details about where the bodies were 
found. 
An Iraqi army officer who was familiar with the search said he saw five badly 
burned bodies inside a Humvee at the site, suggesting the remains may not have 
been recognizable. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity because he was 
not authorized to disclose the information. 
He also said joint US-Iraqi forces had sealed off the area and were 
conducting house-to-house searches, rounding up dozens of suspects. The military 
declined to comment on detentions but said troops were looking for suspects. 
The Iraqi officer said US troops singled out seven suspects out of as many as 
50, including a wounded man who was hiding in a house and confessed to 
participating in the attack. He said most of the houses searched near the attack 
contained only women and children because the men had fled, fearing arrest. 
"I was in my cucumber field when I heard a big explosion followed by 
shootings. I ran toward my house because I was afraid that I would be arrested 
if spotted in the field," Mizaal Abdullah, a 37-year-old farmer who was in the 
custody of the Iraqi army, said by telephone. "This is the third time that I 
have been arrested. Each time, the real attackers flee the area and innocent 
people like me get arrested." 
The attack occurred at 4:44 a.m. about 12 miles west of Mahmoudiya, a town of 
about 65,000 in a Sunni area dubbed the "triangle of death" for the frequent 
attacks against Shiite civilians and US and Iraqi forces. 
On June 16, 2006, two American soldiers -- Pfc. Kristian Menchaca of 
Houston and Pfc. Thomas Tucker of Madras, Ore. -- went missing after their Humvee was 
ambushed at a checkpoint near Youssifiyah, north of Mahmoudiya. 
Their bodies were found days later, tied together with a bomb between one of 
the victim's legs. But the remains were not recovered until the next morning, 
after an Iraqi civilian warned that bombs had been planted in the area. 
A third soldier, David J. Babineau, 25, of Springfield, Massachusetts, was 
found dead at the scene of the attack. 
Five US soldiers also have been charged in the rape of a 14-year-old 
Mahmoudiya girl and the killing of her and her entire family, and three have 
pleaded guilty in the March 12, 2006, attack, which was initially blamed on 
insurgents. 
Also Saturday, the military announced the death of an American soldier from a 
bomb attack Friday near Iskandariyah, 30 miles south of Baghdad. 
At least 30 Iraqis were reported killed or found dead elsewhere in Iraq, 
including a Sunni physician shot to death on his way home from work in the 
northern city of Mosul. 
Seventeen bullet-riddled bodies showing signs of torture -- apparent 
victims of so-called sectarian death squads usually led by Shiite militias -- also turned 
up on the streets in Baghdad. 
All but two were found on the predominantly Sunni western side of the Tigris 
River that divides the capital where sectarian violence appears to be on the 
rise. 
More than 3,380 members of the US military have died since the Iraq war 
started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. But few have been 
kidnapped, due largely to strict military procedures for those on patrol or at 
checkpoints. 
US troops in Iraq travel in groups of armored vehicles, usually Humvees, and 
procedures are in place to keep track so no one is left behind. 
The last US soldier known to have been captured was Ahmed Qusai al-Taayie, 
whose name is also spelled Ahmed Kousay Altaie, an Iraqi-born reserve soldier 
from Ann Arbor, Mich., who was abducted while visiting his Iraqi wife on Oct. 23 
in Baghdad. 
Sgt. Keith M. Maupin of Batavia, Ohio, was taken on April 9, 2004, after 
insurgents ambushed a fuel convoy. Two months later, a tape on Al-Jazeera 
purported to show a captive US soldier being shot, but the Army ruled it was 
inconclusive proof of Maupin's death. 
Both are still listed as missing. 
Capt. Michael Speicher, a Navy pilot, also has been missing since the 1991 
Persian Gulf War.