US troop losses in Iraq 
topped 3,500 after a bridge bombing near Baghdad on Monday, as Britain's 
visiting future prime minister rejected domestic calls for a probe into the 
war's failings. 
 
 
   An undated photo provided by 
 Thememoryhole.org shows US military personnel offloading coffins of US 
 soldiers killed in Iraq at Dover Air Base in Delaware. US troop losses in 
 Iraq topped 3,500 after a bridge bombing near Baghdad, as Britain's 
 visiting future prime minister rejected domestic calls for a probe into 
 the war's failings.[AFP]
   | 
Three US soldiers were killed and six wounded when their checkpoint was 
struck by a suicide car bomb, the military said, bringing the overall death toll 
to at least 3,501 since the March 2003 invasion, according to an AFP count based 
on Pentagon figures. 
But despite the passing of yet another grim milestone for coalition forces, 
Britain's Gordon Brown said it was not the time for an inquiry into the war as 
called for by the Conservative opposition. 
"The wrong time to even consider an inquiry is when you have got to give all 
your effort to supporting the troops on the ground," Brown told Sky News. 
"There are times to consider these things, but the right thing to do at the 
moment is to give the full support and the full force of government behind the 
troops on the ground." 
Monday's attack brought to 28 the number of US troops killed in Iraq so far 
this month, with more than 25,000 US troops wounded in combat since the 
invasion. 
An interpreter was also wounded in the bombing, which destroyed part of a 
highway overpass in Mahmudiyah, a town south of Baghdad in a violent 
agricultural region known as an insurgent stronghold dubbed the "Triangle of 
Death". 
The highway was partly blocked by debris from the collapsed bridge and the 
military said an engineering unit was dispatched with bulldozers and other heavy 
equipment to clear the road. 
Last month, three US soldiers were snatched during an insurgent ambush on a 
small unit manning a temporary observation post near Mahmudiyah, during which 
four US soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter were killed. 
An Al-Qaeda front group said a week ago it had killed the captured troops, an 
act Human Rights Watch said would constitute a violation of international 
humanitarian law and that those responsible would be guilty of war crimes. 
Meanwhile, Brown, currently Britain's finance minister, held talks with Iraqi 
leaders including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and President Jalal Talabani. 
It was Brown's second visit to Iraq but his first since he was chosen to 
replace Blair in late June, and came amid mounting pressure at home over the 
war. 
Brown has not indicated any plans to radically change Britain's policy on 
Iraq, but last month accepted that "mistakes" were made in the country. 
On Monday, he vowed that Britain will continue to support Iraq, Talabani's 
office said. 
"British minister of finance (Brown) praised the presidency and stressed the 
continuous support of his country to Iraq to achieve democracy, reconciliation 
and economic development," a statement from Talabani's office said. 
"They also discussed the role of British forces to build and rehabilitate 
Iraqi military's abilities and participation in delivering peace and stability 
in southern Iraq" where British troops are based, the statement added. 
About 150 British troops have been killed in Iraq. The government has pledged 
to withdraw this year about 1,600 troops from a force of 7,100 soldiers deployed 
in Iraq. 
The BBC said the government would reject the opposition call for a probe, 
arguing that there have already been four inquiries and a new one will distract 
from British efforts to help stabilise the country. 
"It's very important, for instance, to find whether there are lessons that 
need to be applied to Afghanistan from what has happened in Iraq for the last 
years," William Hague, the Conservative spokesman on foreign affairs, told BBC 
radio. 
Britain has in the past year been increasing its deployment of soldiers to 
Afghanistan, where they are fighting a resurgent Taliban, while pledging to 
reduce troops in Iraq. 
Violence continued in Iraq on Monday with at least five people killed, 
including a senior central bank official. 
Khair al-Deen Sabri Ahmed, the bank's general manager in the northern Nineveh 
province, was shot dead by militants in the provincial capital of Mosul while on 
his way to work, said police Brigadier General Mohammed al-Waggaa. 
His two bodyguards were also gunned down, and two other people were killed 
elsewhere. 
A car bomb attack in the restive city of Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, on 
Monday led to the collapse of a key bridge, but no other details were 
immediately available, police said. 
On the domestic political front, Iraq's parliament voted to oust its 
outspoken Sunni speaker Mahmud Mashhadani after he allegedly ordered his 
bodyguards to beat up a Shiite MP.