US attack helicopters have killed 17 suspected al-Qaeda fighters near Baquba in the Iraqi
The military said on Friday that those killed had been moving around an Iraqi police patrol.
Thousands of
The operation, called Arrowhead Ripper, is one of the
Brigadier-General Mick Bednarek, commander of the operation, said: "It is house to house, block to block, street to street, sewer to sewer."
Bednarek estimated that several hundred al-Qaeda fighters were in Baquba and it would take a long time for US forces to force them out.
They will not go any further. They will fight to the death," he said.
There have been houses that were used by al-Qaeda as safe houses ... their entire structures rigged with massive explosives."
US and Iraqi forces have amassed in the area after a four-month-old US-led security crackdown in
The campaign is part of a broader offensive involving tens of thousands of US and Iraqi soldiers pushing on with simultaneous operations in
Torture house
Bednarek said
He said residents led soldiers to a house in the western part of the city that appeared to have been used to hold, torment and kill hostages.
When you walk into a room and you see blood trails, you see saws, you see drills, knives, in addition to weapons, that is not normal," he said.
One
Bednarek said the fight in Diyala also involved local Sunni Arabs who opposed the
He said this included fighters from the 1920 Revolution Brigade, a large Sunni Arab group that has fallen out with al-Qaeda over its killing of civilians.
US military commanders have increasingly begun arming and equipping Sunni Arab tribes in a controversial move to combat al-Qaeda under a model first used in the western Anbar province.
PHOTO CAPTION
US troops operating in Baquba