US raid destroys hospital in rebel-held city of Fallujah

US forces hit Iraq's rebel stronghold of Fallujah with the fiercest air and ground bombardment in months, as insurgents struck…

US forces hit Iraq's rebel stronghold of Fallujah with the fiercest air and ground bombardment in months, as insurgents struck back on Saturday with attacks that killed 34 people in Samarra.

The Fallujah strikes, before a threatened major assault on Saddam Hussein loyalists and militants allied to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, destroyed a hospital, a medical warehouse and dozens of homes, dazed residents said after a sleepless night.

Hospital staff said ambulances had been unable to go out as the city shook to explosions. Later, they collected two dead and seven wounded civilians, among them women and children.

With a US-led offensive on Fallujah apparently imminent, rebels hit back with attacks in Samarra, Baghdad, Ramadi, another rebel-held city to be included in any Falluja offensive.

READ MORE

The deadliest assaults were in Samarra, where a suicide car bomber rammed into a police station and three car bombs exploded elsewhere in the city. Insurgents also attacked three other police stations.

Police said the onslaught killed 34 people, including 19 Iraqi police, two Iraqi National Guards, two members of an Iraqi Rapid Reaction Force and 11 civilians. They said 43 people had been wounded, 28 of them members of the security forces.

"I saw a dead National Guard burning on the ground," said one witness after the first bombings.

"I saw a car trying to reach the town hall," said bookshop owner Mohammed Ahmed. "When police stopped it, it exploded."

US and Iraqi forces stormed Samarra a month ago to dislodge rebels in what was seen as a prelude to the full-scale assault rebel-held areas ahead of January elections.

The latest attacks showed that Samarra is far from pacified.