2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 2, 2004 NATION/WORLD 0 Tensions remain high in Fallujah NEWS IN BRIEF FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) - A U.S. Near Fallujah yesterday, insur- ance in a city that is home to militant tractors were already dead. WASHINGTON " !,l . "_ . r..L I L ._ .l TTC general vowed an overwhelming response to the murder and mutilation of four American contractors, but U.S. troops stayed out of this anti-American city yesterday and fearful Iraqi police took no action. Residents said they were ready to take on the Americans if they try to enter Fallujah, where schools and shops remained open a day after insurgents ambushed the contractors' SUVs and mobs strung up two of their charred corpses on an iron bridge spanning the Euphrates River. "We wish that they would try to enter Fallujah so we'd let hell break loose," Ahmed al-Dulaimi said. "We will not let any foreigner enter Fallu- jah," Sameer Sami said. "Yesterday's attack is proof of how much we hate the Americans." gents set off a bomb beside a U.S. military patrol, wounding three troops. Associated Press Television News footage showed smoke and fire pouring from an abandoned Humvee on the side of a road. In Ramadi, west of Fallujah, six Iraqi civilians died and four were wounded Wednesday evening in a car bombing at a market, said Lt. Col. Steve Murray, a coalition spokesman. Also yesterday, two explosions near a U.S.-escorted fuel convoy in Bagh- dad wounded at least one Iraqi. APTN footage showed U.S. soldiers putting a wounded person on a stretcher in an armored vehicle. U.S. troops stayed out of Fallujah yesterday despite pledges from a mili- tary commander to stamp out resist- forces who appear to enjoy the support - or at least acquiescence - of a sig- nificant part of the population. The city was a stronghold of support for Saddam Hussein, who was ousted in the invasion a year ago. "We will pacify that city. ... It will be at the time and place of our choos- ing," Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said, pledging to hunt down those who car- ried out Wednesday's killings, which were reminiscent of the televised abuse of the corpses of American soldiers in Somalia in 1993. Kimmitt promised a response that will be "deliberate" and "overwhelm- ing," and said troops didn't respond at the time for fear of ambushes or that the insurgents might use civilians as human shields. He also said U.S. forces took into account that the con- "We are not going to do a pell-mell rush into the city," he said. "A pre- emptive attack into the city could have taken a bad situation and made it even worse." Fallujah, 35 miles west of Baghdad, has been the scene of some of the worst violence since the beginning of the U.S.-led occupation a year ago. Last month, U.S. Marines took over authority of Fallujah and surrounding areas from the 82nd Airborne Division and conducted patrols that led to fierce firefights in the city. The Marines enter Fallujah only on days when they conduct a military operation in the city. The Marines were apparently not in Fallujah on Wednes- day when mobs dragged the mutilated and burned bodies of the four Ameri- cans through the streets. Congress continues debate over tax cuts Republicans conceded yesterday they would not resolve their dispute over limit- ing future tax cuts until after Congress' spring recess, abandoning hopes of finishing a $2.4 trillion budget this week. Lawmakers return to work later this month. "We're on ice," said House Budget Committee Chairman Jim Nussle, (R-Iowa.) A leading potential compromise would restrict tax cuts but exempt some expected to be enacted this year, said several participants speaking on condition of anonymity. It also seemed likely that constraints would last for less than the five years the Senate has approved. Details of both issues remained unresolved. Should a bargain along those lines be struck, it would mark a retreat by the White House and by GOP leaders who run the House and Senate. They have insisted against constraining tax reductions, which are the leading element of President Bush's strategy for strengthening the economy. "Philosophically we're opposed to limiting tax cuts," with the restrictions the Senate approved last month, House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) said in a brief interview. "But we're going to have to do the art of the possible, what's possible with the Senate." WASHINGTON List names nations with unfair trade policies The Bush administration cited 55 countries yesterday, from Angola to Vietnam, in its annual review of nations that have the worst trade barriers faced by U.S. exporters. The report, which also named three trading groups, is intended to guide the administration negotiating strategy in the coming year in attacking bar- riers that are causing the greatest harm to U.S. companies. If direct talks with a country do not produce results, then the administra- tion can bring a case against the country before international regulators with the World Trade Organization. A group of House Democrats yesterday sent a letter to President Bush, urging the administration to begin negotiations with five key trading partners - China, the European Union, Japan, South Korea and India - over such issues such as Japanese and South Korean barriers to American cars and auto parts and Euro- pean subsidies to airplane-maker Airbus. The Democrats complained that the Bush administration has failed to aggres- sively pursue unfair trade cases with other countries. 4 Bush signs bill °protecting fetuses WASHINGTON (AP) - Accompa- nied by grieving families, President Bush yesterday signed into law new protec- tions for the unborn that for the first time make it a separate federal crime to harm a fetus during an assault on the mother. "If the crime is murder and the unborn child's life ends, justice demands a full accounting under the law," Bush said before signing the measure, a major priority for many of the president's most loyal political sup- porters. "The suffering of two victims can never equal only one offense." Abortion-rights proponents, mean- while, called the measure an assault on reproductive freedom because it repre- sents the first recognition of federal legal rights for an embryo or fetus as a person separate from the woman. An exuberant audience of abortion foes cheered the president during his remarks, while a few of the family members who shared the East Room stage wiped away tears. Included in the group were the mother and stepfather of California murder victim Laci Peter- son, who was eight months pregnant when she died in December 2002 in a highly publicized case. Bush devoted a large share of his speech to the loss of "a beautiful young woman who was joyfully await- ing the arrival of a new son." Peterson's mother, Sharon Rocha, and stepfather, Ron Grantski, looked on. "All who knew Laci Peterson have mourned two deaths. And the law can- not look away and pretend there was just one," Bush said. q President Bush, seated center, signs the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 2004 during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House yesterday. Among the many people with him are several members of Congress and abortion opponents. pter s Ze% %' T 1/2 Sandwich & Soup ComboT 312 S. State Street - 611 Church Street - Michigan Union - 1st Floor *Available with select sandwiches only ** Not available at the Michigan Union Location of M Women's Glee Club Spring Concert "We're Every Woman" Saturday, April 3rd 6 & 9 p.m. $8 tickets at the door Museum of Art WASHINGTON Dems working hard to raise new money The Democratic Party finds itself in its most confident and comfortable financial position in years, though it still trails Republicans in almost every fund- raising category. The Democrats' efforts to whittle away at the GOP's spending advantage has been aided by presidential nominee-to-be John Kerry's decision to skip public financing and its spending limits, anti-Bush sentiment over the Iraq war, elimination of the party's debt, the formation of outside Democratic fund- raising groups and Howard Dean's Inter- net fund-raising explosion. "Everywhere I go I'll talk to people and they really feel we have a chance," said Tony Coelho, a Democratic strate- gist and Al Gore's campaign chairman in 2000. "They're going to have $200 million or more. But I think as long as we're around $100 million we'll be competitive, we'll get our message out." ANKARA, Turkey Fifty terror suspects arrested in Europe A sweep against a militant Turkish group netted more than 50 suspects in three European countries yesterday in what experts said could be the fruit of increased security cooperation before the Athens Olympics. The suspects were picked up in Turkey, Italy and Belgium after security forces there and in Germany and the Netherlands launched raids against hous- es used by the Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front, or DHKP-C, a Marxist group that calls for the over- throw of the Turkish government. Turkey has been pressing Europe to crack down on the DHKP-C and other groups, and the Europeans want Turkey to seal its porous borders so that Islam- ic militants do not sneak into their countries. TASHKENT, Uzbekistan Uzbekistan attacks blamed on al-Qaida A woman detonated a bomb yes- terday in central Uzbekistan, killing one person and critically injuring herself, and the government for the first time said al-Qaida was behind this week's attacks that left at least 44 dead, mostly alleged militants. Ilya Pyagay, the Interior Ministry's deputy anti-terrorism chief, told The Associated Press that.those behindthe unrest, including some fugitives, were followers of the strict Wahhabi strain of Islam believed to have inspired Osama bin Laden. "These are Wahhabis who belong to one of the branches of the international al-Qaida terror group,"he said. - Compiled from Daily wire reports WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.COM The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. E-mail letters to the editor to letters@michigandaily.com. 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