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Cheering crowds reveled in a barbaric orgy yesterday, slaughtering four Americans with grenades and dragging their charred and dismembered bodies through the streets of Fallujah before hanging them from lampposts.
"Yes to Islam. We make Fallujah the graveyard of the Americans," onlookers shouted, according to a witness who arrived shortly after the killings but in time to see the grisly aftermath.
"It was as if they had turned a piece of Iraq into a piece of hell," said the witness, Salih al-Qaisi, 31.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the United States condemns these "horrific, despicable attacks" in the "strongest possible terms."
"The stakes are high in Iraq, and this is a time of testing," Mr. McClellan said. "The enemies of freedom, the enemies of the Iraqi people, are trying to shake our will, but they cannot. We will not be intimidated."
The four victims were civilian contractors for the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority, U.S. officials in Baghdad said last night. Their names were not released pending notification of families.
However, early evidence indicated they worked for Blackwater Security Consulting, a company based in Moyock, N.C., the company said in a statement. The security firm hires former military members from the United States and other countries to provide security training and guard services. In Iraq, the company was hired by the Pentagon to provide security for convoys that delivered food in the Fallujah area, the company statement said.
The men, armed and wearing flak jackets, were ambushed with grenades as they drove in two sport utility vehicles past a popular restaurant in downtown Fallujah, about 50 yards from the mayor's office.
Fallujah, a Sunni Muslim city about 30 miles west of Baghdad, the capital, has been the scene of almost daily gunbattles between coalition forces and anticoalition insurgents.
In another incident 12 miles away, five U.S. soldiers died when their vehicle ran over a bomb planted along the roadway, making for one of the bloodiest days for coalition forces since a U.S. Black Hawk helicopter was shot down near Fallujah in January, killing the nine soldiers on board.









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