American and Iraqi troops pushing through a desolate area of Iraq's Sunni 
Arab heartland rounded up dozens more suspected insurgents, including alleged 
killers of a television journalist, U.S. and Iraqi officials said Saturday. 
 
 
   Iraqi army soldier 
 wait to transfer the bodies of suspects to an ambulance after a raid near 
 Baqouba, 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, 
 March 18, 2006. Iraqi army soldiers on Saturday raided a house, after a 
 fierce gunbattle with unidentified gunmen, killing two gunmen, wounding 
 one and arrested 18 suspect, including a Jordanian national. A large cache 
 of ammunition, RPGs, roadside bombs and CDs of clerics giving fatwas to 
 kill Iraqi police and Army members, were also recovered, police said. 
 [AP] | 
The three-day-old sweep through villages 60 miles north of Baghdad stirred 
growing unease among leading Sunnis. One called it a needless "escalation" at a 
time of difficult negotiations over forming a broad-based government 
representing all of Iraq's communities. 
In Baghdad, meanwhile, a dozen more bodies were found as a shadowy war of 
Shiite-Sunni reprisals went on. And Shiite Muslim pilgrims heading to the holy 
city of Karbala again came under attack, with a roadside bomb killing one and 
wounding five. 
Reports of violence came from elsewhere as well: an oil tanker driver shot 
dead 50 miles southeast of Baghdad, a tribal sheik slain 30 miles west of the 
capital, a car bombing near a U.S. base in the northern city of Tal Afar in 
which the suicide driver was the only casualty. 
Visiting Baghdad, British Defense Secretary John Reid expressed concern about 
"a greater degree of sectarian violence," but said he did not believe civil war 
was imminent. "The most urgent need at the moment is the speedy formation of a 
government of national unity," he said. 
In a U.S. radio address the day before the third anniversary of the 
U.S.-British invasion, President Bush said the violence in Iraq "has created a 
new sense of urgency" among Iraqi leaders to form such a government. 
Those leaders ¡ª representatives of the squabbling Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish 
blocs in Iraq's new parliament ¡ª were taking a break from negotiations to 
observe Monday's major Shiite holiday and Tuesday's Kurdish new year. 
They are deadlocked over how to apportion the most powerful jobs in the new 
government, as minority factions seek to limit domination by Iraq's Shiite 
majority. 
In the counterinsurgency sweep, through a 100-square-mile area of semidesert 
northeast of the Tigris River town of Samarra, Iraqi soldiers and units of the 
101st Airborne Division had detained about 80 suspected insurgents as of 
Saturday, said Lt. Col. Edward S. Loomis, a U.S. spokesman. Seventeen were 
released after questioning, he said. 
Among those detained were six people, not further identified, allegedly 
responsible for the March 11 killing of Amjad Hameed, a journalist for the Iraqi 
television network al-Iraqiya, and his driver, the interim Iraqi government 
said.