US deaths in Iraq hit 2,500
The US Defence Department confirmed today that 2,500 US troops have died in the Iraq war since it began more than three years ago, even as President George Bush hopes a recent spate of good news will reverse the war's widespread unpopularity at home.
The latest death was announced as Congress was launching into a symbolic election-year debate over the war, with Republicans rallying against calls by some Democrats to set a timetable for the withdrawal of US troops.
While there were no details on who it was or where the 2,500th death occurred, it underscored the continuing violence in Iraq just after an upbeat Bush returned from a surprise visit to Baghdad determined that the tide was beginning to turn.
Some members of Congress have been calling for a timetable for the eventual withdrawal of the 127,000 troops from Iraq. Senator John Kerry planned to introduce an amendment to the Senate's annual military measure to redeploy US combat forces from Iraq by year's end, though Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, a potential 2008 presidential candidate, and other Democrats have opposed setting a rigid deadline.
According to the Pentagon totals, there have been 1,972 service members killed in action in Iraq, and another 528 died from other non-hostile causes. There also have been 18,490 troops wounded in action, including 8,501 who did not return to duty.
Bush has dismissed calls for a US withdrawal as election-year politics and has consistently refused to give a timetable or benchmark for success that would allow troops to come home.
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