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U.S. troops naturalized in Iraq
Los Angeles Times
Developments in Iraq U.S. casualties: A U.S. soldier died in Nineveh province in northwestern Iraq when his helicopter was shot down. In southern Baghdad, another soldier was killed, the military announced, bringing to at least 3,586 the number of U.S. troops killed in the Iraq war.
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Bush defends war: Speaking to the 167th Airlift Wing of the West Virginia National Guard, President Bush equated the war in Iraq on Wednesday with the U.S. war for independence, comparing the military to those revolutionaries who "dropped their pitchforks and picked up their muskets to fight for liberty."
Oil law stalls: A day after a proposed law covering the country's oil industry was introduced in Parliament, an influential group of Sunni Muslim clerics, the Association of Muslim Scholars, issued a fatwa, or religious edict, forbidding legislators from voting for it.
Seattle Times news services
BAGHDAD — U.S. soldiers and Marines filed into the marble hall of Saddam Hussein's former Al Faw Palace on Independence Day as foreigners at home as well as here. But they left the room as American citizens.
Standing under a glittering chandelier, 161 service members took the oath of citizenship Wednesday, the largest group to be naturalized at once in Iraq since the conflict began in March 2003. The mostly young, mostly male troops with last names such as Toledo and Serrano stitched across the back of their caps vowed to "support and defend the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America against all enemies," an abstract promise with a deeper meaning here.
"You chose to endure the same sacrifices as your fellow comrades in arms to preserve the freedom of a land that was not yet fully yours," Army Gen. David Petraeus, military commander in Iraq, told the gathering in Baghdad. "It is the greatest of honors to soldier with you."
About 800 personnel filled the room, including 585 service members re-enlisting as part of the ceremony, with onlookers straining to see from crowded balconies and stairwells. Among them were Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., both veterans who flew in for the occasion.
Near the front of the hall, Pfc. Mark Ayson, with a black brace on his wrist and an M-4 rifle slung across his back, had tears in his eyes.
Ayson, 26, of Pensacola, Fla., was born in the Philippines and immigrated to the U.S. with his family at age 8. Less than a week before the ceremony, he was riding in a Humvee that was hit by a copper-plated explosive in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Adhamiya. Ayson escaped with two damaged eardrums, shrapnel in his right leg and a bruised left wrist. He was back to work within 72 hours.
Ayson said the experience underlines why he joined the Army, came to Iraq nearly a year ago and became a citizen Wednesday.
"We're fighting for a cause," he said.
U.S. immigration officials swore in 325 service members as citizens during ceremonies across Iraq on Wednesday. As of May, 1,186 service members had become citizens in Iraq since the beginning of the conflict, according to the Defense Department.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company

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