Story Highlights• U.S. says intelligence said target was al Qaeda safehouse
• Sunni lawmaker says his office was attacked based on false intelligence
• Shiite-led government wants him silenced, Sunni says
• Lawmaker says guards, neighbor family killed
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- The U.S. military said it raided an al Qaeda safehouse in Iraq on Monday, killing six terrorists and capturing a seventh.
A Sunni lawmaker disputed the account, however, saying the raid was on his Baghdad office and that those killed included two of his guards and a family of four that lived next door.
Salih al-Mutlaq said the raid was based on false information from his enemies in an effort to "settle scores with me" because of his criticism of the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government.
"The government and militias attached to it provided the U.S. military with misleading information to settle scores with me because I do not agree with their sectarian policies and the way the country is being run," he said.
According to the U.S. military, as coalition forces moved in on a building intelligence indicated was being used as a possible safe house for al Qaeda in Iraq, they came under heavy fire from the rooftops of several nearby buildings and returned fire, killing two terrorists.
One of those buildings was later identified as belonging to al-Mutlaq, chairman of the Iraqi National Dialogue Council, the military said.
more:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/01/01/iraq.main/index.html?section=cnn_latest