A funeral for those reportedly killed in the US raid was held in
Ramadi
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The US military has denied allegations that its forces in Iraq killed
dozens of people celebrating a marriage in the west of the country.
Initial reports suggested that a wedding party near the Syrian border was
the target of a US air strike.
A US military spokesman confirmed that about 40 people had been killed in
the area - but said US forces had targeted a safe house used by foreign
fighters.
He said coalition forces had retaliated after coming under attack.
The incident occurred late on Tuesday at the village of Makr al-Deeb,
near the border town of Qaim.
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They [Americans] hit two homes where the wedding was being held
and then they levelled the whole village
Iraqi witness
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"We took hostile fire and we returned fire," said Brigadier General Mark
Kimmitt, deputy director of operations for the US military in Iraq.
He said there were no indications that the victims of the attack were
part of a wedding party.
He added that a large amount of money, Syrian passports and satellite
communications equipment had been found at the site of the attack.
The US, which is facing ongoing insurgency in Iraq, has long said that
foreign fighters are entering the country from Syria.
Footage
Arab TV channel al-Arabiya, quoting eyewitnesses, said a frontier village
was attacked by helicopter gunships before dawn.
The incident apparently happened after wedding guests in the village
started firing in the air in celebration, the report said.
One man told al-Arabiya: "The US planes dropped more than 100 bombs on
us."
"They hit two homes where the wedding was being held and then they
levelled the whole village."
Television pictures from Makr al-Deeb show many bodies being taken for
burial, the dead included young children.
The BBC's Nick Childs in Washington says that right or wrong, those
reports could be hugely damaging to the US-led coalition.
US forces have been accused before of killing innocent people in both
Iraq and Afghanistan after mistaking the celebratory gunfire at wedding
parties - traditional in many Arab countries - for attacks on them.
In 2002, nearly 50 people at a wedding in Afghanistan were killed in a US
air strike.