Updated

The U.S. military reported Wednesday that 9 soldiers and 1 Marine were killed in roadside bombings and combat in and around Baghdad, as sectarian violence continued to rip through Iraq.

A provincial police intelligence chief also was killed in a roadside bombing in southern Iraq early Wednesday, police said.

The 10 U.S. casualties raised to 69 the number of American troops killed in Iraq in October.

Four U.S. soldiers died when a roadside bomb struck their vehicle at about early Tuesday morning west of Baghdad, the military said in a brief statement.

Three soldiers attached to Task Force Lightning, assigned to the 3rd Heavy Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, were killed and one wounded during combat Tuesday in Diyala province east of Baghdad.

Another soldier was killed Tuesday morning when suspected insurgents attacked his patrol in northern Baghdad, and one more soldier died in another roadside bombing north of the capital early in the afternoon.

A Marine assigned to Regimental Combat Team 7 also died from injuries sustained during fighting Tuesday in the western province of Anbar, a hotbed of the insurgency, according to the military.

CountryWatch: Iraq

Violence also claimed the head of intelligence for the Maysan provincial police force, Ali Qassim al-Tamimi, who was killed early Wednesday along with four bodyguards by a bomb planted on the main highway between the cities of Amarah and Basra, Maysan police Capt. Hussein Karim said.

A pair of car bombs exploded in Baghdad Wednesday morning, injuring at least eight people, police reported.

Elsewhere, local Sunni and Shiite leaders were meeting in an attempt to resolve the fate of more than 40 people missing since their 13-car convoy was waylaid at a checkpoint on Sunday outside Balad, where almost 100 people were killed in five days of sectarian fighting.

Police said the hijacked cars had been diverted to the nearby Shiite militant stronghold of al-Nebaiyi on Balad's outskirts.

For the U.S. military, October's death toll is on a pace that, if continued, would make the month the deadliest for coalition forces since January 2005, when 107 U.S. troops died. The war's deadliest month for U.S. forces was Nov. 2004, when 137 troops died. At least 2,780 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The fighting in Balad forced U.S. forces to return to patrolling the streets of the predominantly Shiite city after Iraq's best-trained soldiers proved unable to stem a series of revenge killings sparked by the murder on Friday of 17 Shiite construction workers. The U.S. military had turned over control of the surrounding province north of Baghdad to Iraq's 4th Army a month ago, and American forces apparently did not redeploy there until Monday, when the worst of the bloodletting had ended.

Minority Sunnis, who absorbed most of the brutality in the city of 80,000 people, have been fleeing across the Tigris River in small boats.

On the outskirts of the city, two fuel trucks were attacked and burned and Shiite militiamen clashed with residents of Duluiyah, a predominantly Sunni city on the east bank of the Tigris. Militants were blocking food and fuel trucks from entering Duluiyah.

The conflict between Shiites and Sunnis in the Balad area illustrates the threat to the region should Iraq move toward dividing into three federal states — controlled by Shiites in the south, Sunnis in the center and Kurds in the north.

A government statement said Wednesday that a much-anticipated Iraqi national reconciliation conference aimed at building political consensus and stemming spiraling sectarian violence in the country will be held Nov. 4.

The conference was originally scheduled to start Oct. 20, but had been indefinitely postponed for unspecified "emergency reasons."

The postponement reflected the upheaval that worsening violence has wrought on efforts to stabilize the government and curb bloodshed. That threatened to damage the administration of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, which took office just over four months ago vowing to implement a 24-point National Reconciliation plan to heal the nation's severe political wounds.

Wednesday's statement said the conference was postponed because of organizational snags, denying what it said were Western and Arab media reports suggesting the delay was caused by disputes over the gathering. It did not elaborate.

Al-Maliki, at the helm of what is formally termed a national unity government, presented national reconciliation plan within days of taking office in May but has been unable to effectively implement any of its stipulations.

In the months since he came to power, Iraq has witnessed the surge in killings between Sunni and Shiite Muslim groups alongside increasingly bitter disputes among his coalition's partners over plans to adopt a federal system for the country's 18 provinces.

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