|
U.S. seizes Military Airport in
Baghdad
Baghdad -
U.S. forces battled the tattered remnants of Iraq's army for control
of downtown Baghdad on Tuesday, crushing a counterattack and seizing a
military airport. Saddam Hussein's fate was unknown after an attempt
to kill him from the air.
Inside the capital to stay, some Army
units routed Iraqi fighters from a Republican Guard headquarters.
Others discovered a 12-room complex inside a cave, complete with white
marble floors, 10-foot ceilings and fluorescent lighting.
Marines battled snipers as they
fought deeper into the capital from the east. They seized the Rasheed
Airport and captured enough ammunition for an estimated 3,000 troops.
Ominously, they also took a prison where they found U.S. Army uniforms
and chemical weapons suits possibly belonging to American POWs.
The toll on civilians from four days
of urban combat was unknown. But the World Health Organization said
Baghdad's hospitals were running out of supplies to treat the burns,
shrapnel wounds and spinal injuries caused by the fighting.
Two cameramen were killed and at
least three others wounded when an American tank fired a round into
the Palestine Hotel, headquarters for hundreds of journalists.
Commanders said hostile fire had been coming from the building,
although the journalists said they witnessed none.
Separately, the Arab television
network al-Jazeera reported that a U.S. warplane attacked its office
on the banks of the Tigris River, killing a reporter.
On the city's northern side, Army
forces set a Republican Guard barracks ablaze. Warplanes flew their
bombing runs unchallenged, and smoke poured out of the Ministry of
Planning building in the city's center.
"We are continuing to maintain our
ability to conduct operations around and in Baghdad, and remove them
from regime control" said Capt. Frank Thorp, a spokesman at U.S.
Central Command.
State-run Iraqi television was
knocked off the air, depriving the regime of a key source of influence
over a population thought increasingly eager to help the forces of
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Four days after Americans first
penetrated the Baghdad outskirts, the city showed the effects of the
war. Civilians roamed the streets with Kalashnikov rifles in hand,
uncollected garbage piled up, and there were long lines at the reduced
number of gasoline stations still open.
There were also military losses for
the Americans.
An A-10 "Warthog" warplane was shot
down near Baghdad early in the day, possibly the first fixed-wing
aircraft downed by an Iraqi surface-to-air missile since the war
began. U.S. Central Command said the pilot ejected safely, was
recovered by ground forces and was in good condition.
A U.S. F-15E jet fighter also went
down early Monday and a search was under way for its two-man crew, the
military announced. Officials did not say whether the plane was shot
down or crashed accidentally.
Outside the capital, U.S. jets bombed
Iraqi positions near the northern city of Kirkuk, which remained under
control of the regime. In the southeastern city of Amarah, Marines
seized the airport and an ammunition dump without resistance.
In Basra, a southern city of 1.3
million people under British control at last, military officials
appointed a local sheik as a civilian commander, the first replacement
administration put into place anywhere in the country.
Postwar government was a key topic
for a summit meeting that brought President Bush and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair to Northern Ireland. Both men talked of a U.N.
role inside Iraq once the fighting is over, and sought to minimize
splits on who should govern and rebuild the country.
In the meantime, they trumpeted the
battlefield successes of the American and British forces, and said
Saddam's days were numbered.
"I don't know whether he survived," a
bombing attack on Monday, Bush said of the Iraqi leader. "The only
thing I know is that he's losing power."
Iraq's ambassador to the United
Nations said he believed Saddam had escaped the bombing of a site
where he and at least one son were believed to have been meeting on
Monday.
There was no direct evidence either
way, though.
The site remained in Iraqi hands,
although Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks said American troops hoped to get
there soon.
At the Pentagon, Maj. Gen. Stanley
McChrystal said eliminating Saddam would be significant, even if it
didn't cause the immediate end of the resistance. "He still controls
elements of the Special Republican Guard and death squads," he said.
Officials ordered the attack after
getting intelligence that Saddam was at the facility. Officials said
four bombs dropped by a single B-1B bomber, which was diverted in
flight from its original target. McChrystal said only 45 minutes
elapsed between the time the intelligence reached military officials
and when the bombs fell.
"I was never prouder to be in the Air
Force," said Lt. Col. Fred Swan, the bombardier aboard the warplane
that carried out the mission.
The precision-guided 2,000-pound
munitions left a smoking crater 60 feet deep in the upscale al-Mansour
section of western Baghdad. A young woman's severed head and torso and
a small boy's body were pulled from a crater made by the blasts, so
powerful they yanked up orange trees from their roots.
The bombing marked the second time
that Americans had targeted Saddam for death in the war. Bush
personally approved a missile strike on March 20 in Baghdad, the
opening salvo of the military campaign to topple his regime.
The Iraqi counterattack began shortly
after dawn when an estimated 500 Iraqis jumped off trucks and buses,
firing assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades at Army forces
holding a key intersection in the western part of the city.
Two A-10 warplanes were called in to
provide air cover, strafing building tops and directing 30 mm rapid
cannon fire against the Iraqis. "They're a beautiful thing," said
Capt. Philip Wolford, a company commander with the 3rd Infantry
Division, as the jets roared overhead.
He said at least 50 Iraqis were
killed in the attack, and the rest routed. Two U.S. soldiers were
reported wounded, one seriously, by snipers on nearby rooftops.
Marines combed the site of a
Republican Guard junior training facility, and came across 15 bunkers
full of rifles, anti-aircraft artillery, missile systems,
rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons. "It's the largest cache
of weapons since we crossed the border" from Kuwait, said Capt. Shaine
Grodack. He estimated the cache was big enough to arm a regimental
force — a few thousands soldiers.
--
Associated Press
Brudirect.com
|