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Pentagon: No major Iraqi forces
remain
Washington -
Fierce fighting and air strikes have completely destroyed the ability
of Iraq's regular army and Republican Guard to mount conventional
fighting, and no major military forces remain in the country, the
Pentagon said Friday.
Though parts of forces and pockets of
resistance remain, military officials were detecting no indications of
any command and control ability on the part of Saddam Hussein's
forces, nor any communication between remnants of forces, a Defense
Department official said.
"There is no question the regime
has lost control and that represents a good turning point for the
people of Iraq," presidential spokesman Ari Fleischer said.
"The regime is gone."
He cautioned, however, there may be
tough fighting before Iraq is secured. "There may be more
wounded, more dead and that tempers the president's reaction."
The assessment follows the Pentagon's
aggressive targeting Thursday of remaining Iraqi army units in the
northern part of the country.
"They are the last significant
formations on the battlefield that we're aware of," Maj. Gen.
Stanley McChrystal, vice director of the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of
Staff, told a Pentagon news conference Thursday.
He said the Iraqi forces' capability
has dropped significantly "both from casualties and from people
just leaving the battlefield."
On Friday, officials said that Ba'ath
Party officials had either fled or gone underground and that there
were no clues on the whereabouts of Saddam, his sons or any other
regime leadership.
A Pentagon official said there were a
few thousand Special Republican Guard remaining in the north,
including in the area of Tikrit and Bayji some 25 miles north, but
"no obvious significant forces in Tikrit," Saddam's
birthplace and a spot where some of his remaining backers are believed
to be taking refuge.
At U.S. Central Command headquarters
in Qatar, officials said they had evidence that broken units and
stranded soldiers were "coalescing" in the Tikrit area
trying to make a last stand. Though there is no major U.S. ground
force in the north of Iraq, coalition airstrikes have been pounding
the area regularly and coalition special forces have infiltrated the
city, officials have said.
Meanwhile, U.S. military forces were
working to cut off traffic between Iraq and Syria, which Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has accused repeatedly of helping
Saddam's regime.
American special operations forces
have set up roadblocks along routes to Syria and are searching for
fleeing members of the Iraqi regime or fighters and equipment coming
in from Syria, a military official said. U.S. aircraft are also
watching the routes, and they attacked Iraqi positions near the Syrian
border Thursday.
Rumsfeld has accused Syria of
shipping night vision goggles and other unspecified military equipment
to Iraq and receiving fleeing officials of Saddam's regime or their
relatives. He warned Damascus to stop doing both.
"Senior regime people are moving
out of Iraq into Syria, and Syria is continuing to send things into
Iraq," Rumsfeld said Wednesday. "We find it notably
unhelpful."
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz echoed those sentiments Thursday in an appearance before the
Senate Armed Services Committee.
"The Syrians are behaving
badly," he told senators. "They need to be reminded of that
and if they continue then we need to think about what our policy is
with respect to a country that harbors terrorists, or harbors war
criminals, or was in recent times shipping things to Iraq."
Syrian officials have denied sending
military goods into Iraq but they have been silent on whether they are
helping Iraqi officials escape. Syria, which joined in the coalition
to eject Iraq from Kuwait in the 1991 Gulf War, has strongly
criticized the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. -- Associated Press
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