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War: Latest News

'CHEMICAL PLANT FOUND'
Skynews
Monday March 24, 2003

A huge chemical weapons factory has been found in Iraq, according to the Pentagon.

The facility was found in Najaf, around 225 miles south of Baghdad, US military officials say.


The General in charge of the factory has been arrested and is being questioned, the Pentagon said.

Sky News Foreign Affairs expert Tim Marshal said if the claims are substantiated they will in part vindicate President Bush and Prime Minister Blair.

They have argued the case for war against Iraq on the grounds that Saddam Hussein had banned weapons of mass destruction, including chemical and biological weapons.

The Iraqi regime has always denied this and UN weapons inspectors sent back into the country at the end of last year failed to find any evidence to suggest otherwise.
 
Specially Trained Iraqis Lead Resistance

By JOHN SOLOMON
The Associated Press
Sunday, March 23, 2003; 7:21 PM


Specially trained paramilitary guerrillas and Saddam Hussein's security forces are leading the stiffest resistance to the U.S.-led invasion, trying to keep Iraqi soldiers from surrendering and organizing battlefield tricks that have inflicted casualties, U.S. and British officials said Sunday.

Members of the Fedayeen Saddam are suspected of having organized battlefield ruses using civilian clothes and cars and fake surrenders of Iraqi soldiers that drew in U.S. forces to be attacked in places like An Nasiriyah and Umm Qasr, the officials said.

The Fedayeen are elite inner-circle soldiers totaling about 15,000 that report directly to one of Saddam's sons. U.S. intelligence believes they were dispatched from their strongholds in the Baghdad area to outlying areas over the last few weeks to embolden regular Iraqi troops, the officials said, like others speaking on condition of anonymity.

Intelligence indicates "they are there to enforce loyalty and to make troops more effective and keep them from defecting," one senior U.S. official said.

Officials said the Fedayeen and Saddam's personal security force, known as the Special Security Organization, have been behind the stiffest resistance coalition troops have encountered as they raced from Kuwait through the south toward Baghdad.

"The majority of the resistance we have faced so far comes from Saddam's Special Security Organization and the Saddam Fedayeen," said Peter Wall, chief of staff to the British military contingent in the the U.S.-led coalition. "These are men who know that they will have no role in the building of a new Iraq and they have no future."

The role of the Fedayeen came as U.S. military leaders cautioned Sunday that the toughest days of the war are still ahead even as coalition forces raced to within 100 miles of Baghdad.

The coalition suffered some of their toughest episodes of the war so far as a handful of American soldiers were taken prisoner, a U.S. Patriot missile accidentally downed a British warplane and an American soldier attacked his own comrades with a grenade.

"The hardest part is yet to come," said Air Force Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

U.S. forces were preparing to engage the elite Iraqi Republican Guard as they closed in on Baghdad, and concerns grew about the possibility of a chemical or biological attacks. "The potential for the use of weapons of mass destruction, it grows as we get closer to Baghdad," Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said.

As of Sunday, no such weapons were used or found, officials said. "I have no doubt that we'll find weapons of mass destruction, but you shouldn't think it's going to happen tomorrow," Abizaid told a news conference at command headquarters in Qatar.

Coalition forces on Sunday attacked targets to the north and west of Baghdad, including communications nodes, military leadership targets and Iraqi commando units, Abizaid said. Coalition forces were working in and around several airfields in western Iraq where Iraq launched missiles against Israel in the 1991 Gulf War.

The Fedayeen are specially trained in guerilla warfare and paramilitary tactics and in years past have been used by Saddam's regime to oppress internal foes. The force has been commanded by Odai Hussein, Saddam's eldest son.

The battlefriend ruses that led to U.S. casualties on Sunday, such as the use of civilian disguise and fake surrenders, are signature tactics of the Fedayeen, a senior U.S. military official said Sunday.

"They're specialists in this form of warfare, and we've seen them dress in civilian clothing or drive civilian vehicles," the official said. He said military planners were already making adjustments to ensure U.S. forces can detect and repel such tactics.

Earlier this month, U.S. officials claimed Fedayeen were acquiring military uniforms "identical down to the last detail" to those worn by American and British forces and planned to use them to shift blame for atrocities.

"Saddam intends to issue these uniforms to Fedayeen Saddam troops who would wear them when conducting reprisals against the Iraqi people so that they could pass the atrocities off as the work of the United States and the United Kingdom," Jim Wilkinson, director of strategic communication at Central Command.

Rumsfeld said various ploys used by the Iraqis won't work, such as writing messages on the roofs of some buildings saying that civilian "human shields" were inside. "We are not going to be deterred at all," Rumsfeld said.

Rumsfeld noted that while Saddam can order the use of chemical or biological weapons, it is up to his military to carry it out.

"We have focused extensively on the military people that he would have to persuade to do it, and let them know in no uncertain terms that they must not do it, and if they do do it, they will be hunted down and punished," Rumsfeld said.

Rumsfeld said that "sure" some things have gone wrong in the past five days, including the shooting down of the British plane. Myers said elaborate electronic procedures for identifying friendly aircraft "obviously ... didn't work."

© 2003 The Associated Press
 
Chemical weapons 'found'

themercury
24mar03

A HUGE chemical weapons factory has reportedly been found by allied forces operating near An Najaf, 150km south of Baghdad.

Caroline Glick, a journalist with the respected Israeli daily The Jerusalem Post, reported the story from her "embedded" position with the 3rd Infantry Division.

She says the troops found a huge 100-acre complex, lined with sheet metal and surrounded by an electrical fence.

"It wasn't immediately clear exactly which chemicals were being produced here, but clearly the Iraqis tried to camouflage the facility so it could not be photographed aerially, by swathing it in sand-cast walls to make it look like the surrounding desert," her report says.

At a news conference at Central Command this morning, US Lt. Gen. John Abizaid refused to confirm the find.

"I'm not going to confirm that report, but we have one or two generals officers who are providing us with information," he said.

But Fox News Channel's Pentagon reporter says he has confirmed the report with an unnamed senior Pentagon source.
 
here is a quick fact that most of you probably dont know.

Jimmy Carter made it against Cia policy to take part in political assasinations I am not to sure of the year this passed.

anyways as a result Saddam is still alive. In 1995 the cia was in country with a rebel force on their side,the kurds I believe and had it all set up to take him out,but because of this policy they couldnt.
 
anyways as a result Saddam is still alive. In 1995 the cia was in country with a rebel force on their side,the kurds I believe and had it all set up to take him out,but because of this policy they couldnt.

They did not have enough numbers for it to work! The plan was leaked back to Saddam anyways and well let's just say a lot of men ended up six feet under!
 
no americans ended up dead as a result,they pulled out and left the people who were helping them to fend for themselves.

I think it would have been easy at the time to snipe his ass off
 
The Canadian Oak said:

anyways as a result Saddam is still alive. In 1995 the cia was in country with a rebel force on their side,the kurds I believe and had it all set up to take him out,but because of this policy they couldnt.

Here's a fact most don't know... this is an Ececutive Order which can be cancelled by an American President.
 
The Canadian Oak said:
here is a quick fact that most of you probably dont know.

Jimmy Carter made it against Cia policy to take part in political assasinations I am not to sure of the year this passed.

anyways as a result Saddam is still alive. In 1995 the cia was in country with a rebel force on their side,the kurds I believe and had it all set up to take him out,but because of this policy they couldnt.

They are all excuses for the CIA and NSC being a bunch of bumbling idiots.

I can't believ with all the intelligence, and mind-boggling technology that they haven't been able to take him out.......or find Bin Laden for that matter.

The CIA and NSC should be disbanded for being a bunch of incompetent fucks.

They should be replaced with former members of Russia's KGB to get the job done properly.
 
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