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War: Latest News

Dozens killed as US special forces overrun 'terrorist' camps
By Patrick Cockburn in Sherawa, northern Iraq
31 March 2003


US special forces working with Kurdish militia have over-run the base camps of Ansar al-Islam, a small Kurdish Islamic group which achieved sudden notoriety when the US administration claimed it was linked both to al-Qa'ida and Saddam Hussein.

About 100 US Special Forces and 6,000 Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) peshmerga started their attack last Friday against an Ansar force of 700, which for several years has occupied a narrow wedge of hills between the eastern Kurdish city of Halabja and the Iranian border.

Barham Salih, the prime minister of PUK-controlled eastern Kurdistan, said: "It was a very tough battle. You're talking about a bunch of terrorists who are very well-trained and well-equipped." He said 17 of his men and up to 150 Ansar militants were killed.

Ansar has been a thorn in the side of the PUK government, fiercely defending its handful of villages close to the border with Iran, but in Kurdish politics it was a small player.

It came to international attention when Colin Powell, the US Secretary of State, claimed before the UN Security Council that Ansar had connections simultaneously to al-Qa'ida and Baghdad. But it was always an unlikely alliance.

General Powell said an al-Qa'ida member called Abu Musab Zarqawi had established a "poison and explosive training factory" on Ansar territory. He also said the Iraqi government had "an agent in the most senior levels of Ansar".

The claim that Ansar was linked to al-Qa'ida was encouraged by the PUK, which wanted to get rid of a local irritant, and could point to some 100 Arabs within the group who had previously been in Afghanistan. But Mr Salih said Ansar had no link to Baghdad because the Iraqi Arabs with the group were clearly anti-Saddam Hussein.

In the few villages it held, Ansar had instituted an Islamic regime similar to that of the Taliban in Afghanistan where television, dancing, girls' schools and women appearing without a veil were prohibited. There was little firm evidence, however, that Ansar was connected to al Qa'ida.

The site alleged to have been the poison factory turned out to be controlled by another Islamic group.

Mullah Krekar, the leader of Ansar, in exile in Norway, denied any link with President Saddam, whom he frequently denounced. "As a Kurdish man I believe he is our enemy," he said. He also denied that a senior Ansar Iraqi Arab commander called Abu Wa'el was linked to Iraqi intelligence, describing him as "a toothless diabetic, too old feeble to harm anyone".

Ansar could not have survived without Iranian support, probably channelled through the Revolutionary Guards just across the Iranian border. In recent months, however, aid has been reduced or cut off because Iran fears complications with the US.

In an authoritative report on Ansar published earlier in the year, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group said prophetically: "Should Ansar lose its Iranian sponsor, it would be deprived of its critical fall-back area across the border, and in the face of concerted PUK assault, possibly with US assistance, it would not be likely to survive as a visible fighting force."

Meanwhile on the front line north of Kirkuk, Iraqi forces have fallen back seven or eight miles to a ridge defending the city. The withdrawal, completed over the weekend, was carefully planned and retreating troops left nothing in their bunkers. Troops to the east of Kirkuk also pulled back to less exposed positions nearer the city.
 
Iraqis Moving More Troops to Guard Baghdad From South

The New York Times
By JOHN BRODER
Mon, Mar 31, 2003

CAMP SALIYA, Qatar, March 31 - American ground units engaged Iraqi Republican Guards this morning near the town of Najaf, about 70 miles south of Baghdad, in a sharp armor and artillery exchange, field commanders reported.

The skirmishes do not suggest that coalition forces are pressing forward toward Baghdad, officers here said, but rather are engaging the Iraqis when the opportunity arises.

Commanders hope to weaken the Republican Guard divisions ringing Baghdad with ground and air assaults in preparation for a major offensive that may be days or weeks away.

But the assaults come as reports emerged that Iraq (news - web sites) is moving to reinforce Republican Guards in the south.

The probing American attacks were not the opening act of the battle for Baghdad, but were nonetheless intended to shape the coming battle and re-establish allied momentum. American commanders have made no secret of their determination to keep the pressure on Saddam Hussein (news - web sites).

``We just want to maintain the initiative,'' said Maj. Michael G. Birmingham, spokesman for the Third Infantry Division. ``We don't want to dig in our heels here.''

A senior American military officer at Central Command headquarters said that Iraq appears to be moving significant numbers of Republican Guard troops from the Nebuchadnezzar Division and other units based north of Baghdad to reinforce troops south of the city. Units of the Third Infantry Division have been engaged with elements of the Medina Division in and around Karbala, southwest of the capital, for the past several days.

Officials here believe that the Iraqi military is strengthening the Medina Division in preparation for a major battle with American ground forces in coming days. The Iraqi troops are not moving in organized formations, officials said, but rather in small convoys of military and civilian vehicles.

The Medina has been subjected to punishing air attacks since Saturday, including strikes from B-1, B-2 and B-52 heavy bombers using precision-guided bombs, the officer said. The Army is also hitting the division's troops and equipment with artillery and attack helicopters.

``We're hitting the Medina hard,'' he said. But he did not offer an estimate of how badly the division's fighting strength had been degraded.

Officials said they had detected the southward movement of troops from the Iraq Division, also based north of Baghdad. It was not clear whether these troops were also aiming to join up with the Medina.

A third Iraqi Republican Guard division, now based near the city of Tikrit, Mr. Hussein's hometown, has also begun to move southward toward Baghdad.

``Some of them have moved down, but not all the way down,'' the officer said.

The Medina division and its reinforcements are placing men and equipment in and around the cities of Karbala and Babylon, home to many historical artifacts and sites held holy by the Shia sect of Islam. The deployment raises the possibility that American efforts to dislodge them will cause many civilian casualties and damage to important cultural treasures.

As the ground action continued sporadically across a wide swath of territory south and west of Baghdad, the aerial bombardment of the capital intensified.

United States Air Force officials said that coalition aircraft had flown 1,800 sorties Sunday and into this morning. More than half of the strikes were directed at three Republican Guard units outside Baghdad, while heavy bombing continued aimed at targets in and around the city.

The Air Force said that waves of B-1, B-2 and B-52 heavy bombers struck targets in Baghdad, including communications facilities and suspected leadership compounds. It was the first time the three long-range bombers had been joined in a single squadron for attack, the Air Force said.

Among the targets was a presidential palace used by Mr. Hussein's son Qusay, who has been charged with the defense of Baghdad. A Tomahawk cruise missile also struck the Iraqi Information Ministry, which was hit over the weekend, the Air Force said today. Observers in Baghdad said the building and nearby structures were in flames early this morning.

American B-52's bombers also struck north of the capital, near Mosul and Kirkuk, areas contested by Iraqis and Kurds.

In other fighting around Najaf and Samawa, soldiers from the Army's 82nd Airborne Division killed about 100 ``terror squad members,'' according to Central Command officials here. The United States troops took 50 Iraqi troops prisoner, officials said.

Top Pentagon (news - web sites) and Central Command officials denied that allied forces would ``pause'' before moving on to Baghdad, but reinforcements were sent to secure the town of Nasiriya and to protect supply lines that now snake more than 300 miles north from American bases in Kuwait.

Heavy armor units are en route to the theater from the United States and are not expected to be in position to fight for several weeks.

Marines raided the town of Shatra, about 20 miles north of Nasiriya, in hopes of locating leaders of the Iraqi forces battling American units and supply lines.

Marine officers told a Reuters correspondent traveling with the unit that local informants had told them that Ali Hassan al-Majid, one of Mr. Hussein's most trusted commanders, was directing the resistance from Shatra.

Mr. al-Majid is known as ''Chemical Ali'' because he directed the poison gas attacks against Kurdish villagers in 1988.

British forces trying to quash resistance by Iraqi militiamen in and around Basra moved into the village of Abu al-Qassib south of Basra after a day-long battle Sunday, British authorities said today.

The troops said they captured 200 Iraqi soldiers and five officers, while seven British soldiers were wounded in what an American officer said today was a mistaken attack by an United States ground attack plane on a British armored vehicle.

Momentum has been stalled in recent days by fierce attacks on allied supply lines. This has led to recriminations over whether allied commanders misjudged the willingness of Mr. Hussein's loyalists to resist and underestimated the size of the armed force needed to subdue them.

The American commander in the region, Gen. Tommy R. Franks, spoke publicly on Sunday in defense of his war plan, as did two of his superiors, Gen. Richard B. Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff, and Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld.

General Franks said that his war strategy was being misperceived by ``pundits'' who believe ''we are in an operational pause.''

``It's simply not the case,'' General Franks said Sunday at his headquarters in Doha, Qatar. ``There is a continuity of operations in this plan. That continuity has been seen. It will be seen in the days ahead.''

But despite General Franks' expression of confidence, the situation in Iraq appeared tense. The war continued to unfold as a far more complex tapestry than expected, with dispersed engagements, political and psychological warfare against Saddam's government, mobilization to deliver aid in the South, frenetic diplomacy and shifting explanations at home about the duration and cost of the war.

There was no sign of any crumbling of the Hussein government, which vowed a wave of suicide bombings against American troops.

After days of consolidation, there appeared to be some momentum on Sunday for the allied forces. To the east, thousands of soldiers from the First Marine Division moved north from their static lines to engage Iraqi forces in towns along the highway approach to Baghdad, military officials said.

Brig. Gen. John Kelly, the division's assistant commander, described those operations as ``liberation tactics'' designed to break the hold of officials of Mr. Hussein's Baath Party who are still mobilizing guerrilla-style attacks.

``People are beginning to rat them out,'' General Kelly said after a raid on one Baath Party headquarters where weapons was seized, though the local Baath leader escaped. There were no reports of casualties.

British forces fought intense battles in and around Basra, the southern Iraqi city of 1.5 million. American and British officials expressed guarded optimism that they were close to breaking Baghdad's hold over the city and establishing a secure zone to commence aid deliveries.

Early Sunday, Royal Marine commandos killed a Republican Guard colonel believed to be directing irregular forces that have fired on civilians trying to flee the city.

But the day was not without casualties. A Marine UH-1 Huey helicopter crashed in southern Iraq at a refueling station killing three American crewmen, a military spokesman said.

A British soldier was killed in fighting near Basra, 340 miles from Baghdad, and several others were injured, the Defense Ministry in London said.

More han a dozen soldiers were injured in Kuwait when a contract worker at a rear-area base drove his truck into a line of soldiers waiting to enter the camp store. The driver was shot after he prepared to make a second run at theinjured.

With combat operations resuming at the front, the rear area blazed with fresh Marine Corps helicopter assaults on Nasiriya, where Hellfire missiles were fired into blocks of houses and buildings on the Euphrates River waterfront.

General Franks was vague on Sunday in responding to reports that he had pressed for a delay in commencing combat operations when Turkey refused to allow the passage of the Fourth Infantry Division through its territory. That division was to have headed a northern front against Baghdad.

The Fourth Division's equipment ships passed through the Suez Canal last week and its soldiers were set to fly to Kuwait over the next two weeks to form up in the Kuwaiti desert and push north to join the battle.
 
Raid on Iraqi Militant Group Indicates Ties to al-Qaida but Leadership on the Run to Iran

The Associated Press
BIYARE, Iraq March 31

A U.S.-led assault on a compound controlled by an extremist Islamic group turned up a list of names of suspected militants living in the United States and what may be the strongest evidence yet linking the group to al-Qaida, coalition commanders said Monday.

The cache of documents at the Ansar al-Islam compound, including computer discs and foreign passports belonging to Arab fighters from around the Middle East, could bolster the Bush administration's claims that the two groups are connected, although there was no indication any of the evidence tied Ansar to Saddam Hussein as Washington has maintained.

There were indications, however, that the group has been getting help from inside neighboring Iran.

Kurdish and Turkish intelligence officials, some speaking on condition of anonymity, said many of Ansar's 700 members have slipped out of Iraq and into Iran putting them out of reach of coalition forces.

The officials also said a U.S. missile strike on Ansar's territory on the second day of the war missed most of its leadership which crossed into Iran days earlier.

U.S. officials said the government had reports some Ansar fighters could have made it into Iran and have been shuttling back and forth with fresh supplies.

According to a high-level Kurdish intelligence official, three Ansar leaders identified as Ayoub Afghani, Abdullah Shafeye and Abu Wahel were among those who had fled into Iran. The official said the three were seen being detained by Iranian authorities Sunday.

"We asked the Iranian authorities to hand over to us any of the Afghan Arabs or Islamic militants hiding themselves inside the villages of Iran," said Boorhan Saeed, a member of the pro-U.S. Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. "We asked them about it Sunday, and still don't have a response."

Last week, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld warned the Iranians to stop meddling in the war. Tehran denied any involvement.

Using airstrikes and ground forces, Kurdish soldiers and U.S. troops have cooperated in the past week to dislodge and crush Ansar militants in 18 villages surrounding the Iraqi city of Halabja about 160 miles northeast of Baghdad.

"We actually believe we destroyed a significant portion of the Ansar al-Islam force there," Maj. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, vice director of operations on the Pentagon's Joint Staff, said Monday. He said forces were investigating the finds.

Among a trove of evidence found inside Ansar compounds were passports and identity papers of Ansar activists indicating that up to 150 of them were foreigners, including Yemenis, Turks, Palestinians, Pakistanis, Algerians and Iranians.

Coalition forces also found a phone book containing numbers of alleged Islamic activists based in the United States and Europe as well as the number of a Kuwaiti cleric and a letter from Yemen's minister of religion. The names and numbers were not released.

"What we've discovered in Biyare is a very sophisticated operation," said Barham Salih, prime minister of the Kurdish regional government.

Seized computer disks contained evidence showing meetings between Ansar and al-Qaida activists, according to Mahdi Saeed Ali, a military commander.

It was unclear how strong Ansar remains.

Officials from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, one of two parties that share control of an autonomous Kurdish enclave in northern Iraq, say they killed 250 Ansar members during two days of intense fighting and aerial bombardments.

"There was ferocious fighting," Saeed said. He said he chased 25 Ansar militants across the Iranian border and captured nine Ansar sympathizers belonging to a group called the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan.

The remaining Ansar fighters are thought to be in the mountains along the Iraq-Iran border, U.S. and Kurdish military officials have said.

Kurdish soldiers on Monday continued sporadic fighting in several villages around Halabja and along the Iran-Iraq border near the village of Sargat, site of a destroyed building once allegedly used by Ansar militants to produce poison.

Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Sunday the Sargat compound was probably the site where militants made a biological toxin, traces of which were later found by police in London.

"We think that's probably where the ricin that was found in London came (from)" he told CNN's "Late Edition." "At least the operatives and maybe some of the formulas came from this site."

British police raided a London apartment in January and found traces of ricin, a powerful poison made from castor plant beans. U.S. officials believe the poison and those arrested were linked to Ansar.

The group's leader, Mullah Krekar, is being held in Norway on charges of kidnapping and aiding terrorists.

Krekar has denied any links to Saddam or al-Qaida, but said he considers Osama bin Laden a "good Muslim."

In a recent interview with Dutch television, Krekar said his fighters would use suicide attacks if U.S. troops went after the group.

One such attack came three days into the war when an apparent car bomb killed at least five people, including an Australian cameraman, at a checkpoint near an Ansar training camp.


Associated Press Writer Dafna Linzer contributed to this report from New York.
 
Dcup! Be weary! Don't fall prey to the puppet masters!
Dcup! Be weary! Don't fall prey to the puppet masters!

I think I'm seeing double! I think you are imply that I believe everything in the news/info posts, I post! I'm just posting breaking war news/info true, real or not! Any educated non Sheeple can usually decipher between fact or fiction! Sheeples need help though! Much of this news comes under the Fog of war anyways and the true facts may or may not come out with the passage of time!
 
DcupSheepNipples said:


I think I'm seeing double! I think you are imply that I believe everything in the news/info posts, I post! I'm just posting breaking war news/info true, real or not! Any educated non Sheeple can usually decipher between fact or fiction! Sheeples need help though! Much of this news comes under the Fog of war anyways and the true facts may or may not come out with the passage of time!

Nope. You got me wrong. I guess I should have added a ;) . I figured you to have the ability to decipher the intended humour. Oh well.

Double post because of George's slow board.
 
Nope. You got me wrong. I guess I should have added a . I figured you to have the ability to decipher the intended humour. Oh well.
Double post because of George's slow board.

And You thought I was serious! Shame on you Sheeple! Shame on you! I knew of your intentions to try to trick me with humour! I just threw you some bait and you bit:D
 
Air War Weapon Stockpile Runs Critically Low
By Julian Borger in Washington
The Guardian - UK
4-1-3


With the war in Iraq threatening to last significantly longer than expected, US forces in the Gulf are in increasing danger of running out of some of their most important weapons in the air war.

In the first 11 days of the conflict, the US navy has fired 700 of its stock of 1,200 Tomahawk cruise missiles on ships and submarines in the region. Meanwhile, the air force and navy together have used 5,000 satellite-guided bombs, known as JDAMs, which account for more than 80% of the bombs dropped so far. The JDAM (joint direct attack munitions) arsenals on the five US aircraft carriers in the Gulf are already running low.

One solution is to switch to different types of weapons, which will happen anyway as the focus of the air campaign shifts from fixed to moving targets, from palaces and government buildings to tanks.

The other solution is to take more Tomahawks and JDAMs into the region. But even worldwide inventories would not last for many months, and US military planners, always thinking at least one war ahead, are concerned that the US might use all its firepower in Iraq and not leave enough to deal with another possible threat, such as a North Korean attack on Seoul.

There are about 13,000 JDAMs left in stockpiles around the world, according to air force estimates, and they can be shipped to the region relatively easily. They may need to be. US warplanes are maintaining a rate of 500 strike sorties a day (and 1,000 more support flights) as they continue to attack Baghdad and the Republican Guard divisions around the city.

There are also about 2,300 Tomahawk missiles left in American global arsenals, enough for about three more weeks of air strikes at the current rate. They are much harder to bring into action, as the missile arsenals of ships and submarines cannot be replenished at sea. More Tomahawks can only be brought to the battlefield by bringing new ships and submarines into the region.

JDAM have a strap-on guidance system added, mainly to 1,000lb or 2,000lb "dumb" gravity bombs, to make them "smart". They are therefore relatively cheap, about $20,000 each, a fraction of the cost of other guided bombs and missiles, such as the $600,000 Tomahawk.

Boeing, the manufacturer, has been turning JDAMs out around the clock since the Afghan war, when stocks ran seriously low. It has also increased its capacity over the past year, but monthly output is still only 1,500 a month, enough for only about two days at the current rate of sorties.

Military analysts say there is a limit to the extent the Pentagon can afford to move its arsenal of munitions around the world because it cannot leave itself unprepared to face a second, simultaneous threat elsewhere.

"The problem is that there has to be enough for this war and another one. We would have to be able to respond if the North Koreans move on Seoul," said Daniel Gour, a military analyst at the Lexington Institute.

But the US armed forces will need fewer Tomahawks and JDAMs as the war progresses.

Bob Martinage, an expert at the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments said: "The Tomahawk is meant to go after fixed targets and they've hit most of those. There are only so many targets in that target set. When you shift to hitting targets of opportunity, you don't need them so much."

The same is true for JDAMs, which use satellite signals and GPS (global positioning system) to adjust the tail fins on the bomb, landing it within a few metres of the target. They need to be programmed with the targets' coordinates and are less useful against moving targets like tanks in battle.

Mr Gour said as pitched battles get under way between coalition and Iraqi forces, coalition warplanes would be used less to bomb buildings and more to serve as close air support. "For that, Mavericks [heat-guided air-to-surface missiles] and laser-guided weapons," he said. "Laser-guided weapons are better than JDAMs when you start getting moving targets."

There are already signs that the coalition planners are running out of fixed targets to bomb. Over the past few days the bombers have gone back to presidential palaces and government buildings they had already attacked.

When it comes to trying to destroy bunkers, JDAMs and Tomahawks are not the ideal weapons. For that the US air force has the GBU 57, a 5,000lb satellite-guided bomb in a hardened casing that can penetrate 12 metres (40ft) of concrete or 30 metres of earth.

The Pentagon has already placed orders to replenish its stocks. Admiral William Fallon, the vice-chief of naval operations, said last week that the navy was requesting at least $3.7bn to replenish its munitions stocks to "restore inventories to pre-conflict levels".

In the short term, JDAMs can be reallocated from the air force to the navy. In the longer term, Boeing is due to double its production to 3,000 a month by the end of this year. The company will supply the air force and navy with a 250,000 of the guided bombs by 2008.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,926959,00.html
 
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