Posted on 10/14/2004 3:27:27 PM PDT by jmc1969
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- American troops and Iraqi special forces launched a major operation in Falluja late Thursday aimed at disrupting future attacks by insurgents who control the volatile city, the U.S. military said.
U.S. warplanes pounded targets in the Sunni Triangle city, lighting up the nighttime sky and jolting a city that has been a hotbed for the insurgency for months.
1st Lt. Lyle Gilbert, a spokesman for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, said Marines, Army soldiers and Iraqi special forces were participating "in and near the city of Falluja."
The ground forces were being backed up by fixed-wing aircraft and helicopter gunships, he said.
"We've been looking forward to this for a long time," Gilbert said from from the U.S. base Camp Falluja.
"It's a long time in coming, and this operation is going to set the stage for Fallujans and for the Iraqi people to go out and elect their government and live in freedom and security as they deserve," he said.
Hours earlier, Iraqi national security adviser Kasim Dawood said the government was preparing to "smash" the deeply entrenched insurgency in Falluja if city officials failed to turn in militants.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
God bless our Marines and the brave Iraqis with them.
U.S. Marines launch air and ground attacks after Fallujah delegation suspends peace talks
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/iraq/20041014-1549-iraq-fallujah.html
By Nadia Abou El-Magd
ASSOCIATED PRESS
3:49 p.m. October 14, 2004
BAGHDAD, Iraq U.S. Marines launched air and ground attacks Thursday on the insurgent bastion Fallujah after city representatives suspended peace talks with the government over Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's demand to hand over terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Late Thursday, residents of the city, 40 miles west of Baghdad, reported shuddering American bombardments using planes and armored vehicles in what they said was the most intensive shelling since U.S. forces began weeks of "precision strikes" aimed at al-Zarqawi's network.
Blasts pierce U.S. security safeguards in Baghdad, review is under way
Suicide bombers blow up "Green Zone" cafe and market
In Washington, however, a senior military official, speaking on operational matters on condition of anonymity, described the latest fighting as strikes against specific targets and of the same scope as previous attacks into Fallujah.
Warplanes and artillery pounded the city as two U.S. Marine battalions attacked rebel positions to "restore security and stability," 1st Lt. Lyle Gilbert, a spokesman for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, told CNN.
"It is going to be a long night," he said.
Maj. Francis Piccoli, spokesman for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, told The Associated Press that two Marine battalions were engaged in the fight backed up by aircraft.
He would not say the attack was the start of a major campaign to recapture the city, saying he did not want to jeopardize any future operations.
Piccoli said the goal of the operation was to "disrupt the capabilities of the anti-Iraqi forces."
"Ultimately, the intent is to help the Iraqi government bring in democracy," he added. "As you bring in sustained security and stability, the Iraqi government can build on as they go into elections" in January.
U.S. officials believe al-Zarqawi's terrorist group, Tawhid and Jihad, is headquartered in Fallujah. The group purportedly claimed responsibility for two suicide bombings inside the heavily guarded Green Zone in Baghdad on Thursday, according to a statement posted on a Web site known for its Islamic content. The unprecedented attack killed 10 people, including four Americans, and wounded 20.
The U.S. military said its targets were linked to al-Zarqawi's terrorist network, including a building being used to store weapons, two safehouses used to plan attacks, several illegal checkpoints and a weapons cache.
At least five people were killed and 16 wounded, according to Fallujah General Hospital.
Fallujah residents said the Americans were attacking several areas with rockets, artillery and tanks. One resident said U.S. forces were using loudspeakers in the west of the city to urge Fallujah fighters to lay down their arms "because we are going to push into Fallujah."
Residents reached by telephone from Baghdad also said there were sharp clashes in the northern part of the city, which was a major battlefield during last April's Marine siege of Fallujah.
Allawi warned Wednesday that Fallujah must surrender al-Zarqawi and other foreign fighters or face military attack.
Abu Asaad, spokesman for the religious council of Fallujah, said that "handing over al-Zarqawi" was an "impossible condition" since even the Americans were unable to catch him.
"Since we exhausted all peaceful solutions, the city is now ready to bear arms and defend its religion and honor and it's not afraid of Allawi's statements," Asaad said in a live interview with Al-Jazeera television.
However, he used the Arabic word for "suspend," implying that the talks could resume later.
"We are not afraid of Ayad Allawi's statements or the American troops," Asaad said. "The government now is an (American) agent that is working to make this city easy for American troops to enter and do what they want."
Negotiations had been aimed at restoring government control to Fallujah, which fell under the domination of clerics and their armed mujahedeen followers after the end of the three-week Marine siege last April.
"Military operations didn't even stop when the negotiating delegation was in Baghdad," Asaad said. "Dozens are killed every day. Entire families have been eliminated."
The government made no comment about the breakdown of the Fallujah talks. However, national security adviser Qassem Dawoud said military operations against Fallujah "will continue" until the city "has been cleansed" of "terrorists."
Dawoud said he is hopeful the delegation will succeed in ridding the city of insurgents.
"I hope they can succeed and can take them away from Fallujah as soon as possible, or otherwise, we're preparing ourselves to smash them ... by military means," he said.
MKM
Fallujah will not be flattened, nor should it be.
God bless oor troops.
Eat sh*t and die, murderers.
lol. enjoyed your tagline.
A-men.
Allawi may need/want Bush to win more than Bush himself.
If Kerry wins, he faces an uncertain future to say the least.
Thanks. ;-)
Us too. No need for undue haste - make them fight and kill them.
Great new! Will be better when the Headline reads Iraqis and US .... and the best when it reads Iraqis singlehandedly launch and then Secure....
uncertain future for Allawi under Kerry? you could say that - its would be a choice of death, or being on the run for the rest of his life.
what's your feeling on the timing of this? does Bush feel he can score a win here fast, before the election, with limited losses? I have to say, this move is the political razor's edge - the downside risk being some large loss of life for US forces, just before the election; the upside is nabbing Zarqawi.
They will long for the days of panties on their heads and dog leashes!
I think theres some, but relatively little political considerations regarding the timing. Also, from what Ive read, its Rumsfeld that makes the political decisions in this case, Bush totally delegates it to him.
The political objective;
The timing;
IMO:To have Allawi in place and for Allawi to have as many Iraqi security forces in place as possible all before the Iraqi national election.
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