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Troops Go Into 'Hunting Mode'
CBS ^ | March 26, 2003

Posted on 03/26/2003 12:24:14 PM PST by Guardian_John

CBS) U.S. units in central Iraq appeared to be shifting their strategy because of attacks from Iraqi militia.

Rather than racing toward Baghdad as they have in the last few days, Marines on Wednesday slowed their advance, opting to send patrols out from their convoys to take out mortar nests and other enemy targets.

"We're going into a hunting mode right now," said Lt. Col. B.T. McCoy, 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines. "We're going to start hunting down instead of letting them take the cheap shots."

The attacks "appear to involve Republican Guards who have donned Arab civilian dress and are traveling in buses, taxis and SUVs to reinforce units in the south," CBS News National Security Correspondent David Martin reports.

Dodge Billingsly, a freelance reporter working for CBS News and traveling with the 1st Marine Division south of an-Nasariyah, reports his convoy came under fire.

"It seems to be the same tactic being used by Iraqis elsewhere - wait until dusk, spring ambush and melt away," he reports.

There were no U.S. casualties.

The gunfight lasted one hour and the attackers fled when the Marines turned on their overwhelming firepower, Billinglsy reports.

Meanwhile, a large contingent of Iraq's Republican Guard headed south under cover of blinding sandstorms in a 1,000-vehicle convoy Wednesday toward central Iraq — site of the heaviest fighting of the war.

Cobra pilots resupplying Marines in central Iraq cited military intelligence reports that columns of 3,000 Republican Guard troops were moving from Baghdad to the city of Kut, and 2,000 more were seen south of Kut.

"I don't have a number, but we have seen reports of Republican Guards coming south in significant numbers, in strong and significant numbers," said Navy Capt. Frank Thorp, a spokesman at U.S. Central Command in Qatar.

Thorp later said he was not referring to Republican Guards but Iraqi forces.

Coalition forces may find it difficult to attack the columns because sandstorms sweeping across Iraq for a second day have grounded helicopter flights throughout the area and significantly reduced the number of flights off carriers in the Persian Gulf and eastern Mediterranean.

The blinding storms also hampered resupply efforts. Most aircraft have been grounded since Tuesday morning, including helicopters bearing food, water and ammunition. Some helicopters that were able to fly on Wednesday picked up casualties.

The 3rd Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division was within striking distance of Baghdad but was stalled by the storms, said its commander, Col. Michael Linnington.

"We are one tank of fuel from Baghdad," Linnington said. "The 101st is grounded and were not doing what we do best which is air assault operations and attacks. So we're waiting for a weather break."

The unexpected level of resistance and battering sandstorms are creating a drag on troops headed to Baghdad, where President Saddam Hussein and his regime are expected to make their last stand, said officials at the Pentagon and the U.S. military command center in Qatar.

Storms grounded scores of coalition aircraft Tuesday, blinded the array of electronic eyes needed to target Iraq and were gumming up guns, breaking down engines and generally slowing a military campaign designed for speed.

The U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division drew to within 50 miles of Baghdad, west of where the Republican Guard was advancing. Other American forces were expected to join soon in squeezing the capital from several directions.

A military source said the U.S. Central Command now had evidence that the Iraqi regime had wired many of the bridges around Baghdad for destruction. Meanwhile, Iraqi officials said a U.S. missile attack in Baghdad killed 14 and injured 30 in the Al-Shaab neighborhood, an area crowded with apartments, auto repair shops and inexpensive restaurants. Associated Press Television News footage showed a large crater in the middle of a street, a child with a head bandage, and bodies wrapped in plastic sheeting in a pickup truck. Hundreds of people stood in front of a damaged building, some shaking fists in the air and shouting.

U.S. Central Command said it had no information about the incident.

"We don't have a report that corroborates that, so I can't confirm it," Brig. General Vincent Brooks said during a Central Command briefing Wednesday. "We do everything physically and scientifically possible to be precise in our targeting."

"Warfare is not a pretty or easy endeavor. Mistakes do happen. Weapons do malfunction. If we make a mistake we admit it," said Jim Wilkinson, a U.S. Central Command spokesman.

Asked about military conditions south of Baghdad, Brooks said "we've not seen any significant movement" in the area by the Republican Guard, although there has been some "survival positionings, but not serious attacks."

British forces on the edge of Basra waged artillery battles with more than 1,000 Iraqi militiamen, who reportedly also faced some sort of insurrection by Shiite Muslim civilians opposed to Saddam.

British officers said the Basra uprising became enough of a threat that the militiamen fired mortars to try to suppress it. British forces then silenced the Iraqi mortar positions with an artillery barrage, spokesman Lt. Col. Ronnie McCourt said.

McCourt said British troops also were firing at some of the militiamen who were trying to flee Basra.

Iraqi officials have denied there was any uprising in Basra.

The British — while awaiting an opportune moment to enter the heart of Basra — used loudspeakers to say that aid is waiting outside the city. Relief officials say many of the 1.3 million residents are drinking contaminated water and face the threat of diarrhea and cholera.

Assigned to bring aid to another battle-scarred southern city, a seven-truck relief convoy — loaded with food and water — left Kuwait and reached the port of Umm Qasr on Wednesday.

Hoping to cripple the Iraqi government's communications, the allies attacked the state television headquarters in Baghdad before dawn Wednesday with missiles and air strikes. The station's international satellite signal was knocked off the air for a few hours.

Asked about 14 civilians killed in Baghdad on Tuesday in what Iraq said was a U.S. bombing, Brooks said that he had no information on the incident. "We don't have a report that corroborates that, so I can't confirm it," he said. "We do everything physically and scientifically possible to be precise in our targeting."

Television footage showed a large crater in the middle of a street, a child with a bandaged head and bodies wrapped in plastic sheeting in a pickup truck. Hundreds of people stood in front of damaged buildings, some chanting "Oh, Saddam, we sacrifice our souls and blood to you."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
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1 posted on 03/26/2003 12:24:14 PM PST by Guardian_John
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To: Guardian_John
"Oh, Saddam, we sacrifice our souls and blood to you."

Sounds about right for a Black Mass, doesn't it?

2 posted on 03/26/2003 12:27:14 PM PST by Pearls Before Swine
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To: Guardian_John
Sgt. Fudd says, "I'm gonna get me a wascally Iwaki."
3 posted on 03/26/2003 12:29:09 PM PST by Enterprise
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To: Guardian_John
The 3rd Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division was within striking distance of Baghdad but was stalled by the storms, said its commander, Col. Michael Linnington.

"We are one tank of fuel from Baghdad," Linnington said. "The 101st is grounded and were not doing what we do best which is air assault operations and attacks. So we're waiting for a weather break."

The sandstorms are predicted to clear out by tomorrow. Tomorrow night all hell will break loose around Baghdad.

4 posted on 03/26/2003 12:32:11 PM PST by TADSLOS (Sua Sponte)
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To: Pearls Before Swine
Man oh man, you hit the nail on the head. Islam is devil worship and this is just more proof.
5 posted on 03/26/2003 12:32:29 PM PST by JeeperFreeper
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To: Guardian_John; MadIvan
You think we're mad, look what the Brits just picked up: click.

BRIT SURRENDERS TO ALLIES

A British man fighting for Saddam Hussein has surrendered to the Desert Rats in Iraq.

The man, in his mid-20s, told the Irish Guards he was from Manchester and wanted to return home - to claim benefits, the Guards claimed.

Born in Iraq, the unidentified prisoner, who speaks in a Mancunian accent, is currently being held in a prisoner of war camp in the south of the country.

A source within the Irish Guards said: "He told us he wanted to fight for the Iraqis because he didn't agree with what Britain and American are doing.

"After handing himself over he began taunting some of the soldiers that he would soon be back in Britain enjoying state benefits even though he had a wish to fight against our people."

It is understood the man, whose family are still in England, joined a militia group through relatives in the Basra area.

6 posted on 03/26/2003 12:32:39 PM PST by xJones (I)
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To: Enterprise
Be vewy vewy cwyit I'm huntin Iwaqis huuuuu huuuuu huuuuu
7 posted on 03/26/2003 12:34:30 PM PST by Conspiracy Guy (eif eit smells eits french)
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To: Enterprise
They're the Iwakis. We're the Attackis.
8 posted on 03/26/2003 12:35:31 PM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Flurry
LOL! Ok, I'm gonna be wery wery cwyit. Shhhhhhhhhhh.
9 posted on 03/26/2003 12:35:46 PM PST by Enterprise
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To: Flurry
Get Uday and Quasay while you're at it.
10 posted on 03/26/2003 12:35:51 PM PST by xJones (I)
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To: Guardian_John
We're ahead of schedule. I'll bet the plan has always been to wait for no moon to enter Baghdad. That would explain why we started this near a full moon... Just an opinion.
11 posted on 03/26/2003 12:36:24 PM PST by rivercat
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To: xJones
I wonder what kind of benefits he will receive.Our Taliban member received 20 years.
12 posted on 03/26/2003 12:37:12 PM PST by MEG33
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To: xJones
and Obey and Ebay too!
13 posted on 03/26/2003 1:01:04 PM PST by Conspiracy Guy (eif eit smells eits french)
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