Posted on 04/06/2003 7:47:31 PM PDT by winner3000
IRBIL, Iraq - U.S. warplanes struck a convoy of allied Kurdish fighters and U.S. Special Forces during a northern battle Sunday in one of the deadliest friendly fire attacks of the war. At least 18 people were killed and more than 45 wounded, including senior Kurdish commanders, Kurdish officials said.
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U.S. Central Command said its "early casualty reports" on what appeared to be the same incident gave lower figures: one civilian killed and six people injured, including a U.S. soldier. But the command said the investigation was not complete.
Among the wounded were a brother and son of Massoud Barzani, head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, which runs half the Kurdish autonomy zone.
The incident also showed the heightened intensity of combat along the northern front, where joint U.S.-Kurdish ground offensives backed by air power have been battling Iraqi forces.
"There is more tension as this front becomes more active in order to put more pressure on the Iraqi side," said Hoshyar Zebari, a senior member of the KDP leadership.
Zebari said the "tragic" bombing along battle lines southeast of Irbil killed at least 17 Kurdish fighters and a translator for the British Broadcasting Corp., which was following the convoy. The injured was a roster of some of the KDP's top military officials.
Wajy Barzani, the Kurdish special forces commander and younger brother of Massoud Barzani, was in critical condition and airlifted by U.S. forces to a hospital in Germany, said Zebari.
Other senior Kurdish military commanders Saeed Abdullah, Abdul Rahman, Mamasta Hehman and Mansur Barzani, the political leader's son also suffered injuries.
Massoud Barzani and the entire top ranks of his party's leadership were at the hospital, guarded by hundreds of Kurdish militiamen. Throngs of onlookers pressed forward, making it difficult for ambulances to pass. U.S. servicemen also arrived with vehicles, but it was unclear whether they carried any victims.
Zebari said the mistaken bombing could have been caused over a confusing and changing battle scene between Pir Dawad and Dibagah, 25 miles southwest of Irbil.
Kurdish and U.S. forces called for close air support after a column of Iraqi tanks tried to turn back advancing coalition soldiers. The convoy was near disabled Iraqi tanks when it was struck, he said.
The warplanes may have "mistaken some of the tanks that the (Kurdish fighters) had taken with the new column of tanks," he told reporters. "This was a war situation and these things happen."
The U.S. statement differed slightly on the location of the incident, placing it 30 miles southeast of Mosul, near Kalak. Kalak is 40 miles northwest of Dibagah.
It was not clear whether the convoy was on the front line of fighting or behind the most forward positions. Hours after the bombing, the Iraqi forces were pushed back at least 200 yards beyond the wreckage.
Driving Iraqi troops from Dibagah would cut off the main road connecting the main northern cities in Baghdad hands: Mosul and the Kirkuk oil center.
At the scene, BBC correspondent John Simpson reported that the convoy contained eight to 10 cars, two of which carried U.S. Special Forces troops. BBC translator Kamaran Abdurazaq Muhamed, who had been working for the corporation since mid-March, died in the bombing from blood loss after losing his legs.
"This is just a scene from hell here," Simpson said. "All the vehicles are on fire, there are bodies burning all around me, bits of bodies all around. ... The Americans saw this convoy and they bombed it. They hit their own people."
"I saw people burning to death in front of me," reported Simpson, who suffered minor shrapnel wounds.
Zebari stressed that the incident would not undercut Kurdish military and political backing for the coalition effort to topple Saddam Hussein (news - web sites).
"It will not affect ... our resolve to work together," Zebari said.
The Kurds, who live in Iraq (news - web sites), Turkey, Iran and parts of Syria, have long struggled to set up an independent state.
The foreign ministers of Iran and Turkey met Sunday and voiced opposition to the creation of a Kurdish state in northern Iraq. Turkey in particular fears that a Kurdish rebellion in Turkey could be re-ignited if Iraqi Kurds gain independence. The United States has said it seeks to keep Iraq intact.
TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER ABDULLAH GUL SAID HE PLANNED TO TRAVEL NEXT WEEK TO SYRIA TO DISCUSS THE REGIONAL REPERCUSSIONS OF THE IRAQ WAR.
That's reading far more into that visit than I would.
Our own troops were hit too.
Such tragedies happen in war. Confederates killed their own Stonewall Jackson. During the Normady campaign, U.S. bombers decimated American lines prior to an assault. Such is the fog of war.
After all that is what i would do if i were an Iraqi comander! Knowing what the US did in the first Gulf War and Kosovo (sending special forces units with laser designators and radios deep into enemy territory to paint targets with lasers) i would purchase similar equipment and hopefully try to do as much damage as possible. Obviously it would nto win a war .....but it might sow some doubt among the Kurds plus, most importantly, maybe lead to enough civilian deaths to make the 'Arab street' even madder than it usually is.
Hence it is possible (and the Iraqis could get them from the same sources it acquired the GPS jammers). Remember .....a few years ago the Cali cartel came 'this' close to purchasing an ex-soviet submarine (with torpedoes and anti-shipping missiles) for a throw-away price to use in its drug shipments (they also got very advanced radio-equipment, that shocked the heck out of US DEA when it was captured, plus a couple of mini-subs for smuggling)> However it was the big submarine that really shocked everyone since that was unthinkable.
If it is possible to almost have a transfer of attack submarine tech to a Colombian cocaine cartel then how hard is it for the Iraqis to get 10 laser designators and distribute them to Fedayeen dressed as 'civilians?'
I know if i were in the Iraqi ruling cabal i would ahve thought of this, and implemented it, years ago!
(By the way i have some ideas about the chemical weapons Saddam has and how i would use them if i were him. I will freepmail you tomorrow since right now i need to go to sleep and prepare for work. Let me just say if i were him i would implement that strategy within the next 2 weeks ....and it would work!)
Take care Struw! (p.s: Climate get too cold for you 'over there?' LOL! I thought your trip would last much longer)
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