Posted on 04/09/2004 8:33:32 PM PDT by Clive
Fallujah, Iraq - A U.S. AC-130 gunship raked Iraqi insurgents Friday night after hundreds of women and children fled the besieged city Fallujah during a U.S.-declared pause in the marine offensive.
On the anniversary of the fall of captive Iraqi president Saddam Hussein's regime, Baghdad and parts of central Iraq were chaotic.
At a square in the capital where Saddam's statue was toppled a year ago, soldiers took down a new icon: pictures of the radical Shiite Muslim cleric whose followers have risen up against coalition forces in the south.
Gunmen running rampant on Baghdad's western edge attacked a fuel convoy, killing a U.S. soldier and an Iraqi driver and causing a fiery explosion. Two U.S. soldiers and an unknown number of civilians were missing after the attack and 12 people were injured, Pentagon officials said. Another U.S. soldier was killed in an attack on a base elsewhere in the capital and large groups of insurgents battled U.S. troops in two cities to the north, Baqouba and Muqdadiyah.
One marine was killed in Fallujah and another wounded in exchanges of fire after U.S. forces called a halt to offensive operations in the city, a spokesman said.
The death - along with those of three marines a day earlier announced Friday - brought the toll of U.S. troops killed across Iraq this week to 46. The fighting has killed more than 460 Iraqis - including more than 280 in Fallujah, a hospital official said. At least 647 U.S. soldiers have died in Iraq since the war began in March 2003.
Meanwhile, a spokesman for radical Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr denied Friday his militia was involved in the kidnapping of three Japanese and threats to burn them alive.
"We condemn such acts and we pray for their release," Amer al-Husseini said.
The three Japanese captives were among at least five foreigners being held by militants in unknown locations around the country.
The others were two humanitarian aid workers, including a Syrian-born Canadian citizen, Fadi Ihsan Fadel, 33, and an Arab resident of Jerusalem. A Briton was also reported missing.
Mr. Fadel, whose parents live in Montreal, worked for the New York City-based International Rescue Committee, a non-governmental organization, was abducted early Wednesday morning from the IRC residence in Najaf.
For the first time, U.S. troops moved in strength into the heartland of the rebellion by al-Sadr's militia. More than 1,000 troops backed by tanks pushed into the southern city Kut, retaking police stations and government buildings seized this week by Shiite gunmen.
Elsewhere, fighting with al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army militia diminished. Coalition forces largely left gunmen in firm control in three cities of south-central Iraq and farther south, coalition troops have largely succeeded in taming the uprising, though Italian troops still saw light fighting in Nasiriyah.
In Fallujah, marines halted their assault on insurgents to allow U.S.-picked Iraqi leaders — angry at the United States over the bloodshed from five days of heavy fighting — to hold talks with city leaders about how to reduce the violence.
Throughout the afternoon, fighting was reduced to sporadic gunfire. But when night fell, heavy explosions resumed as an AC-130 gunship strafed targets and soldiers and insurgents engaged in a mortar battle.
The AC-130 hit a cave near Fallujah where insurgents took refuge after attacking marines. A laser-guided bomb also struck the cave, said spokesman 1st Lieut. Eric Knapp.
Iraq's top U.S. administrator, Paul Bremer, said the unilateral pause was also aimed at allowing humanitarian aid to enter the city and Fallujah residents to tend to their dead.
Many families, emerging from their homes for the first time in days, buried slain relatives in the city football stadium.
A stream of hundreds of cars carrying women, children and elderly headed out of the city after Marines announced they would be allowed to leave. Families pleaded to be allowed to take out men, and when Marines refused, some entire families turned back.
The heavy fighting in Fallujah - during which mosques have been damaged and buildings demolished - has made the city of 200,000 a symbol of resistance for some Iraqis and threatens to divide the Iraqi Governing Council and the U.S. administration that appointed it.
Military hesitation over the halt in fighting was clear. After initially being ordered to cease all offensive operations, marines quickly demanded and received permission to launch assaults to prevent attacks if needed.
"We said to them (the commanders): 'We are going to lose people if we don't go back on offensive ops.' So we got the word," marine Maj. Pete Farnun said.
Brig.-Gen. Mark Kimmitt underlined talks between two Governing Council members and sheiks and clerics representing Fallujah representatives were not negotiations, suggesting the military would not be making concessions. U.S. officials were not participating in the talks, which began Friday.
The Governing Council early Saturday issued a statement demanding an end to military action and "collective punishment" - a reference to the Fallujah siege.
Abdul-Karim Mahoud al-Mohammedawi, a Shiite on the Governing Council, announced he was suspending his council seat until "the bleeding stops in all Iraq." He also met Friday with al-Sadr, whom U.S. commanders have threatened to capture.
A Sunni council member, Ghazi al-Yawer, said he would quit if the Fallujah talks fell through.
One of the strongest pro-U.S. voices on the council, also a Sunni, Adnan Pachachi, denounced the U.S. siege.
"It was not right to punish all the people of Fallujah and we consider these operations by the Americans unacceptable and illegal," Mr. Pachachi told Al-Arabiya TV.
Meanwhile, in a signal of how U.S. forces face a new enemy in Iraq, two pictures of Mr. al-Sadr hung from a sculpture in Baghdad's central Firdos Square, where one year ago Marines toppled a statue of Saddam.
A U.S. soldier climbed a ladder to tear down the posters, and the military warned that Mr. al-Sadr's followers were planning bomb attacks in the area. Hours later, a mortar hit nearby, shaking two hotels where foreign journalists and contractors are staying.
U.S. troops drove into Kut before dawn Friday, pushing out members of Mr. al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army militia that seized the southern textile and farming centre this week after Ukrainian troops abandoned the city under heavy attack.
A U.S. helicopter struck Mr. al-Sadr's main office in Kut, killing two people, witnesses said. Americans were patrolling the streets during daylight.
Kimmitt said he expected the operation to retake Kut would be finished by Saturday morning.
"We are fairly comfortable that the town of al-Kut is well on its way to coming back under coalition control," he said.
Still, he suggested a move against Mr. al-Sadr's militia controlling parts of Najaf and Karbala would have to wait, because hundreds of thousands of Shiite pilgrims are in the area this weekend for al-Arbaeen, which commemorates the end of the period of mourning for a 7th-century martyred saint.
"We expect that those special cities that are currently observing the Arbaeen will continue to have some al-Sadr presence," he said.
Mr. Al-Sadr demanded Friday that U.S. forces leave Iraq, saying they now face "a civil revolt."
"I direct my speech to my enemy Bush and I tell him...you are fighting the entire Iraqi people," Mr. al-Sadr said in a sermon, delivered by one of his deputies at the Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf, Shiite Islam's holiest site.
Mr. Al-Sadr, a young, firebrand anti-U.S. cleric, is thought to be holed up in his office in Najaf, protected by scores of gunmen. He has said he is willing to die resisting any attempt to capture him.
Gunmen on the highway outside the capital Baghdad were seen stopping a car carrying two western civilians — apparently security guards, because both had sidearms. The gunmen pulled the men from the car, firing at the ground to warn them to obey. Their fate was not known.
The heavy fighting for Fallujah was prompted by the March 31 slaying of four U.S. security guards. Their burned bodies were mutilated and dragged through the streets by a mob that hung two of them from a bridge.
Actually, Son of Puff, on steroids.
Football stadium? Somehow I didn't imagine Iraqi's kicking around the old pigskin!!!
Their time will come.
The Coalition allowed this Sadr guy to build up a militia, probably funded by Iran... for what reason? Why is the guy still not dead or in custody?
These lunatics still haven't figured out who they're dealing with...
They can't hit and run anymore....we can find them.. We can destroy them...
Semper Fi
Puff the Magic Dragon should tend to foster clearer thinking on the part of the insurgents.
Even the old AC47 laid down some awesome fire. Spectre has an order of magnitude more firepower and precision.
Communists, dictators, Islamists...they always lift themselves up as a icon, a "god". A portrait on every building, a statue in every square.
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