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Forces Occupy Part of Baghdad Airport
AP | 4/03/03 | CHRIS TOMLINSON

Posted on 04/03/2003 7:15:04 PM PST by kattracks

Forces Occupy Part of Baghdad Airport

By CHRIS TOMLINSON .c The Associated Press

NEAR BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - U.S. forces occupied part of Baghdad's airport before dawn Friday, putting them less than 10 miles from the seat of Saddam Hussein's government and closer to gaining control of a key lever of power.

Gunshots were heard from inside Saddam International Airport, and it was unclear how many Iraqi troops were there.

Soldiers of the 3rd Infantry Division reached the airport late Thursday, according to military reports. By early Friday, tank companies of the division had rolled in and soldiers were clearing the area building by building, according to a CBS reporter with the unit who said he heard sporadic gunfire.

The airport, which includes a military facility, is a key first objective for infantry and Marines converging on the capital from the south. Securing it will allow coalition forces to bring in more troops, military equipment and humanitarian aid.

At one point Thursday evening it seemed like U.S. forces had control of the airport, ``and then it got more confusing'' with continued fighting, Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Thursday night.

The situation should be clear Friday morning, he said in a Fox News interview.

Myers also said Republican Guard divisions were moving around the outskirts of Baghdad to the east and west - though it was unclear whether they were trying to reinforce units fighting the American advance, moving into more defensive positions or fleeing.

In the approach from the southeast Thursday, Marines fought in close combat in Kut, at one point firing AK-47s at small group of Iraqis who tried a suicide charge against a tank. To the northwest, at Lake Tharthar, Special Operations forces raided one of Saddam's palaces.

The focus, though, was on the impending battle for Baghdad.

On the way to the airport, the 3rd Division rolled through a veritable shooting gallery - a single-lane road on the capital's southern outskirts with Iraqi fighters firing from all sides.

For four hours in punishing heat, tanks and Bradley armored vehicles tried to pick out soldiers and fighters amid civilians standing next to houses, watching the armored column pass.

``They're running alongside us,'' Staff Sgt. Bryce Ivings of Sarasota, Fla., shouted into the intercom.

``Fire, fire, kill them,'' said Capt. Chris Carter from Watkinsville, Ga., the commanding officer of Alpha Company. ``Got it.''

Then Ivings spotted another group of fighters.

``He's got a weapon, oh ... there's civilians in the way, he's using these people are shields,'' Ivings said. He did not fire.

Under fire from the main gun of the M1A1 Abrams tank and the 25mm cannon on the Bradleys, trees 200 yards off the road across farmer's fields exploded in orange flashes. At least seven pillars of black smoke rose from the horizon.

At least one U.S. soldier was killed by friendly fire. He was outside his vehicle when U.S. forces blasted an Iraqi tank nearby. Three were wounded by Iraqi fire, and three soldiers collapsed from heat exhaustion as temperatures rose to about 90 degrees outdoors and over 100 degrees inside the tanks and Bradleys.

The troops destroyed more than seven Iraqi armored personnel carriers and more than 15 Iraqi tanks. The number of Iraqis killed was unknown.

Iraqis fired a rocket-propelled grenade that hit the turret of one of the Bradleys, injuring one of the soldiers seriously. Another soldier was shot in the leg as he stepped from his refueling vehicle along the route.

``My point man was hit in the turret. He's now on the street unprotected,'' shouted 1st Lt. Jeff McFarland. Infantrymen ran out of the Bradley and pulled the soldier to safety.

Along the road from the Euphrates River to Baghdad, there were hundreds of burning vehicles, civilian and military. Hundreds of dead Iraqis, most in uniform, lay next to the vehicles.

Once at the airport, the 3rd Infantry moved to take the field's military complex and its 13,000-foot runway, according to a San Antonio Express-News report.

``We expected a lot of resistance at the airfield because of the military side to it,'' the newspaper quoted Army Maj. Mike Johnson as saying. Johnson said the west end of the airport, has military barracks and, in the past, had armored personnel carriers and tanks.

Earlier Thursday in Kut, soldiers fought Iraqis in a date palm grove, tossing grenades at each other. Late in the battle, a small group of Iraqis with assault rifles tried a suicide charge against a tank.

``At the end, they came charging in a human wave - 10 to 15 guys with AKs that we mowed down,'' said Lt. Col. B.P. McCoy. He said 30 Iraqis were killed.

A Sea Knight helicopter evacuated three injured Marines. Two suffered minor gunshot and shrapnel wounds, but the third died in the helicopter. Another died when the truck he was driving slammed into another on a dusty road, injuring at least 10 others.

Across Iraq, fighting flared throughout the day:

South of Baghdad, the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, came under sniper fire and saw something truly chilling, according to CNN's Walter Rogers: upward of 20 dead Iraqi troops wearing gas masks. Rogers, attached to the unit, gave no indication that chemical weapons had been used.

At Lake Tharthar, about halfway between Baghdad and Saddam's hometown of Tikrit, Special Operations for the first time raided a presidential palace. They overcame sporadic resistance from anti-aircraft artillery fire and fighters on the ground.

In Basra, British troops told Associated Press Television News they had found the villa of Gen. Ali Hassan al-Majeed, the cousin of Saddam who is known as ``Chemical Ali'' for ordering Iraqi forces to use chemical weapons on Kurds in northern Iraq in 1988.

Marines from the 1st Battalion, 5th Regiment, crossed the Tigris River on their way to Baghdad. Along the way they encountered not Iraqi soldiers, but places were Iraqi soldiers had been: Empty bunkers, built atop levees with commanding views of the main roads. A few pieces of clothing. An occasional piece of food, or a coffee pot.

Asked where the soldiers had gone, local people pointed northward, toward Baghdad.

04/03/03 22:07 EST


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: airport; battleforbaghdad; captured; deadiraqisoldiers; embeddedreport; gasmasks; troopmovement; viceisclosing

1 posted on 04/03/2003 7:15:04 PM PST by kattracks
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: kattracks
What part is not under control?
3 posted on 04/03/2003 7:19:18 PM PST by js1138
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To: kattracks
IMO, if you are next to a soldier, you might as well be one. Let the Iraqi's sort this part out for themselves. If the civilians knew they would be fired upon, they probably wouldn't stand there. Get, on film, an Iraqi soldier, shooting one of them.
4 posted on 04/03/2003 7:22:04 PM PST by TheLion
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To: enfield
How about Tommy International?
5 posted on 04/03/2003 7:25:57 PM PST by patriciaruth
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To: enfield
That's Rumsfeld International to you Skippy

Freedom Field or Liberty International

Its not conquest...

A name like that send a clear message to both the people of Iraq...and the neighbors.

6 posted on 04/03/2003 7:29:36 PM PST by antaresequity
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To: patriciaruth
I'm watching it now live on CNN; really effen cool. They keep showing this hideous painting of a neatly manicured hussien in the background. Hopefully we'll put one up with Rumsfeld and a litle blip next to his mouth with the words "france sucks"
7 posted on 04/03/2003 7:32:37 PM PST by God luvs America
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To: God luvs America
"At least one U.S. soldier was killed by friendly fire. He was outside his vehicle when U.S. forces blasted an Iraqi tank nearby. Three were wounded by Iraqi fire, and three soldiers collapsed from heat exhaustion as temperatures rose to about 90 degrees outdoors and over 100 degrees inside the tanks and Bradleys."

The push is on to take Baghdad within the next two weeks.

Temps by then will be over 110F - unbearable in a chem suit.

Our troops are paying their dues - and then some.

8 posted on 04/03/2003 8:04:03 PM PST by Happy2BMe (HOLLYWOOD:Ask not what U can do for your country, ask what U can do for Iraq!)
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To: kattracks
Marines fought in close combat in Kut, at one point firing AK-47s at small group of Iraqis who tried a suicide charge against a tank

I didn't realize that the U.S. Marines were now armed with AK47s.

9 posted on 04/03/2003 8:18:40 PM PST by PAR35
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To: kattracks
Anyone listen to the press conference with the Iraqi foreign minister this morning?
(I've been trying to find it in the news and can't - please let me know if you're more successful.)
His first comment was "They are NOT nearing Baghdad - don't believe them!"
He says we haven't taken the airport, haven't wiped out two Iraqi divisions, etc. -it's all lies.
When someone in the room asked, "are they trapped?" (This was in reference to some comment about the U.S. RETREATING from Baghdad.) He said, "Yes! They are a-trapped in Baghdad, they are a-trapped in Nasarif, they are a-trapped in Basrah!"
Aside from Bill Clinton, I've never heard someone go out and make statements that were so easily proven FALSE.
10 posted on 04/03/2003 8:23:51 PM PST by DED (Liberals Never Learn. *LNL*)
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To: kattracks

"No, we did not capture Chemical Ali, but we did capture his main squeeze,
known as "Baghdad Heli" for her frequent broadcasts calling for American
Soldiers to surrender."

11 posted on 04/03/2003 8:42:35 PM PST by sonofatpatcher2 (Love & a .45-- What more could you want, campers? };^)
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