March 29
— By Hassan Hafidh
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - An Iraqi suicide bomber killed four American
soldiers at a military checkpoint on Saturday and Iraq promised
there would be more such attacks on invading U.S. forces.
As U.S. planes kept up withering air strikes on Baghdad, a U.S.
official said a car exploded at a checkpoint near the Shi'ite Muslim
shrine city of Najaf, about 100 miles to the south, killing the
driver and four soldiers searching it.
"Any method that stops or kills the enemy will be used," Iraqi
Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan told a news conference, paying
tribute to the suicide bomber. "The United States will turn the
whole world into martyrs against it."
A state television presenter, describing the attack as a "blessed
beginning on the road of sacrifice and martyrdom," said President
Saddam Hussein had awarded medals to the dead bomber, an army
officer.
Iraqi television named the dead bomber as Ali Hammadi al-Namani
and said he had killed 11 Americans, not four.
The suicide attack, the first against U.S.-led forces since they
invaded Iraq on March 20, threatens to complicate Washington's task
of defending long supply lines and preparing for a major battle for
Baghdad.
U.S. officers in the field said there would be a pause in the
advance on Baghdad for four to six days to consolidate supply lines.
Headquarters commanders said they would press on with the war on
many fronts.
Ramadan lambasted the U.S. and British governments. "They are
bragging that a B-52 bomber can...kill 500 people at a time...
That's why people are transforming themselves into bombs," he
said.
"One day, we will see that one martyr operation will kill 5,000
instead of the 500 you kill with your bombs."
A U.S. spokesman, Major General Victor Renuart, said earlier that
the car bomb appeared to be a "terrorist" attack by an organization
that was getting "a little bit desperate," adding that it would not
affect military operations.
APACHE STRIKES
A U.S. military spokesman said 30 Apache helicopters had attacked
Republican Guards southwest of Baghdad, killing at least 50 troops
and destroying about 25 vehicles.
Renuart said at war command headquarters in Qatar that operations
were continuing "exactly on the plan that we would like," and Iraqi
attacks had not halted logistical support. "There is no pause on the
battlefield. Just because you see a particular formation pause on
the battlefield it does not mean there is a pause," he declared.
A defense official in Washington said troops from the Army's 82nd
Airborne Division had been placed near Nassiriya, 235 miles
southeast of Baghdad, to boost security for convoys.
Renuart said some cruise missiles aimed at Iraq had fallen on
U.S. ally Saudi Arabia, forcing planners to suspend certain routes
for launches to avoid endangering Saudi civilians.
The United States says it was checking to see whether its forces
were responsible for a devastating explosion in a crowded Baghdad
market on Friday evening. A hospital doctor said the toll from the
attack had risen to 62 dead and 49 wounded.
Shi'ites in the stricken Shula district voiced fury at the United
States. Many were also angry that Iraqi missile launchers and
anti-aircraft guns had been sited in their neighborhood.
In the overnight blitz on Baghdad, at least one cruise missile
crashed into the roof of the Information Ministry, wrecking aerials
and satellite dishes.
BUSH SAYS U.S. FORCES CLOSING ON BAGHDAD
President Bush said American-led forces were less than 50 miles
from Baghdad and were fighting the "most desperate" Iraqi army units
before a battle for the capital.
He also stepped up criticism of Saddam's government in a bid to
rally public opinion behind the war in the face of mounting
questions about its tactics and duration.
"Every atrocity has confirmed the justice and urgency of our
cause," Bush said in his weekly radio address.
Achieving Bush's goal of complete victory seemed some way off,
however, with U.S. columns finding their advance hampered by Iraqi
resistance and supply problems.
"We have almost out-run our logistics lines," one officer said in
the northernmost stretch of the U.S. thrust.
Many analysts had expected Saddam to defend fiercely his power
bases in Baghdad and Tikrit, but few anticipated that he would be
able to sustain resistance to the U.S.-British onslaught in mainly
Shi'ite southern towns that staged brief but bloody revolts against
him after the 1991 Gulf War.
"It is hard to avoid the impression that they are meeting much
more resistance than they had expected," U.N. chief weapons
inspector Hans Blix said in a Swedish radio interview.
In northern Iraq, anti-Saddam Kurdish fighters said they had
pushed up to 16 miles overnight from the Qushtapa crossing point
into territory previously held by Iraqi troops.
The claim could not be confirmed. If true, it would be the second
sign this week that Iraqi troops have been pulling back toward the
oil city of Kirkuk after repeated U.S. air strikes.
IRAQI MISSILE HITS KUWAIT
In Kuwait City, an Iraqi missile evaded Patriot anti-missile
defenses and slammed into a breakwater, damaging a seafront shopping
mall and wounding two people, Kuwaiti officials said.
They said the missile, probably a Chinese-made anti-ship
Silkworm, had been fired from the vicinity of the Faw peninsula,
which British forces said they had captured early in the war.
Iraq has fired a dozen missiles at Kuwait since the war began,
but this was the first to hit the capital.
Describing the massed helicopter attack on Republican Guards
southwest of Baghdad, U.S. Major Hugh Cate of the 101st Airborne
Division said: "We fired 40 missiles and we had 40 hits."
U.S. planes bombed a building where some 200 Iraqi paramilitaries
were said to have met in the southern city of Basra. A military
spokesman said early reports indicated that "no one came out" of the
shattered two-storey structure.
Britain said on Saturday a British soldier was killed and five
wounded, apparently in "friendly fire" from U.S. aircraft.
Before the incident the official British death toll in the war
was 20, only five of whom were killed in combat.
Since the war began, U.S. forces have lost 30 killed, 104
wounded, 15 missing and seven taken prisoner, a U.S. official said
on Saturday. The toll includes accidents as well as combat.
Amid rising concern about a humanitarian crisis in Iraq, the U.N.
Security Council voted to resume the program that uses Iraqi oil
revenues to get food and other goods to civilians.
Britain and France, at odds over the Iraq war, have agreed to
work closely with the United Nations after the conflict, French
President Jacques Chirac's office said .
North Korea vowed to resist all international demands on the
communist state to allow nuclear inspections or agree to disarm,
saying Iraq had made this mistake and was now paying the price.
photo credit
and caption:
Soldiers of the 1st Battalion
The Parachute Regiment protect themselves as a Chinook
helicopter takes off during operations at their camp in
southern Iraq March 29, 2003. Baghdad came under coalition
attack again, a day after dozens of people were reportedly
killed by a blast at a busy marketplace. Photo by
Pool/Reuters
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