BAGHDAD, Iraq March 22 — 
            Intermittent explosions were heard throughout the day Saturday as 
            workmen swept glass from the streets after two days of fierce 
            bombardments that destroyed presidential palaces, government offices 
            and military headquarters. 
            But as the day wore on, Iraqis were back in the streets in 
            greater numbers than they had been since the start of the war. Small 
            shops and restaurants reopened. 
            Toward evening Saturday two more explosions rattled the city and 
            there was a dark plume of smoke rising southwest of the city 
            center. 
            A massive explosion had rocked the center of Iraq's capital early 
            Saturday just hours after Saddam Hussein's Old Palace was demolished 
            by coalition airstrikes. Aircraft could be heard overhead and smoke 
            and the sound of sirens rose from the city, thought it was unclear 
            what had been targeted. 
            Elsewhere, U.S. aircraft bombed Iraqi tanks holding bridges near 
            Basra, the country's second-largest city. American officials said 
            Saddam's regime was clearly losing control. 
            In Baghdad, Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf 
            addressed the Iraqi people Saturday, assuring them that the 
            government remained in power and had repulsed the U.S.-British 
            attacks, destroying five tanks in the process. He also said those 
            captives taken by coalition troops were civilians, not Iraqi 
            soldiers. 
            "Baghdad will remain with its head held high," Al-Sahhaf said. 
            "The Baghdad of Saddam will remain defiant." 
            Al-Sahhaf said 19 missiles had been fired upon a small area of 
            Baghdad, injuring more than 200, mostly civilians. 
            The blast at first light ended an eerie quiet that had fallen 
            over Baghdad after a ferocious attack filled the sky with towering 
            fireballs Friday night. Tomahawk missiles began to rain down just 
            after 9 p.m. and air raid sirens squealed. Two Iraqi palaces and the 
            intelligence headquarters were among the buildings destroyed. 
            British Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon said the intelligence 
            facility was struck by a Tomahawk fired from a British 
submarine. 
            Allied ships in the Persian Gulf and Red Sea fired 320 Tomahawks 
            in the strike the third and largest since the war began. 
            The attack apparently was coordinated to occur simultaneously 
            with strikes on two other cities, Mosul and Kirkuk in the north and 
            Basra and Nassiriyah in the south. 
            The leader of one of the missions said a 30-plane strike force 
            encountered no resistance from the air or ground during their 
            six-hour mission. Commander Anthony Gaiani, aboard the USS Theodore 
            Roosevelt, one of two carriers in the eastern Mediterranean, 
            identified the complex as Ar Ramadi, on the Euphrates River, and 
            said it consisted of two large palaces. 
            "I really had thought that based on the type of target and the 
            proximity to Baghdad they would put up more of a fight," he 
said. 
            Three other carriers and their complement of cruisers and 
            destroyers are launching similar strikes from the Persian Gulf 
            region. 
            The air barrage came with U.S. ground troops already a third of 
            the way to Baghdad, and with Saddam and his regime fighting to 
            demonstrate their control of the country despite reports of 
            surrendering Iraqi troops and the loss of strategic sites. 
            After the early morning blast Saturday, traffic returned to the 
            streets of Baghdad, and workmen swept glass from the sidewalks 
            around the badly damaged main presidential compound. 
            A hole the size of two ping-pong tables had been blown in the 
            dome of the Peace Palace, though four busts of Saddam still stood on 
            the corners of the building. The intelligence headquarters was 
            gutted and appeared to have taken a direct hit. Bricks, masonry and 
            glass were strewn across the street in the al-Salhiya 
            neighborhood. 
            Friday night's spectacular blasts lit up the horizon, 
            illuminating Baghdad even as they devastated parts of the city of 5 
            million people. Iraqi anti-aircraft bursts winked in the darkness. 
            At one point, the sound of a missile roared through a street before 
            exploding into a fireball. 
            Hoon said the attacks on the Iraqi capital were carefully 
            calibrated not to damage civilian targets or city 
infrastructure. 
            "The lights stayed on in Baghdad, but the instruments of tyranny 
            are collapsing," Hoon said. 
            Three major fires raged inside Saddam's Old Palace compound, 
            which stretches for 1.7 miles on the west bank of the Tigris River. 
            The compound is the official center of the Iraqi state, and home to 
            the offices of the prime minister's staff, the Cabinet and a 
            Republican Guard camp. 
            Its turqoise-domed main building appeared untouched. But a 
            building next to the palace was on fire, and black smoke billowed 
            from a 10-story building in another part of the compound. 
            Despite the apparent setbacks, Saddam's regime was taking a hard 
            line denying military setbacks and verbally attacking its enemies in 
            a show of public resolve. Al-Sahhaf lashed out at the Allies early 
            Saturday. 
            "They are a gang of war criminals ... international bastards," he 
            said. "They lie day and night. They are not human." 
             photo credit 
            and caption: 
            
 
              
              
                In this image taken from video, 
                  an explosion is seen in Baghdad, Iraq during the US-led air 
                  campaign against the Iraqi capital Friday evening, March 21, 
                  2003. (AP Photo/Abu-Dhabi TV, VIA 
              APTN)
  |    
            Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This 
            material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or 
            redistributed.   |