| April 6 —
 Chipping away at the vestiges of Saddam Hussein's power, U.S. 
            forces encircled Baghdad on Sunday and began flying into the 
            capital's airport. British forces in the south made their deepest 
            push into Iraq's second largest city. Monday morning brought to Baghdad the scream of missiles, the 
            thud of artillery shells and the crackle of heavy machine gun fire. 
            Buildings in the city shook violently with the explosions. A hulking U.S. C-130 transport plane landed at the Baghdad 
            international airport Sunday, carrying unknown cargo but weighted 
            with symbolism and tactical importance. The arrival presaged a major 
            resupply effort by air for U.S. troops, dependent until now on a 
            tenuous line stretching 350 miles to Kuwait. U.S. officials declared Baghdad cut off from the rest of 
Iraq. "We do control the highways in and out of the city and do have 
            the capability to interdict, to stop, to attack any Iraqi military 
            forces that might try to either escape or to engage our forces," 
            said Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 
Staff. Marines closing in on Baghdad from the south were told to take 
            off their protective suits Monday for the first time in 20 days, a 
            sign of easing fears of possible use of chemical or biological 
            weapons. Intense fighting took a growing toll on combatants and civilians. 
            Injured Russian diplomats and a convoy of America's Kurdish comrades 
            in arms were among unintended victims caught in crossfire and 
            friendly fire Sunday. Kurds said 18 of their own died in the 
            mistaken U.S. air strike. Assorted prizes fell into allied hands, some after hard fighting, 
            but U.S. forces had yet to confront Baghdad's last-ditch defenders 
            on a large scale. "They are extremely weakened, but that does not mean they're 
            finished," Pace said of the Republican Guard. Inside a VIP building at the airport, troops found a lavish 
            hideaway believed to have been used by Saddam, Associated Press 
            Television News reported. Southeast of Baghdad, Marines seized one of Saddam's palaces, 
            poked through remnants of a Republican Guard headquarters and 
            searched a suspected terrorist training camp, finding the shell of a 
            passenger jet believed to be used for hijacking practice. Also to the south, U.S. forces on took control Sunday of the 
            center of the holy city of Karbala, the Army Times newspaper 
            reported from the scene. U.S. forces consolidated positions around Baghdad a day after 
            raiding the capital and killing perhaps several thousand Iraqi 
            shooters, by rough U.S. estimates. On Sunday, U.S. forces made their second foray into the city, 
            testing Iraqi defenses and destroying all of the Iraqi vehicles and 
            fighters they came in contact with, U.S. officials said. Pace said the Republican Guard's main weapons systems are gone 
            and the force probably cannot assemble more than 1,000 men in any 
            one place. On another vital front, British troops thrust to the center of 
            Basra, Iraq's second largest city, with a sense they were finally 
            shaking Saddam loyalists loose. British Desert Rats went into the city of 1.3 million with more 
            than three dozen tanks and armored cars, a column similar in size to 
            the American unit that probed suburban Baghdad, then got quickly 
            out. But the British found resistance softer than expected, picked 
            up reports that the local Baath Party leadership was crumbling and 
            fought into the core, losing at least three soldiers and finding 
            their arrival cheered by hundreds of citizens. "We have a lot of it occupied," British Maj. Gen. Peter Wall told 
            the BBC. He said it might take days to put down renegades. In chalking up military gains, the United States accelerated a 
            campaign of persuasion, too, aimed at getting the Iraqi Republican 
            Guard to give up. And Washington's attention began turning to 
            postwar Iraq. Pace said the United States would welcome Republican Guard 
            division commanders and troops in a postwar government if they 
            surrendered now. "I mean, there's a small clique around Saddam Hussein who are the 
            perpetrators of all the crimes against humanity," Pace said on ABC's 
            "This Week." "Below them are still many senior leaders and troops who have 
            their free will to decide what their life is going to be like. They 
            can surrender and become part of the future free Iraq, or they can 
            fight and die." The United States is deploying some of Iraq's exiles and internal 
            dissidents around the country to help root out pro-Saddam elements, 
            keep order and distribute aid, according to one such organization, 
            the Iraq National Congress. The group said several hundred of its 
            members were flown to an area near the city of Nasiriyah. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said it will probably 
            take more than six months once the war is over before a new Iraqi 
            government can take over. In northern Iraq, U.S. warplanes struck a convoy of allied 
            Kurdish fighters and U.S. special forces 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. U.S. Central Command only reported one civilian killed and six 
            people injured, including a U.S. soldier, but its investigation was 
            not complete. A convoy of Russian diplomats, including the ambassador, came 
            under fire Sunday while evacuating Baghdad, the Russian foreign 
            ministry said. A correspondent for state-run Russian television said 
            the convoy was caught in a crossfire and three diplomats were hurt, 
            one with a serious stomach wound. U.S. Central Command said no allied forces were operating in the 
            area at the time, but it was investigating what happened. In and around Baghdad, civilians were caught up in the 
            intensified ground fighting. At the al-Kindi hospital in a working-class Baghdad district, 
            scores of civilians with shrapnel wounds have been coming in since 
            Saturday night. Among them were eight members of one family. In one ward, several children wore bloodstained casts on their 
            legs and arms, and some had difficulty breathing. One girl had 
            bandages over half her face. British tasted a breakthrough in Basra against Saddam's hard-core 
            militia. "Their days are limited," said Brigadier Graham Binns, commander 
            of the Desert Rats. "Our intelligence tells us that morale is low 
            among the defenders of the city, that the population can't wait to 
            see us, and the opposition such as it is, is uncoordinated." A statement broadcast on Iraqi state television in Saddam's name 
            was typically defiant but hinted at problems coordinating the 
            nation's defense. It urged soldiers who had been separated from 
            regular units to join up with any unit they could find. Central Command officials estimated Sunday that 2,000 to 3,000 
            Iraqi fighters died in the 3rd Infantry Division's 25-mile incursion 
            in an industrial section of Baghdad a day earlier. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks gave no specifics on how the estimate 
            was reached. More than three dozen tanks and armored vehicles staged 
            the raid; U.S. casualties were described as light. photo credit 
            and caption:
 
              
              
                | A British tank with the 7th 
                  Armored Brigade, known as the "Desert Rats," moves into 
                  northern Basra, Iraq, Sunday, April 6, 2003. British troops 
                  staged their largest military incursion into the southern city 
                  of Basra, rumbling into Iraq's second-largest city with a 
                  column of 40 armored personnel carriers Sunday. (AP 
                  Photo/Daily Mail, Bruce Adams, 
            POOL) 
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