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发信人: Systems (落叶), 信区: English
标 题: U.S., U.K. Combat Units Drive Into Iraq
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2003年03月21日09:05:08 星期五), 站内信件
U.S., U.K. Combat Units Drive Into Iraq
Friday March 21, 2003 12:50 AM
American and British combat units rumbled across the desert into Iraq from t
he south Thursday and bombed limited targets in Baghdad. But military comman
ders withheld the massive onslaught that would signal all-out war.
``The days of the Saddam Hussein regime are numbered,'' Defense Secretary Do
nald H. Rumsfeld predicted, although he also said there was ``no need for a
broader conflict'' if Iraqi leaders surrender.
There was no sign of that on the second day of Operation Iraqi Freedom, alth
ough intelligence officials said they detected some disarray in the country'
s leadership after missile strikes on a few buildings in the capital on Wedn
esday night.
Rumsfeld and other American officials held out the tantalizing possibility t
hat Saddam had been killed in the mission, personally approved by President
Bush at the White House. ``We've reached no conclusion'' said White House sp
okesman Ari Fleischer, as intelligence analysts tried to determine whether a
man in military garb shown on state-run television was the Iraqi leader or
a double.
The long-awaited full-scale assault is still on tap and, barring evidence th
at the regime has been undermined, could come at any time, said a senior U.S
. official.
State-run Iraqi television said Saddam survived, and met with his top aides
to counter the U.S.-led attack.
``We are resolved to teach the criminal invaders hard lessons and make them
taste painful punishment,'' declared the Iraqi military.
Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush's staunchest ally in the war effort, went on
television to tell his country that British forces were ``engaged from air,
land and sea. Their mission: to remove Saddam Hussein from power and disarm
Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction,'' he said in the recorded address.
It was the second straight night that cruise missiles and bombs penetrated B
aghdad.
This time, officials said the targets included facilities of the Special Rep
ublican Guard and the Special Security Organization. The organization, run b
y Saddam's younger son, Qusai, oversees most security and intelligence activ
ities in Iraq.
Red and white anti-aircraft tracers lit the night sky and a huge plume of sm
oke rose from the west bank of the Tigris River in central Baghdad.
A senior defense official with direct knowledge of the operation said about
two dozen Tomahawk missiles were fired from two American and two British sub
marines, plus one American surface ship. The vessels were in the Persian Gul
f and the Red Sea.
But two officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the night strike
s were not the beginning of the massive air assault that Pentagon officials
have said they plan to unleash.
In southern Iraq, white light glowed in the desert sky, and the sound of exp
losions could be heard from across the Kuwait-Iraq frontier as the 3rd Infan
try Division unleashed an artillery barrage. Troops eager to cross the borde
r into Iraq cheered - and units were soon on their way.
The 101st Airborne Division rumbled across the desert in a vast convoy - tru
cks, tankers, humvees and more rolling along under a round white moon.
Iraq sent missiles toward Kuwait in retaliation for the pre-dawn attack agai
nst Saddam, and American officials said they had set fire to some of their o
wn oil wells.
The missiles landed harmlessly in the Kuwaiti desert. Officials said none of
the Iraqi missiles caused injuries, and one was intercepted by a Patriot mi
ssile. Thousands of American and British troops donned protective gear, but
there was no evidence the missiles carried chemical or biological weapons.
The onset of war sparked anti-war demonstrations across the country and at U
.S. embassies around the world. The State Department warned U.S. citizens ab
road of an increased danger of terrorism.
In Washington, protesters briefly blocked one of the Potomac River bridges c
arrying traffic into the capital. Outside the White House, demonstrators sho
uted, ``No blood for oil.'' San Francisco police arrested 500 demonstrators
and there were peace rallies in many other U.S. cities.
In an unusual diplomatic move, the Bush administration called Thursday for t
he expulsion of Iraqi diplomats by all countries that recognize and deal wit
h the government in Baghdad.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the diplomats represented a
``corrupt and ruthless regime.''
The Bush administration seized $1.75 billion in Iraqi assets already frozen
in the Gulf War, saying the money would be used for humanitarian purposes in
Iraq.
Bush arrived in the Oval Office before 7 a.m., and summoned his Cabinet to a
mid-afternoon meeting to discuss the war. He planned to leave the White Hou
se early Friday afternoon for his customary weekend at Camp David.
``There's no question we've sent the finest of our citizens into harm's way,
'' he told reporters. ``They performed with great skill and great bravery. .
.. We appreciate their sacrifice.''
Despite continued opposition overseas, including criticism from Russian Pres
ident Vladimir Putin, Bush said 40 nations backed the American-led effort to
topple Saddam.
Turkey, which borders Iraq to the north, approved a limited form of cooperat
ion. The parliament, which earlier had rejected a plan to let U.S. forces ma
ss on Turkish soil, voted to let aircraft fly over the country's airspace du
ring the war.
--
We are angels with but one wing.
To fly we must embrace each other.
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