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发信人: Systems (落叶), 信区: English
标 题: Hundreds Surrender to Allied Forces
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2003年03月21日17:08:16 星期五), 站内信件
Hundreds Surrender to Allied Forces
Friday March 21, 2003 8:40 AM
American and British forces advanced Friday through southern Iraq, some raci
ng unimpeded across the desert, others meeting hostile fire. Hundreds of Ira
qi soldiers surrendered and U.S. officials said Iraq's command structure app
eared to have disintegrated.
No combat casualties were reported by the allies, but they suffered their fi
rst losses when a Marine helicopter crashed and burned in Kuwait, killing ei
ght British soldiers and four Marines. Officials said the crash was not caus
ed by hostile fire.
Hoping the regime might capitulate, U.S. military commanders held back-chann
el negotiations with Iraqi commanders and refrained from all-out bombardment
. Instead, U.S. missiles and bombs struck specific targets - including the m
ain presidential palace in Baghdad and strongholds of the Iraqi army's elite
Special Republican Guard.
U.S. officials said Iraqi forces appeared cut off from their leadership afte
r the initial missile attack on a Baghdad compound. It was struck because of
intelligence reports that Saddam Hussein was inside.
The officials said there was no definitive word on whether Saddam was caught
in the attack, but they indicated that medical workers were summoned to the
compound after it was hit.
Saddam appeared on Iraqi television Thursday a few hours after the attack; U
.S. intelligence experts are analyzing the footage to determine if it was ta
ped before the air strike.
The Iraqi military said four soldiers were killed and six others wounded in
Thursday's air strikes, but gave no figures for losses in ground combat.
On the home front, thousands of anti-war activists protested, blocking stree
ts, boycotting classes and chaining themselves together. More than 1,500 peo
ple were arrested, mostly at a raucous demonstration in San Francisco.
In the war zone, one convoy from the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force was targ
eted by Iraqi rockets and small-arms fire just after it crossed over the bor
der from Kuwait, according to a BBC reporter with the unit. Another Marine u
nit, the 7th Infantry's 3rd Battalion, had to delay its foray into Iraq afte
r it was reported that numerous tanks were sighted unexpectedly on the Iraqi
side of the border.
The unit took small-arms and artillery fire Thursday night, and at one point
a U.S. Cobra helicopter accidentally fired a missile at an American tank, i
njuring one soldier and forcing abandonment of the smoldering tank.
But overall, resistance to the allies was limited. Within a few hours of cro
ssing into southern Iraq, the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit encountered 200
or more Iraqi troops seeking to surrender.
One group of 40 Iraqis marched down a two-lane road toward the Americans and
gave up. They were told to lie face down on the ground, then were searched
by Marines.
Soldiers from the Army's 3rd Infantry Division also crossed into Iraq and en
countered several Iraqi armored personnel carriers, destroying at least thre
e, troops reported by radio. British troops moved on the strategic al-Faw pe
ninsula - Iraq's access point to the Persian Gulf and the site of major oil
facilities.
Still waiting back in Kuwait was the 3rd Brigade of the 101st Airborne Divis
ion.
Sgt. Jose Rivera, 24, of Hartford, Conn., slept in the bed of his truck, the
n awoke to get ready for a push into Iraq.
``With all the training in the rear, I feel prepared,'' said Rivera, who has
a 3-year-old daughter. ``I'm nervous, but not scared.''
Allied officials were trying to determined the cause of the deadly helicopte
r crash in northern Kuwait but said it was an accident. The CH-46 Sea Knight
helicopter was assigned to the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force.
With the start of the war, members of Congress moved away from debating Pres
ident Bush's stance. The Senate unanimously approved a resolution in support
of U.S. forces, and House leaders prepared a similar measure.
But divisions over the war were stark in numerous cities across the country,
anti-war protesters took to the streets and in some cases were confronted b
y counter-demonstrators. ``Support the U.S. or keep your mouth shut,'' said
one sign in Mississippi.
More than 1,300 people were arrested in San Francisco, and one protester die
d after falling from the Golden Gate Bridge.
``America is different today,'' said Jason Mark, a San Francisco activist. `
`We've just launched an unprovoked, unjust war.''
Large anti-war protests also took place in many cities abroad. Demonstrators
marched in Manila, Philippines; Beijing; Rome; Berlin; Stockholm, Sweden; a
nd the West Bank. More than 100,000 protesters rallied in Athens.
--
I am looking outside into the rain
through the blurred window, in front
of which you seem to be there.
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