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Progress war of words

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http://www.dw-world.de/english/0,3367,7489_A_825762_1_A,00.html

05.04.2003

War of Words Erupts Over Progress of Forces

U.S. forces conduct "probing" missions into central Baghdad, as Iraqi minister says Baghdad, airport remain in Iraqi control. U.S. troop death toll rises to 75 with identification of 9 soldiers reported missing.

The fierce fighting around Baghdad and the city's international airport has been supplemented by a war of words between Iraqi and U.S. military officials on the progress made by coalition forces.

While American military officers and reporters "embedded" with U.S. forces showed burned-out Iraqi tanks and said they had troops in the "heart" of Baghdad, Iraq's information minister said both the airport and the city remained in control of Iraqi troops.

War of words clouds truth

"You can go an visit those places. Nothing there, nothing there at all," said Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf. "There are Iraqi checkpoints. Everything is okay."

Al-Sahaf's statements to reporters Saturday morning were seemingly supplemented by a Reuters reporter who made a tour of the southern outskirts of Baghdad and the presidential palaces and found "no American troops."

Though acknowledging that there was still sporadic fighting at the former Saddam International Airport, U.S. military officials said they had secured the vital strategic location south of Baghdad. Al-Sahad, in response, said "hundreds" of American soldiers had been killed at the airport, which U.S. forces have re-named Baghdad International Airport.

The "airport has been changed into a graveyard for the invaders," the information minister said.

Four soldiers had been injured in fighting, one of them seriously, U.S. military sources told Reuters. A military spokesman called Iraq's claims "quite frankly groundless."

In addition, said Capt. Frank Thorp, American forces were moving a significant number of troops into the "heart of Baghdad." At a press briefing later in the day, military spokesman Renuart said forces had moved north into Baghdad near a bend in the the Tigris river and west to the airport (see DW-WORLD's Atlas of the Iraqi conflict on a side bar of the home page). Renaurt said U.S. soldiers and tanks would move further at "times and places of our choosing," and have encountered little resistance so far.

A U.S: Marine Commander told a reporter his forces would use "a knock-out punch" in taking the city. "We're not going to tip-toe into the city," he told Reuters.

Baghdad humanitarian situation worsens

The situation inside the capital has gotten more dangerous, report correspondents. Iraqis are fleeing Baghdad via the northern road as the International Red Cross reported increasing difficulties in caring for war victims.

The international organization Medicins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) temporarily suspended operations in Baghdad after two of its six-member staff were reported missing this week.

Aid has begun flowing into northern Iraq and the southern port of Umm Qasr, which was visited by U.N. aid officials on Saturday. The UN World Food Program has begun shipping in aid through Iraq's northern border with Turkey. A U.S. army civil affairs representative told reporters that "significant progress" was being made in getting potable water to thousands of Umm Qasr residents. Water was also being shipped north to the still-unsecured city of Basra.

British soldiers continue to battle sporadic Iraqi resistance in the southern city, Iraq's second largest. An Arab newspaper reported Saturday that senior Baath Party officials in Basra wanted to surrender to British forces, but were wary of making any move until Hussein was out of power.

U.S. Military spokesman Major General Victor Renuart provided details on the rescue last week of Pfc. Jessica Lynch, now being operated on for broken bones at Landstuhl Medical Center in southern Germany. Renuart said U.S. Navy seals, acting on a tip, stormed the hospital where Lynch was being held during the night last week.

Lynch was captured, along with 15 soldiers of her supply convoy, in an ambush by Iraqi forces on March 23. U.S. officials confirmed Saturday that eight of those 15 reported missing by U.S. forces had indeed been killed. Their remains were found by the same special forces soldiers that rescued Lynch, and have been identified. In addition to the eight dead from the 597th Maintenance Company, special forces found the remains of one soldier from the Forward Support Group 3rd Infantry Division.

The toll for U.S. forces rises to 75 dead on the 17th day of the Iraq war.

Compiled by DW-WORLD staff with information from wire services.

Note: Information on troop movements, victims and damage estimates are based on information from parties involved in the war and cannot be independently verified.


http://www.dw-world.de © Deutsche Welle




Ambassador disproves troops entered baghdad
Coalition might pause before baghdad
Conflicting reports
Iraq denies us entered baghdad { April 5 2003 }
Iraq says airport retaken { April 5 2003 }
No us troops seen
Pause is ordered { April 4 2003 }
Progress war of words
Resistance near baghdad { April 4 2003 }
Weary troops end elusive { April 5 2003 }

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