ABC Reports U.S. Marines are moving into Fallujah

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  • Nickdfresh
    SUPER MODERATOR

    • Oct 2004
    • 49646

    ABC Reports U.S. Marines are moving into Fallujah

    Gunmen killed a schoolteacher Wednesday on her way to class in a well-to-do Baghdad neighborhood, the third attack on Iraqi educators this week.


    ABC reports U.S. Marines, Soldiers and Iraq forces are now moving into the city. Two Marines killed overnight.

    U.S. & Iraqi troops took hospital and sealed city last night.

    November 8, 2004

    THE WORLD
    U.S. Troops Advance to Fallouja's Edge
    Interim Iraqi premier imposes state of emergency as all-out attack on rebel-held city looms. Coalition forces seal the town to prevent insurgents fleeing.

    By Patrick J. McDonnell, Alissa J. Rubin and John Hendren, Times Staff Writers


    BAGHDAD — U.S. warplanes pummeled suspected insurgent positions in Fallouja early today as thousands of American troops advanced to the edges of the rebel-held city and prepared to launch an all-out assault.

    Iraqi commandos and U.S. troops captured a hospital in Fallouja late Sunday. The facility was seized "to ensure that there was a medical treatment facility available to the population as well as making sure the insurgents could not continue to exaggerate casualties," a senior Pentagon official said on condition of anonymity.

    U.S. forces halted traffic in and out of Fallouja by nightfall, and roads in the surrounding countryside were blocked, presumably to stop fighters from escaping and to prevent reinforcements or arms from entering.

    As dawn broke and a thunderstorm poured down rain, hundreds of Marines streamed out of bases near Fallouja. Scores of tanks, Humvees, amphibious assault vehicles and tow trucks moved in slow lines toward the city.

    Arriving at staging areas about a mile outside town, the troops dug ditches and built berms with shovels. Flames and smoke rose from the city as the U.S. launched a heavy artillery attack.

    The military movements in Fallouja came hours after the Iraqi government declared a state of emergency in most of the country, anticipating that violence could escalate nationwide once U.S. forces stormed the city, about 35 miles west of Baghdad.

    Although the looming showdown in Fallouja is in some ways a rematch of April's abortive five-day Marine assault on the city, this battle could be much larger and longer.

    This time, the U.S. troops have taken longer to prepare, and say they are determined to go in with overwhelming force and finish the fighting instead of withdrawing halfway through.

    In April, fewer than 3,000 troops were initially deployed. This time, U.S. forces are known to have trained two regimental combat teams — which could total more than 6,000 troops — to spearhead the assault, including Marines, soldiers and sailors. In addition, the Air Force and thousands of Army and other troops are supporting the effort.

    In another contrast with April's assault, interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi has sent envoys to neighboring countries to explain his approach, hoping to avoid the kind of criticism Arab nations leveled at the United States over the spring attack.

    The rebels, too, appear to be far more numerous and better organized and armed than they were in April, according to Falloujans who are in the city or have recently left.

    U.S. intelligence officials estimate that up to 5,000 militants may be hunkered down in the city. Most are believed to be Iraqi, including many former members of Saddam Hussein's army, but several hundred foreigners may also be present.

    Residents reported continual explosions Sunday evening, and some said that all the town wanted was peace.

    "We are just a helpless and feeble town; a town like an old man! Still, the U.S. is accumulating its armies and troops against Fallouja … as if Fallouja is a superpower that stands in the face of America," said Haji Mahmood Allawi, a former colonel in the Iraqi army who has stayed in Fallouja for the fight. "If you look at what is arrayed against Fallouja, you would think World War III was going to take place."

    Residents warned that U.S. troops who entered Fallouja could face booby-trapped buildings, mined streets and dozens of suicide car bombers.

    "People of Fallouja have encircled the city with mines…. Whenever the American troops try to advance, they will find them in their way," said Fadel Jasim, 40, a shop owner.

    Insurgents have threatened to launch attacks throughout the country if Marines storm Fallouja, and in recent days, militants have stepped up assaults on Iraqi police and soldiers. A number of insurgents are believed to have left Fallouja in recent days to conduct attacks in other cities.

    At least 70 people have been killed in the last two days. At dawn Sunday, 20 Iraqi policemen were slain in the western town of Haditha. On Saturday, 30 people were killed in bombings and shootings in Samarra, and in a previously unreported incident, 20 Iraqi national guard recruits were slain near Latifiya, south of Baghdad, a senior Iraqi government official said Sunday on condition of anonymity.

    The increased violence prompted the government to invoke the emergency laws, which will be in effect for 60 days, said Thair Al Nakib, spokesman for Prime Minister Allawi.

    Under the state of the emergency, the government has sweeping powers to impose curfews and cordons; use wiretaps and other listening devices; limit associations, unions and other organizations; and freeze bank accounts and seize assets.

    In addition, authorities could detain anyone believed to be involved in "an ongoing campaign of violence … for the purpose of preventing the establishment of a broad-based government in Iraq, or to hinder the peaceful participation of all Iraqis in the political process," officials said.

    Detainees must appear within 24 hours before an investigative judge, but there is no limit on the detention period. Once in effect, the state of emergency can be extended indefinitely.

    The only area of the country exempt from the emergency law is the northern region of Kurdistan, which has experienced little violence in recent months. It is thought the assault on Fallouja will not inflame passions or spark attacks in the region, which is dominated by Kurds.

    The emergency law "is in response to the violation we are feeling in Iraq and it's a clear message to all the people from outside who came to destabilize the country," Nakib said.

    Allawi's invocation of the law was starkly at odds with his declaration in late September on a visit to the United States that of Iraq's 18 provinces, "14 to 15 are completely safe. There are no problems."

    Mohammed Bashar Faidi, spokesman for the Sunni Muslim Scholars Assn., predicted that the emergency laws would only worsen matters.

    "This will increase the violence," he said. "Now the government cannot protect itself, how can it control the country?"

    A loud explosion was heard as Nakib briefed reporters on details of the emergency law. Later, it was reported that the blast was from a rocket hitting near the finance minister's home.

    There were at least three other attacks Sunday, killing two U.S. soldiers, at least one Iraqi civilian and wounding several more people — both Iraqis and U.S. soldiers.

    As Marines prepared Sunday to take up positions around Fallouja, commanders sought to motivate the troops.

    The town is "being held hostage by mugs, thugs, murderers and intimidators," Lt. Gen. John F. Sattler, head of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, told troops at a base where several thousand Marines had prepared for battle. "All they need for us is to give them the opportunity to break the back of that intimidation."

    Earlier, Maj. Gen. Richard F. Natonski, who heads the 1st Marine Division, visited barracks and said the battle for Fallouja would probably stand in Marine history along with other celebrated episodes.

    "The eyes of the world are upon you, and I know you won't let us down," Natonski said. "When they're talking about the history of the Marine Corps 100 years from now, they'll be talking about this battle."

    Senior commanders, however, expressed confidence that Fallouja could be secured in a matter of days and rejected comparisons to the bloody 1968 fight for the Vietnamese imperial city of Hue. More than 100 U.S. troops died in that battle, which lasted four weeks and required house-to-house fighting, leaving the city in ruins.

    "I think you're going to be so aggressive and so hard-hitting and so violent, this will be over very, very quickly," Natonski told the Marines. "We're going to kill these suckers who are just terrorizing the people."

    U.S. forces are expected to impose a curfew once an invasion begins. Commanders say any car on the street will be viewed as a potential suicide bomber.

    Military-age men would be questioned about any suspicious activity, officials said. U.S. commanders also warned Fallouja police officers — widely believed to be working with the insurgents — to put down their arms and stay in their homes or risk being shot. The prime minister has officially disbanded the Fallouja police, U.S. forces said.

    Although promising a "decisive" victory, Lt. Col. Michael Ramos, head of the 1st Battalion of the 3rd Marine Regiment, and other commanders acknowledged that many insurgents probably would stash their arms and pretend to be civilians, and return to fight another day.

    That tactic has already blunted the effectiveness of recent U.S. offensives in Samarra and elsewhere, where rebels re-emerged after U.S. troops withdrew.

    "When they start to lose the battle, [the insurgents] will go to ground and try to blend back in with the civilian population," Ramos said.

    U.S. forces plan to help install new security services that will be loyal to Allawi's government. Many have already been recruited from outside Fallouja, officials say, a move that is expected to help reduce the threat of intimidation.

    Rubin reported from Baghdad, Hendren from Washington and McDonnell from near Fallouja. Suhail Hussain of The Times' Baghdad Bureau and a special correspondent in Fallouja contributed to this report.




    Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
    Last edited by ELVIS; 11-14-2004, 12:24 AM.
  • Switch84
    Veteran
    • Feb 2004
    • 2316

    #2
    I have the utmost confidence in our troops succeeding in this assault!

    Thanks for posting it, Nick! (See? No 'Darling Nikki' this time! LOL!)
    "He doesn't need to sell millions of records, he doesn't need to fill arenas, he doesn't need to be popular, he doesn't need your money, AND HE DOESN'T NEED YOU!"
    Blackflag on DLR

    Comment

    • Nickdfresh
      SUPER MODERATOR

      • Oct 2004
      • 49646

      #3
      Photos:

      Comment

      • Nickdfresh
        SUPER MODERATOR

        • Oct 2004
        • 49646

        #4
        Nightvision

        Comment

        • Nickdfresh
          SUPER MODERATOR

          • Oct 2004
          • 49646

          #5
          U.S., Iraqi troops brace for Falluja battle:


          Last edited by Nickdfresh; 11-08-2004, 12:15 PM.

          Comment

          • Nickdfresh
            SUPER MODERATOR

            • Oct 2004
            • 49646

            #6
            CNN reports forces have crossed the "line of departure" and U.S. and Iraqi troops have now entered the city of Fallouja after cutting its power. I hope it goes well because this will be the largest urban combat operation since Hue City, Vietnam in 1968.

            View the latest news and breaking news today for U.S., world, weather, entertainment, politics and health at CNN.com.


            U.S., Iraqi troops brace for Falluja battle
            Iraqi prime minister: Will 'clean Falluja' of 'terrorists'
            Monday, November 8, 2004 Posted: 10:17 AM EST (1517 GMT)


            Insurgents fire at U.S. and Iraqi forces in Falluja on Monday.
            [img]Image:[/img]



            FALLUJA, Iraq (CNN) -- U.S. Marines, Army units and Iraqi troops have assumed "battle positions" surrounding Falluja, an embedded CNN producer said Monday.

            They are standing by, awaiting an order to enter the city, according to the producer.

            U.S. warplanes and artillery fire hammered insurgent targets in Falluja throughout the day as thousands of U.S. and Iraqi troops massed in the nearby desert and braced for all-out urban combat. (Gallery: Scenes from the field)

            Late Sunday, Iraqi soldiers backed by U.S. Marines seized the main hospital on the western outskirts of the Sunni Triangle city. The seizure is seen as the first step in what is expected to be a major push to retake the city from as many as 5,000 insurgents. (Minor resistance as hospital seized)

            U.S. forces also secured the western ends of two key bridges over the Euphrates River. It's from one of those bridges that corpses of slain U.S. security contractors were hung last spring. (Special Report: The Struggle for Iraq)

            Iraqi interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said Monday he has given U.S. and Iraqi forces the green light to rid the city of Falluja of insurgents, and he promised to restore law and order.

            "We are determined to clean Falluja from terrorists," Allawi said at a news conference.

            Allawi imposed a 6 p.m. (10 a.m. ET) curfew for Falluja and Ramadi as part of a security law. He said that armed groups in Falluja "do not want a peaceful settlement."

            He also closed Iraq's borders with Syria and Jordan -- allowing only food convoys -- to keep insurgents from escaping to other countries.

            "Yesterday, we have seen more criminal acts committed by terrorists, who continue to use Falluja as a base for their operations. I reach conviction (that there is) no other option but to take necessary measures to protect Iraq from killers, and so they will go back and lead a normal life."

            More than 10,000 forces -- Marines, U.S. soldiers and Iraqi forces -- are expected to be involved in the assault. On Monday morning, tanks and attack vehicles streamed through the desert, getting in position for the fight.

            The U.S. and Iraqi forces hope to pacify Falluja in time for elections in January for a transitional national assembly.

            Falluja is considered an insurgent command and control center for the rest of the country and a base for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi terror network.

            Its population was estimated to be 250,000 to 300,000 before warfare escalated in the city earlier this year. Now, it is thought that 50,000 civilians remain there.

            Military officials contend that 3,000 to 5,000 insurgents may be inside the city, but they acknowledge many may have slipped away amid widespread reports that a new offensive was coming.

            U.S. warplanes, including AC-130 gunships, have bombarded insurgent targets in recent days to weaken insurgent positions. American forces have pounded Falluja for months in an attempt to root out insurgents.

            Marines attacked Falluja in April after four U.S. private security contractors were killed and mutilated. The ensuing battles led to many deaths. The U.S.-led forces established an indigenous Falluja brigade to restore peace to the city, but in the summer, the brigade fell apart and insurgents solidified control there.

            Other developments

            Two Marines died near Falluja Monday when their bulldozer flipped into the Euphrates River in an apparent non-combat incident, military sources said. There were no further details.


            A car bomb targeting a U.S. convoy on the Baghdad airport road Monday killed at least three Iraqis, hospital officials said. The car detonated at 9:30 a.m. The airport road has been the scene of many attacks.


            Fourteen insurgents died and nine others were arrested in an Iraqi police operation against insurgents in the Babil province town of Latifiya Sunday night. Police dressed in civilian clothes stormed a checkpoint being held by insurgents and freed a "number" of hostages, including two women, a police official said. The operation, involving about 100 police officers, netted a number of weapons, including machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and stolen cars.

            CNN's Jamie McIntyre, Karl Penhaul, Jane Arraf, Cal Perry, Kevin Flower and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.
            Last edited by Nickdfresh; 11-08-2004, 12:20 PM.

            Comment

            • twonabomber
              formerly F A T
              ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

              • Jan 2004
              • 11300

              #7
              just level the whole place and be done with it.
              Writing In All Proper Case Takes Extra Time, Is Confusing To Read, And Is Completely Pointless.

              Comment

              • Nickdfresh
                SUPER MODERATOR

                • Oct 2004
                • 49646

                #8
                The offensive is called "Operation Phantom Fury."

                U.S. Military Intelligence believes militants have actually gravitated to the city in recent weeks to "confront the Americans." -Jane Arraf CNN

                Comment

                • Nickdfresh
                  SUPER MODERATOR

                  • Oct 2004
                  • 49646

                  #9
                  CNN's Jane Arraf reported that Marines detonated a line of homemade bombs and booby traps with a "line charge" causing a massive explosion to breech that north of the city.

                  U.S. Marine and Army infantry and tanks are trading heavy fire with insurgents well inside the city.

                  CNN inbedded reporters claim to hear chants of "Allah al Akbar" or God is great coming from the city.


                  U.S. Forces Launch Attack on Fallujah
                  U.S. Marines, Army's 1st Infantry Division Lead Operation Phantom Fury

                  By Jackie Spinner and Karl Vick
                  Washington Post Foreign Service
                  Monday, November 8, 2004; 11:50 AM

                  FALLUJAH, Nov. 8 -- U.S. forces entered the Sunni stronghold of Fallujah Monday, launching a long-anticipated urban offensive that is widely seen as the most significant and controversial battle since the U.S. invasion of Iraq 19 months ago.

                  The assault is code-named Operation Phantom Fury. It was led by U.S. Marines and members of the Army's 1st Infantry Division, followed weeks of bombing by U.S. aircraft. It came about 11 a.m. EST, hours after Iraq's interim prime minister, Ayad Allawi, announced that he had formally authorized the attack.

                  "I gave my authority to the multinational forces, Iraqi forces. We are determined to clean Fallujah from the terrorists," Allawi declared earlier Monday in Baghdad. "I have reached the belief that I have no other choice but to resort to extreme measures to protect the Iraqi people from these killers and to liberate the residents of Fallujah so they can return to their homes," he told a news conference.

                  He said he was imposing a curfew on the city starting at 6 p.m. Iraq time and closing Baghdad international airport for 48 hours.

                  Fallujah, a Sunni Muslim city of 300,000 about 35 miles west of Baghdad, has been controlled by a volatile mix of local insurgents and foreign fighters since April, when a Marine offensive was abruptly halted on orders from the White House. Since political authority was turned back to the Iraqis in June, the final say on major U.S. military operations has resided with the government of Allawi.

                  Among those said to be operating out of Fallujah is the Jordanian-born militant Abu Musad Zarqawi, whose group has asserted responsibility for kidnappings, beheadings, car bombings and other suicide strikes in Iraq, including bombings inside Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone that recently killed three American civilians and as many as six Iraqis.

                  U.S. Marines have been pounding the city for weeks, targeting what officials have called safe houses and meeting places for fighters loyal to Zarqawi. The pounding has reportedly sent a large proportion of the population fleeing the city in fear.

                  The prospect of an attack on Fallujah has been intensely controversial internationally. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan warned last week that a military offensive there could jeopardize the credibility of upcoming elections in Iraq.

                  In letters dated Oct. 31 and addressed to President Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Allawi, Annan said using military force against insurgents in the city would further alienate Sunni Muslims already feeling left out of a political process orchestrated largely by Washington.

                  "I wish to share with you my increasing concern at the prospect of an escalation in violence, which I fear could be very disruptive for Iraq's political transition," Annan wrote to the three leaders.

                  "I also worry about the negative impact that major military assaults, in which the main burden seems bound to be borne by American forces, are likely to have on the prospects for encouraging a broader participation by Iraqis in the political process, including in the elections."

                  Annan's comments and criticism drew anger and frustration from U.S., British and Iraqi officials.

                  U.S. and Iraqi forces entered Fallujah General Hospital late Sunday night and immediately began an inventory of supplies and medical equipment, said Col. John R. Ballard, commander of the Marine 4th Civil Affairs Group based in Washington, D.C.

                  "We've surrounded it to protect it," Ballard said. "The key word here is to protect."
                  Permission to Republish
                  © 2004 The Washington Post Company

                  Comment

                  • Nickdfresh
                    SUPER MODERATOR

                    • Oct 2004
                    • 49646

                    #10
                    Battle for Falluja under way
                    Monday, November 8, 2004 Posted: 4:49 PM EST (2149 GMT)

                    FALLUJA, Iraq (CNN) -- U.S. and Iraqi forces have begun an all-out assault on Falluja aimed at driving insurgents out of the city.

                    U.S. Army troops have crossed "the line of departure into the northeast sector of Falluja to secure a foothold in the city," military officials said.

                    Pentagon officials said the operation involves about 10,000 U.S. troops and more than 2,000 Iraqis.

                    CNN's Jane Arraf, embedded with U.S. troops on the northeast edge of the Falluja, said the forces cut power to the city before the start of the assault.

                    Military officials told Arraf that the Army had achieved one of its initial goals -- clearing a path through insurgent defenses in the northern part of the city.

                    U.S. forces entering northeast Falluja encountered barricades booby-trapped with bombs capable of causing heavy damage. U.S. tanks fired 120-mm rounds into the barriers for about an hour, igniting massive explosions. (Map of Falluja)

                    The Army said U.S. airstrikes hit a suspected insurgent position, killing an estimated 20 to 25 insurgents in the city.

                    Four Marines were wounded in one engagement, a medic told embedded CNN journalist Karl Penhaul.

                    Penhaul reported hearing an almost constant barrage of explosions and machine gun fire and said that tracer fire was lighting the night sky. Insurgents could be heard chanting in Arabic: "God is great."

                    Before the ground offensive, Falluja was pummeled for hours by airstrikes aimed at destroying suspected safe houses and other insurgent strongholds

                    U.S. and Iraqi troops had surrounded the city as they awaited the order for a full attack.

                    (Gallery: Scenes from the field)

                    Late Sunday, Iraqi soldiers backed by U.S. Marines seized the main hospital on the western outskirts of the Sunni Triangle city. The seizure was seen as the first step in what was expected to be a major push to retake the city from as many as 5,000 insurgents. (Minor resistance as hospital seized)

                    U.S. forces also secured the western ends of two key bridges over the Euphrates River. It's from one of those bridges that corpses of slain U.S. security contractors were hung last spring. (Special Report: The Struggle for Iraq)

                    Iraqi interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said Monday he has given U.S. and Iraqi forces the green light to rid Falluja of insurgents, and he promised to restore law and order.

                    "We are determined to clean Falluja from terrorists," Allawi said at a news conference.

                    Allawi imposed a 6 p.m. (10 a.m. ET) curfew for Falluja and Ramadi as part of a security law. He said that armed groups in Falluja "do not want a peaceful settlement."

                    He also closed Iraq's borders with Syria and Jordan -- allowing only food convoys -- to keep insurgents from escaping to other countries.

                    Allawi visited Iraqi troops as they waited to enter the city.

                    "First of all, this is our Iraq, and it is our duty to defend our country. We're counting on you to defend the country and regain its pride and its values," Allawi told them in Arabic. "I'm here to check on you and tell you that all of Iraq is with you."

                    Allawi announced a state of emergency in Iraq Sunday -- exempting the Kurdish north -- and told reporters the terrorists in Falluja "do not want a peaceful settlement."

                    U.S. and Iraqi forces hope to pacify Falluja in time for elections in January for a transitional national assembly.

                    Falluja is considered an insurgent command-and-control center for the rest of the country and a base for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi terror network.

                    Its population was estimated to be 250,000 to 300,000 before warfare escalated in the city earlier this year. Now, it is thought that 50,000 civilians remain.

                    Military officials say 3,000 to 5,000 insurgents may be inside the city, but they acknowledge many may have slipped away amid widespread reports that an offensive was coming.

                    U.S. warplanes, including AC-130 gunships, bombarded targets in recent days to weaken insurgent positions. American forces have pounded Falluja for months in an attempt to root out insurgents.

                    Marines attacked Falluja in April after four U.S. private security contractors were killed and mutilated. The ensuing battles led to many deaths. The U.S.-led forces established an indigenous Falluja brigade to restore peace to the city, but in the summer, the brigade fell apart and insurgents solidified control there.

                    Other developments

                    A British soldier with the Black Watch Regiment was killed in an attack Monday and two other soldiers were wounded, one of them seriously, the British Ministry of Defense said. The attack took place north of the Black Watch base camp at Camp Dogwood, south of Baghdad. Last week, three Black Watch members were killed by a suicide bomber.


                    A Task Force Baghdad soldier was killed by small arms fire Monday when a convoy was attacked in eastern Baghdad. A car bomb, apparently aimed at a U.S. convoy, wounded at least three Iraqis on the road to Baghdad International Airport.


                    Two Marines died near Falluja on Monday when their bulldozer flipped into the Euphrates River in an apparent non-combat incident, military sources said. There were no further details.


                    A car bomb targeting a U.S. convoy on the Baghdad airport road Monday killed at least three Iraqis, hospital officials said. The car detonated at 9:30 a.m. The airport road has been the scene of many attacks.


                    Fourteen insurgents died and nine others were arrested in an Iraqi police operation against insurgents in the Babil province town of Latifiya Sunday night. Police dressed in civilian clothes stormed a checkpoint being held by insurgents and freed a "number" of hostages, including two women, a police official said. The operation, involving about 100 police officers, netted a number of weapons, including machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and stolen cars.

                    CNN's Karl Penhaul, Jane Arraf, Jamie McIntyre, Cal Perry, Kevin Flower and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.

                    Comment

                    • Nickdfresh
                      SUPER MODERATOR

                      • Oct 2004
                      • 49646

                      #11
                      Battle for Falluja under way
                      Monday, November 8, 2004 Posted: 4:49 PM EST (2149 GMT)


                      U.S. Marines take positions Monday on the outskirts of Falluja before the start of the assault on the city.

                      FALLUJA, Iraq (CNN) -- U.S. and Iraqi forces have begun an all-out assault on Falluja aimed at driving insurgents out of the city.

                      U.S. Army troops have crossed "the line of departure into the northeast sector of Falluja to secure a foothold in the city," military officials said.

                      Pentagon officials said the operation involves about 10,000 U.S. troops and more than 2,000 Iraqis.

                      CNN's Jane Arraf, embedded with U.S. troops on the northeast edge of the Falluja, said the forces cut power to the city before the start of the assault.

                      Military officials told Arraf that the Army had achieved one of its initial goals -- clearing a path through insurgent defenses in the northern part of the city.

                      U.S. forces entering northeast Falluja encountered barricades booby-trapped with bombs capable of causing heavy damage. U.S. tanks fired 120-mm rounds into the barriers for about an hour, igniting massive explosions. (Map of Falluja)

                      The Army said U.S. airstrikes hit a suspected insurgent position, killing an estimated 20 to 25 insurgents in the city.

                      Four Marines were wounded in one engagement, a medic told embedded CNN journalist Karl Penhaul.

                      Penhaul reported hearing an almost constant barrage of explosions and machine gun fire and said that tracer fire was lighting the night sky. Insurgents could be heard chanting in Arabic: "God is great."

                      Before the ground offensive, Falluja was pummeled for hours by airstrikes aimed at destroying suspected safe houses and other insurgent strongholds

                      U.S. and Iraqi troops had surrounded the city as they awaited the order for a full attack.

                      (Gallery: Scenes from the field)

                      Late Sunday, Iraqi soldiers backed by U.S. Marines seized the main hospital on the western outskirts of the Sunni Triangle city. The seizure was seen as the first step in what was expected to be a major push to retake the city from as many as 5,000 insurgents. (Minor resistance as hospital seized)

                      U.S. forces also secured the western ends of two key bridges over the Euphrates River. It's from one of those bridges that corpses of slain U.S. security contractors were hung last spring. (Special Report: The Struggle for Iraq)

                      Iraqi interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said Monday he has given U.S. and Iraqi forces the green light to rid Falluja of insurgents, and he promised to restore law and order.

                      "We are determined to clean Falluja from terrorists," Allawi said at a news conference.

                      Allawi imposed a 6 p.m. (10 a.m. ET) curfew for Falluja and Ramadi as part of a security law. He said that armed groups in Falluja "do not want a peaceful settlement."

                      He also closed Iraq's borders with Syria and Jordan -- allowing only food convoys -- to keep insurgents from escaping to other countries.

                      Allawi visited Iraqi troops as they waited to enter the city.

                      "First of all, this is our Iraq, and it is our duty to defend our country. We're counting on you to defend the country and regain its pride and its values," Allawi told them in Arabic. "I'm here to check on you and tell you that all of Iraq is with you."

                      Allawi announced a state of emergency in Iraq Sunday -- exempting the Kurdish north -- and told reporters the terrorists in Falluja "do not want a peaceful settlement."

                      U.S. and Iraqi forces hope to pacify Falluja in time for elections in January for a transitional national assembly.

                      Falluja is considered an insurgent command-and-control center for the rest of the country and a base for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi terror network.

                      Its population was estimated to be 250,000 to 300,000 before warfare escalated in the city earlier this year. Now, it is thought that 50,000 civilians remain.

                      Military officials say 3,000 to 5,000 insurgents may be inside the city, but they acknowledge many may have slipped away amid widespread reports that an offensive was coming.

                      U.S. warplanes, including AC-130 gunships, bombarded targets in recent days to weaken insurgent positions. American forces have pounded Falluja for months in an attempt to root out insurgents.

                      Marines attacked Falluja in April after four U.S. private security contractors were killed and mutilated. The ensuing battles led to many deaths. The U.S.-led forces established an indigenous Falluja brigade to restore peace to the city, but in the summer, the brigade fell apart and insurgents solidified control there.

                      Other developments

                      A British soldier with the Black Watch Regiment was killed in an attack Monday and two other soldiers were wounded, one of them seriously, the British Ministry of Defense said. The attack took place north of the Black Watch base camp at Camp Dogwood, south of Baghdad. Last week, three Black Watch members were killed by a suicide bomber.


                      A Task Force Baghdad soldier was killed by small arms fire Monday when a convoy was attacked in eastern Baghdad. A car bomb, apparently aimed at a U.S. convoy, wounded at least three Iraqis on the road to Baghdad International Airport.


                      Two Marines died near Falluja on Monday when their bulldozer flipped into the Euphrates River in an apparent non-combat incident, military sources said. There were no further details.


                      A car bomb targeting a U.S. convoy on the Baghdad airport road Monday killed at least three Iraqis, hospital officials said. The car detonated at 9:30 a.m. The airport road has been the scene of many attacks.


                      Fourteen insurgents died and nine others were arrested in an Iraqi police operation against insurgents in the Babil province town of Latifiya Sunday night. Police dressed in civilian clothes stormed a checkpoint being held by insurgents and freed a "number" of hostages, including two women, a police official said. The operation, involving about 100 police officers, netted a number of weapons, including machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and stolen cars.

                      CNN's Karl Penhaul, Jane Arraf, Jamie McIntyre, Cal Perry, Kevin Flower and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.

                      Comment

                      • Nickdfresh
                        SUPER MODERATOR

                        • Oct 2004
                        • 49646

                        #12
                        A map for that summer road trip:

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                        • Nickdfresh
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                          • Oct 2004
                          • 49646

                          #13
                          U.S. Marines and Army troops are facing lighter than expected resistance in Falluja, which may be a bad sign. The military was hoping to engage a large number of insurgents in order to destroy them enmasse. This may mean that many of the Iraq insurgents have slipped away.

                          U.S. forces are still facing sporadic, unorganized defenses of boobytraps, sniper fire and small numbers of guerillas firing at them. It has been reported on CNN that possibly six soldiers were killed yesterday in Falluja while it was a bloody day overall in Iraq with nine combat deaths yesterday.

                          American commanders are still wary that the insurgents may be "baiting" them into the city and waiting until they begin to really defend the town in its urban interior.

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                          • Nickdfresh
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                            • Oct 2004
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                            #14
                            November 11, 2004 E-mail story Print



                            Forces Cross Key Road Into Fallouja's Heart
                            After three days of combat, U.S. and Iraqi troops may have killed 600 rebels, officials say.




                            CArab Anger Over Fallouja Assault Muted
                            November 11, 2004
                            Sunnis, Shiites Divided in Response to Attack on Fallouja
                            November 11, 2004
                            Flash




                            By Patrick J. McDonnell, Alissa J. Rubin and Mark Mazzetti, Times Staff Writers


                            FALLOUJA, Iraq — U.S. and Iraqi forces pressed into the heart of Fallouja on Wednesday, chasing insurgents out of the city's battered northern neighborhoods and crossing a key highway into densely packed quarters to the south.

                            After three days of combat in which as many as 600 rebels may have been killed, military officials estimated that U.S. and Iraqi troops loosely controlled about 70% of the longtime insurgent stronghold. They cautioned, however, that they had not yet conducted coordinated, house-to-house clearing operations, and commanders believe that small bands of guerrillas are still operating in areas said to be in U.S. hands.







                            Lt. Gen. John F. Sattler, commander of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, said the rebels were moving about haphazardly and "blind," without communications. As troops flushed armed insurgents from their hiding places, U.S. gunships and tanks cut them down in the streets.

                            Elsewhere in Iraq, other militants struck back, abducting three relatives of interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and killing at least 10 Iraqi policemen and seven Iraqi national guardsmen in scattered attacks. A U.S. soldier was killed in Balad, and four Turkish truckers were slain in the northern city of Mosul.

                            Military commanders said troops in Fallouja had discovered homes where hostage-takers had apparently held and beheaded several captives.

                            Maj. Gen. Abdul Qader Mohammed Jassem Mohan told reporters at a base near Fallouja that in the homes, Iraqi soldiers found black outfits and masks similar to ones that insurgents have worn in videotapes that show foreign hostages. Banners and videos that may depict some beheadings were also discovered, the official said.

                            There was no indication, though, that troops had found any of the foreigners still thought to be in militants' hands, including at least one American, two French journalists and Margaret Hassan, director of CARE International's operations in Iraq and a dual British-Iraqi citizen.

                            Al Jazeera television aired a videotape from a militant group that claimed to have captured 20 Iraqi national guardsmen in Fallouja. The recording showed at least a dozen men in military uniforms with their backs to the camera. There was no immediate confirmation from Iraqi officials that any troops were missing.

                            U.S. officials offered no updates on American casualties in Fallouja on Wednesday; a day earlier, they said 11 U.S. troops and two Iraqi soldiers had been killed since the invasion began Monday.

                            As for an insurgent death toll, one senior Defense official who has read classified situation reports said commanders in Iraq estimated that 500 to 600 had been killed in three days of fighting. Prior to launching the offensive, officials estimated that 3,000 to 5,000 insurgents may have been in Fallouja.

                            Although some units have encountered fierce resistance, commanders have indicated that the rebels have put up less of a defense than anticipated. That has fueled speculation that many rebels may have fled Fallouja before the invasion.

                            Commanders said that some fighters no doubt escaped, but they emphasized the significance of U.S. and Iraqi troops finally taking control of a city that had been a key insurgent operating base — and symbol of their strength — since U.S. Marines halted an offensive in the city in April.

                            "There was never any attempt to try to round up every single insurgent in Fallouja," said the senior Defense official. "We're taking a safe haven away from them, and that's what's important about this operation."

                            U.S. and Iraqi forces have steadily seized key buildings. On Wednesday, U.S. forces took control of Fallouja's Iraqi national guard headquarters. Early today, U.S. and Iraqi troops captured the Al Rawdha al Muhammadiyah mosque, one of Fallouja's signature structures where a key insurgent spiritual leader, Abdullah Janabi, had been presiding.

                            U.S. military officials said the mosque was a legitimate target because it had been used by enemy fighters as a base of operations.

                            An attempt to take the dual-domed mosque was called off Wednesday because of heavy sniper fire. Marines approached again under cover of darkness and blew a hole in the complex's wall with tank fire. Iraqi police entered and cleared the building. A group of people fled and came under fire from an American AC-130 gunship; it was unknown whether Janabi was among them.

                            "We know we killed a whole lot of them running away toward the south," said Lt. Brandon Turner, the platoon leader, as he stood in the carpeted main room of the grand mosque. One of the building's two minarets was damaged earlier by a U.S. munition.

                            The U.S. military acknowledged dropping four bombs on another mosque, the Khulafah Rashid, saying it did so because insurgents were using the building to fire on U.S. and Iraqi troops.

                            After three days of combat, northern Fallouja is a landscape of blown-out buildings and charred cars. Electricity has been cut off, and tracer bullets arced across the cloudless, starry sky early today.

                            In light of the continued fighting in Fallouja, Allawi, the prime minister, closed Baghdad's airport for a third day. Many roads around Fallouja and Ramadi, to the west, remained shut.

                            A previously unheard of group calling itself Ansar al Jihad, or Holy War Followers, claimed responsibility for kidnapping Allawi's relatives from a Baghdad neighborhood late Tuesday. In a statement posted on the Internet, they said they would behead the three captives within 48 hours unless all detainees were released and the siege of Fallouja lifted.

                            In a brief statement, Allawi spokesman Thair Nakib said the captives included 75-year-old Ghazi Allawi, a cousin of the prime minister. Also seized were Ghazi Allawi's wife and daughter-in-law. Ali Baqir Allawi, a distant cousin of Allawi, said Ghazi Allawi's son escaped through the roof.

                            Neighbors reported that two cars of gunmen came to the household, which is somewhat isolated, bounded by railroad tracks on one side and an empty area on a second side. They fired barrages of bullets as they burst into the area.

                            Umar Abdul Malik, 30, owner of a nearby minimarket, said he was going out to turn on his generator when the shooting started.

                            "They fired a hundred or more bullets," he said. They shot not only at the Allawi home, "but also at the houses of the neighbors, to guarantee that no one would come out and try to help the victims."

                            On Wednesday, the house was surrounded by police vehicles.

                            Violence gripped other areas of the capital Wednesday. A car bomb exploded near an Iraqi police checkpoint near the Culture Ministry, killing at least seven officers, wire services reported.

                            To the north of Baghdad, nine civilians were killed as clashes broke out between Iraqi police and gunmen in Baiji, Reuters reported.

                            About 40 miles south of Kirkuk, six Iraqi national guardsmen were killed when a roadside bomb exploded under their vehicle, said Maj. Gen. Anwar Hama Amin, the national guard commander in the city.

                            In Mosul, authorities declared a curfew after insurgents killed four Turkish truckers early Wednesday and later clashed with U.S. troops for several hours. Armed with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, the rebels attacked two American convoys.

                            A reporter on the scene said two cars were destroyed and four people were killed. A U.S. military spokesman confirmed the attacks but said only that a foreign contractor was killed in one of them.

                            A spokesman for a local hospital said three Iraqi police were also killed.

                            In one Mosul neighborhood, insurgents boasted that they had killed an Iraqi national guardsman and showed reporters the body of a lieutenant, his head riddled with bullets.

                            One fighter said: "This is a traitor who worked with the ING [Iraqi national guard], and he helped the Americans in killing his brother Iraqis!"

                            Another said: "What is happening in Mosul is retaliation for our brothers in Fallouja. There is nothing that can stop us."

                            Despite the 4 p.m. curfew, Mosul was still in chaos at dusk. There was no sign of government forces or American military; insurgents controlled the streets.

                            *


                            --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            McDonnell is traveling with Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment in Fallouja. Rubin reported from Baghdad and Mazzetti from Washington. Warren Vieth in Washing- ton and special correspondent Roaa Ahmed in Mosul contributed to this report.




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                            Last edited by Nickdfresh; 11-11-2004, 06:40 AM.

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                              #15
                              Slaughterhouses Found Where Hostages were Beheaded

                              Thursday, November 11, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

                              Execution chamber discovered in Fallujah

                              By Seattle Times news services
                              The Associated Press

                              FALLUJAH, Iraq — U.S. and Iraqi military commanders said yesterday that troops had found at least one house in Fallujah that appeared to be the base of some of the hostage-takers who have terrorized foreigners and Iraqis for months with their gruesome, filmed beheadings.

                              An American military commander said yesterday that the 3rd Battalion of the 5th Marines had discovered one site.

                              "They found a room they suspect was used for the executions," said the commander, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "They found dried blood, banners up on the wall, a wheelchair used to restrain hostages. They found a guy who was still restrained down in a tunnel. ... They believe he's one of the Iraqi hostages."

                              Maj. Gen. Abdul Qader Mohammed Jassem Mohan, leader of the Iraqi forces in Fallujah, said Iraqi troops had found more than one such house. He said they were in the northern part of the city.

                              "We have found hostage slaughterhouses in Fallujah that were used by these people and the black clothing that they used to wear to identify themselves, hundreds of CDs and whole records with names of hostages," he told reporters at a military base outside Fallujah.

                              It appeared troops did not find any of the at least nine foreigners still in kidnappers' hands — including two Americans.

                              Fallujah, 40 miles west of Baghdad, is the centerpiece of the Sunni Muslim insurgency that has stymied U.S. efforts to secure Iraq and prepare for national elections that are scheduled for January.

                              U.S. commanders said yesterday the fighting in Fallujah was going better than expected. Resistance was lighter than expected, they said, but rebels in small teams attacked U.S. and Iraqi soldiers from many directions.

                              Sgt. Randy Laird, who was riding in the back of a Bradley Fighting Vehicle, said he had had no real sleep in days and was having a hard time keeping track of the times he had taken fire. There were reports at least two suicide bombers had been shot to death before detonating explosive belts in neighborhoods to the east.

                              "Somebody said the news is saying we face light pockets of resistance," Laird said. "But it hasn't been light for us."




                              At least 71 militants had been killed as of yesterday, the third day of intense urban combat, the military said. As of Tuesday night, 10 U.S. troops and two members of the Iraqi security forces had been killed. Marine reports yesterday said 25 American troops and 16 Iraqi soldiers were wounded. There was no new report yesterday on U.S. military deaths.

                              Throughout the day, Americans hit the militants with artillery and mortars, and warplanes fired on the city's main street and market as well as Jolan, one of several neighborhoods where troops were skirmishing with militants.

                              In what could be a sign of progress, the Marines began turning over Jolan to Iraqi forces, signaling that Marines consider the area relatively secure. Jolan was considered one of the strongest positions held by militants inside Fallujah.

                              One Marine officer estimated U.S. and Iraqi forces controlled about 70 percent of the city, but the commander of the Iraqi force said he believed the figure was closer to 50 percent.

                              In one of the most dramatic clashes of the day, snipers fired on U.S. and Iraqi troops from the minarets of the Khulafah Al Rashid mosque, the military said. Marines said the insurgents waved a white flag at one stage but then opened fire, BBC's embedded correspondent Paul Wood reported. The troops called in four precision airstrikes that destroyed the minarets but left the mosque standing.

                              Most of Fallujah's 200,000 to 300,000 residents are believed to have fled the city before the U.S. assault. Civilian casualties in the attack are not known, though U.S. commanders say they believe the numbers are low.


                              Also yesterday:

                              A car bomb in Baghdad struck a police patrol as night fell, killing 10 people. A total of 28 people died in insurgent attacks yesterday.

                              Al-Jazeera television reported 32 people were killed and about 50 injured in politically motivated violence yesterday throughout Iraq, but it was unclear if the figures included deaths and injuries in Fallujah. The toll included 10 who died when a car bomb targeted a police patrol in the capital after sunset. U.S. troops clashed with insurgents in Baghdad and the cities of Ramadi, Mosul and Latifiyah.

                              An Arabic TV station broadcast video from what appeared to be a militant group holding captured Iraqi soldiers hostage. The tape, Al-Jazeera said, showed some men wearing Iraqi National Guard uniforms from behind. A masked militant, the station said, read a statement saying that the group would not kill the captured men but would kill others captured in the future.

                              Compiled from Newsday, Knight Ridder Newspapers and The Associated Press reports.


                              Gunmen abduct

                              3 in Allawi's family


                              BAGHDAD, Iraq — The gunmen who abducted three members of Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's family from their Baghdad home said the hostages would be beheaded in two days if the siege of Fallujah was not lifted, Allawi's spokesman said.

                              A cousin of the premier, Ghazi Allawi, the cousin's wife and their daughter-in-law were snatched Tuesday night from their house in the western Yarmouk neighborhood, government spokesman Thair al-Naqeeb said.

                              "Ghazi Allawi is 75 years old. He has no political affiliation, and is not holding a government post," the statement said.

                              A group calling itself Ansar al-Jihad group claimed in a Web posting that it carried out the abductions.


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