Wed, Apr 09, 2003 - Page 1 News List

US tightens its grip on Iraqi capital

LOOKING FORWARD While US and British leaders met to discuss post-war Iraq, it was not certain whether an attack targeting Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had succeeded

AP , BAGHDAD

US Marines load an injured Iraqi man onto their vehicle after the bus he was riding in came under fire as it entered a military compound that US troops had recently taken in southeast Baghdad yesterday.

PHOTO: AP

US troops mounted an air and tank assault on Baghdad to repel an Iraqi counterattack yesterday, a day after targeting Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and his two sons with bunker-busting bombs.

In Belfast, Northern Ireland, US President George W. Bush said it was unclear whether Saddam was still alive. "I don't know whether he survived," he said at a joint news conference with British Prime Minister Tony Blair. "The only thing I know is that he's losing power."

The two leaders -- holding their third meeting in three weeks -- were looking ahead to the postwar period in Iraq while seeking to minimize splits on who should govern and rebuild the country.

"There will be a vital role for the UN in the reconstruction of Iraq," Blair said. "But the key is that Iraq in the end will be run by the Iraqi people."

Iraqi forces staged an assault on US forces in the capital shortly after dawn, sending buses and trucks full of fighters over the Tigris River, which divides the city. Tanks with the US Army's 3rd Infantry Division took up positions on a bridge. At least 50 Iraqi fighters were killed, and two US soldiers were reported wounded, one seriously, by snipers on rooftops.

A US A-10 "Warthog" warplane went down near Baghdad early yesterday, US Central Command said. The pilot ejected safely from the aircraft and was recovered by coalition ground forces near the airport.

During Monday's assault on Baghdad, a B-1B bomber carried out a massive strike on what the coalition described as a "leadership target," in an upscale neighborhood where senior Iraqi officials, possibly including Saddam and his two sons, were believed to be meeting. US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said US intelligence learned of the high-level meeting Monday morning.

It was not clear if any leader was killed; the strike left a smoking crater of dirt and concrete and destroyed three nearby houses. Iraqi rescue workers pulled two bodies from the rubble, but said the toll could be as high as 14.

As US and British troops advanced in Iraq, their political leaders were meeting in Belfast. It was the second summit for Bush and Blair since the fighting began.

"The hostilities phase is coming to a conclusion," US Secretary of State Colin Powell told reporters. Without elaboration, he said the US government is sending a team this week to Iraq to begin laying the groundwork for an interim authority.

As airstrikes continued yesterday, Arab satellite network al-Jazeera reported its Baghdad office was bombed, killing one staffer. While the network's cameras rolled, a second bomb fell in the same neighborhood on the Tigris, where a number of TV channels have offices. Abu Dhabi TV said its office had also been hit.

Later, the Palestine Hotel, home base for many journalists, was struck by what was believed to be tank fire. Reuters said a cameraman was killed in the blast and three of its staff were injured -- a reporter, a photographer and a technician. A Spanish cameraman working for Telecinco was also killed. All had to be rushed to hospital.

In southeastern Baghdad, the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, took over a prison overnight, where they found US Army uniforms and chemical weapons suits, possibly from captured US soldiers. Shortly after dawn, the Marines were attacked by Iraqis firing rocket-propelled grenades and AK-47s; Marine snipers shot more than a dozen of them.

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