| Tuesday
November 18, 2003
By John D. Banusiewicz
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 18, 2003 – Coalition forces in Iraq captured 99
anti-coalition suspects in 25 raids, and the 4th Infantry Division
conducted 36 attacks against anti-coalition targets, a U.S. military
official told reporters in Baghdad Nov. 17.
Army Brig. Gen. Mark T. Kimmitt, deputy director of operations for
Combined Joint Task Force 7, said the raids and overnight attacks took
place Nov. 16-17. He met with reporters at the headquarters of the
Coalition Provisional Authority.
Kimmitt detailed several operations and their results:
- The 101st Airborne Division conducted 229 patrols in a
series of "cordon-and-search" operations. Kimmitt said the
soldiers detained 18 people, confiscated weapons and munitions and
developed intelligence for future operations.
- The 4th Infantry Division's 36 attacks – part of
Operation Ivy Cyclone II – destroyed 15 safe houses and three
suspected former regime loyalist training camps. The soldiers also
suppressed 14 mortar firing points, Kimmitt said.
- Coalition soldiers killed six former regime loyalists
and captured 21 others in other raids, Kimmitt said. One Army
Tactical Missile System missile destroyed a suspected training camp
on the Little Zab River in a daytime attack. Another missile was
used at night against a target identified as a sanctuary for
anti-coalition activities, Kimmitt said, and no damage assessment
was yet available. He added the missiles were used because their
precision minimized the possibility of injuring civilians or causing
collateral damage.
- One coalition soldier was killed and two others were
wounded when their Ivy Cyclone II mounted patrol was attacked near
Albu Shukur. The wounded soldiers were taken to the 21st Combat
Support Hospital.
- Coalition forces conducted 609 patrols in and around
Baghdad during the 24-hour period as part of the 1st Armored
Division's Operation Iron Hammer, capturing 33 enemy personnel.
Combat actions included two cordon-and-search operations in Baghdad,
detaining six people with suspected ties to the Fedayeen Saddam
paramilitary organization and other anti-coalition elements. Another
cordon-and-search operation in Baghdad's Azamiyah section netted 25
enemy personnel, including a former Republican Guard general, and
what Kimmitt called "significant quantities" of weapons
and ammunition. A joint cordon-and-search operation was conducted in
the Abu Ghuraib area with the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps, he added.
- In the west, the 82nd Airborne Division conducted six
offensive operations, 171 patrols and nine joint patrols with Iraqi
security forces. They detained 26 people and cleared 11 ammunition
stockpiles. Kimmitt said enemy contacts in the zone had decreased
for the third straight day.
- Paratroopers from the 505th Parachute Infantry
Regiment conducted offensive operations and captured two people
wanted for planning and supporting attacks against the coalition.
The operation netted 11 other people wanted for questioning, and
soldiers confiscated various explosives and bomb-making materials.
- Operations in Habbaniyah and Ramadi by the 1st
Infantry Division resulted in the capture of five people with
explosives. Soldiers also seized anti-coalition documents.
- In the central zone, coalition forces conducted 128
mounted and dismounted patrols, 11 joint patrols, and operated 104
checkpoints. Acting on information from a local source, a 3rd Battle
Group patrol on the edge of Karbala found a cache of artillery
rounds. Also in Karbala, a local citizen turned in 15 grenade
launchers.
Kimmitt also told reporters that efforts continue to kill or capture
Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, former vice president of Saddam's revolutionary
council and No. 6 on the coalition's most-wanted list. He is represented
as the king of clubs in the 55-card deck depicting the most-wanted
former regime leaders. "We have reason to believe he is a key
figure in attacks against coalition figures and Iraqi citizens,"
Kimmitt said, adding that the coalition is "getting closer every
day" to finding him.
The most-wanted fugitive is the former dictator himself, Saddam
Hussein, and Kimmitt said the effort to find him is "daily
business" that will not stop until he's found. "And we will
bring him to justice," the general added.
Kimmitt said the coalition doesn't classify the attacks against the
coalition and Iraqi citizens as a guerrilla insurgency. "We see it
as criminal activity within the country – people laying booby traps
(and) people using car bombs to go after coalition forces," he
said.
The attackers don't want to fight the coalition in a military sense,
he continued, but rather want to break the coalition's will and drive it
out of Iraq. "We're responding with military weapons," he
said. "And every time we have an engagement with the enemy, we
always prevail, and we'll continue to do that until the situation is
stable."
The general dismissed a suggestion that the coalition isn't getting
anywhere in defeating anti-coalition forces. "Every one of these
people that we have in detention (is) no longer building bombs, driving
car bombs, (or) putting bombs by the side of the road that kill, maim
and injure innocent Iraqis and other military forces here," he
said.
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