U.S. Troops Advance Toward
Iraqi Border
March 19, 2003 05:02 PM EST ...
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Jim Wilkinson, director of strategic communications
for Central Command in Doha, Qatar, said he understood from preliminary
reports that there were two separate surrenders - one with 15 Iraqi solders
and the other with two
The two Iraqis gave themselves up at Abdali, in Kuwait, and were in custody of Kuwaiti officials, a U.S. military source said. The 15 Iraqi soldiers gave themselves up to Kuwaiti police and were taken into custody, the source said. Meanwhile, increased air activity - helicopters and jets - could be heard near the border. At sea, combat pilots and others on the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt were ordered to snooze through the day so they could work through the night. Those on the USS Harry S. Truman remained on day duty - thus providing round-the-clock combat capability. Maj. Gen. Buford Blount III, commander of the 3rd Infantry Division, ordered his 20,000 soldiers and 10,000 tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles and fuel trucks to line up near the border. One company commander led his troops in a Seminole war dance, and told the men to remove the American flags that fluttered from the tops of the tanks because "we will be entering Iraq as an army of liberation, not domination." The soldiers had slept under the stars and a full moon after packing their tents into the back of their convoy, where they will likely stay until the worst of the fighting is over. The 3rd Infantry Division is the only armored force in the region and is likely to attack Iraqi defenses head-on in the event of war. Troops of the 101st are expected to be flown in on helicopters to seize key installations ahead of the 3rd Division. At the Army's Camp New Jersey, the commander of the 101st Airborne Division' 3rd Brigade summoned his officers for a "battle update" briefing. "We are one day closer to making history, everybody," said Col. Michael Linnington. A strong sandstorm swept in Wednesday, affecting several units and hampering movement and visibility. The winds later died down, but a lot of haze remained, with visibility a little over a mile. Blowing sand cut visibility in the Persian Gulf, where the United States and Britain have assembled an armada of carriers, guided missile cruisers and other warships, to about 500 yards. Maj. Gen. David Petraeus, commanding general of the 101st Airborne Division, said, "We always watch the weather because it has an effect on flying conditions and really a lot of the activities you can see. Everything takes a little bit longer." "It'll slow things down somewhat, but our soldiers will get everything done in the end," Petraeus said. About 300,000 troops - most of them from the United States, about 40,000 from Britain - waited within striking distance of Iraq. Backing them were scores of attack helicopters and more than 1,000 airplanes. Near the war zone, commander Tommy Franks hunkered down with other top military officers at the forward command center in Qatar, about 700 miles from Baghdad. "He wants to make sure that the commanders have thought about every possible contingency that you can," said U.S. Central Command spokesman Jim Wilkinson said of Franks. "But he also is realistic enough, and has been around enough, to know that every military plan changes once the first bullet's fired." Equipment, supplies and troops continued to arrive in Kuwait, where most of the U.S. and British ground troops preparing to invade Iraq were awaiting their final orders. Military officials said there was no last-minute surge in activity at Kuwait's ports and airfields because front-line units were already prepared. In the desert near the border, U.S. troops packed up their gear and loaded it onto cargo trucks and armored vehicles. Soldiers said they were a bit apprehensive but ready to move into Iraq. "I'm kind of excited, wanting to see if we go north. The faster we do, the faster we go home," said Spc. Servando Diaz of San Jose, Calif. After driving in a convoy for several hours, members of the 3rd Infantry Division's A Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment took up a defensive position along with two tank companies. Climbing down from the turrets, the men's faces were crusted with dirt from the sandstorm and the sand kicked up by the Bradley fighting vehicles and Abrams tanks. "We've got a lot farther to go," said Capt. Chris Carter of Watkinsville, Ga. With infantrymen surrounding his headquarters vehicles on one side, and tanks on the other, he positioned them into a windbreak. Earlier, the commander of A Company, 4th Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, which is also part of the 3rd Infantry Division, rallied his troops before leading them to the Iraqi border. Following a brief prayer, Capt. Philip Wolford of Marysville, Ohio, led the troops in a Seminole Indian war dance. After making sure their weapons were empty, the men started chanting, jumping up and down with their weapons in the air. Wolford also told them to take down the U.S. flags from the tops of the tanks. "We will be entering Iraq as an army of liberation, not domination, so it would not be right to go in with the American flag flying," he said. Paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division ate a special pre-combat meal of lobster and steak. Soldiers sent e-mails to loved ones and savored what could be a last good shower for a long while. The aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk met with an ammunition ship, the USNS Flint, to load more 1,000-pound Joint Direct Attack Munition bombs and Phoenix air-to-air missiles. Crews waited to load the weapons onto the carrier's F/A-18 and F-14 warplanes. "We might be able to use them quickly," said Capt. Thomas A. Parker, the carrier's commander. "We've got some room down below, so we're going to fill her up with as much as we can hold." U.S. officials also continued planning for governing Iraq after Saddam. The man who would be Iraq's civil administrator after the U.S. takes control, retired Army Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, was in Kuwait as those preparations continued. |