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Published on Wednesday, March 26, 2003 by Associated Press
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At Least 14 Dead in Baghdad Neighborhood Cruise Missile Attack
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by Hamza Hendawi
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BAGHDAD, IRAQ - Two cruise missiles struck a residential area in Baghdad on Wednesday, killing 14 people, Iraqi defense officials said the worst single reported instance of civilian deaths since the U.S. bombing campaign began a week ago.
At a military briefing in Qatar, U.S. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks said he could not confirm that U.S. missiles hit the neighborhood. "We don't have a report that corroborates that so I can't confirm it," he said. "We don't know that those are ours." Associated Press Television News video showed a large crater in the street, a smoldering building, demolished cars, and bodies wrapped in plastic sheeting in the back of a pickup truck. The streets were flooded after water pipes ruptured. Street lights toppled over, trees were uprooted and some cars were overturned.
Hundreds of people milled around on the street in front of the gutted market. Some of them shook their fists in anger. "This is barbarian!" shouted Adnan Saleh Barseem. "It's proof that their aggression is collapsing." Crowds consisting of residents of some of the damaged apartments began to chant: "Oh, Saddam, we sacrifice our souls and blood to you." Lt. Col. Hamad Abdullah, head of civil defense in the area, said 14 people were killed and 30 injured. Seventeen cars were destroyed, he added. U.S. Central Command said it was checking into the report. A spokesman noted that coalition forces take "extraordinary" measures to protect civilians. On Monday, Iraq's information minister reported that 194 civilians had been injured so far in the bombing of Baghdad.
Cars drove with their headlights on and street lights were switched on. Overnight, with the final assault on Baghdad drawing closer, the allies tried to cripple the regime's communications with bombs and missiles, knocking Iraq's satellite TV signal off the air for several hours Wednesday. U.S. forces pounded targets in the Iraqi capital with a barrage of at least 40 Tomahawk cruise missiles launched from warships in the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, the Navy said. The air strikes also included bombing runs by warplanes. The attacks targeted not only Iraqi television but also government communications and satellite links at several sites in the capital, U.S. military officials said. Smoke was seen next to the information ministry and the Iraqi TV building. "These targets are key regime command-and-control assets," said Jim Wilkinson, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command. Iraqi Satellite TV, which broadcasts 24 hours a day outside Iraq, went off the air around 4:30 a.m. after the attack on the TV building. It went back on the air about eight hours later.
However, there was no trace of Al-Shabab television, the station owned by Saddam Hussein's son Odai. That station is normally transmitted from the state television building. Meanwhile, a howling sandstorm that had cast a yellow haze over Baghdad eased Wednesday morning as U.S.-led troops lay within 50 miles of the capital, setting up a seemingly inevitable fight for control of the city of 5 million people. The sandstorm had slowed the allies' advance to a crawl. "We are determined to defend our capital after what we have seen of our brothers' resistance in the south," Baghdad truck driver Ahmed Falah said. "The whole world is with us now, even the weather, because the sandstorm has brought benefits to us. They are the storms of God." The city has also been shrouded with smoke from fuel fires set by Baghdad authorities to obscure military targets. Television, like state radio, constantly played patriotic songs and messages of support from Iraqis for Saddam. Copyright 2003 Associated Press ### |