General McChrystal: Nearly 300,000 U.S., Coalition Troops in Iraq
BBSNews - 2003-03-26 -- There are now 250,000 U.S. ground forces inside Iraq, along with 40,000
coalition forces, Army Major General Stanley McChrystal, vice director for
operations at Joint Staff, said at a Pentagon briefing March 26. Those
forces have advanced more than 220 miles in six days in spite of difficult
weather, he said.
Some of those forces inflicted sharp losses on an attacking Iraqi ground
force the previous night near An Najaf, McChrystal said. The U.S. Army's
Seventh Cavalry encountered Iraqi irregulars, killed hundreds and
destroyed 30 Iraqi vehicles, while no U.S. forces were killed, he said.
U.S. casualties so far are 24 killed and 19 wounded, Defense Department
Spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said at the same briefing.
Coalition air operations continue as well, McChrystal said. Close to 700
sorties were flown March 25, against "regime targets" near Baghdad as well
as against missile threats in western and southern Iraq, he said. Since
beginning the war on March 20, U.S. and coalition forces have fired more
than 600 Tomahawk cruise missiles and have dropped more than 4,300
precision-guided munitions, he added. In contrast, Iraq has fired 10
short-range ballistic missiles at Kuwait; seven were intercepted by
Patriot anti-missile missiles, while two fell in the desert and another
fell into the Persian Gulf, he said.
Responding to press reports that coalition forces had bombed a marketplace
in Baghdad the previous night, McChrystal said, "Coalition forces did not
target a marketplace, nor were any bombs or missiles dropped or fired in
the district" of the marketplace. "We'll continue to look and see if we
missed anything, but another explanation could be the triple-A
[anti-aircraft] fire or [a] surface-to-air missile that missed its target
[and] fell back on the marketplace area," he said.
"But just like we mentioned [March 25], the bus on Monday that we hit
accidentally, once we have a better clarity, we'll get it to you. We do
regret the loss of ... any innocent life in any conflict," he said.
Asked about a report that Iraqi tanks and armored vehicles have broken out
of Basra and are headed south, McChrystal said, "I've seen those reports
as well. We wouldn't confirm their movements, but we watch wherever they
go...." He also said he could not confirm reports of a column of Iraqi
vehicles moving south from Baghdad.
Asked whether coalition forces would change tactics in view of Iraqi
battlefield actions that violate the laws of war, McChrystal said,
"They're trying to get an overreaction from coalition forces, so that
we'll fire on people who are trying to surrender.
"We won't change our rules of engagement," but U.S. forces "will be
careful," he said.
Asked about Iraqi efforts to interdict the ground forces' supply lines
back to Kuwait, McChrystal said, "One of the points I'd want to make is
the extent of this move [toward Baghdad] and the speed: the logistics have
not been interrupted. There have been some situations [that have
occurred], but it has in no way endangered or cut any of our lines of
communication."
Questioned whether coalition forces would go into cities to root out
Fedayeen Saddam forces and others, McChrystal replied that "when the
regime is taken down ... they will become less motivated and effective."
Defense Department Report, March 26: Iraq operational update.
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Michael Hess is the Editor of BBSNews in Charlotte, NC. Write to the editor here. Not all submissions are published. Or visit the completely new BBSNews Blog and Forum on our front page - Please Participate in BBSNews!
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