An Iraqi man was captured by US soldiers in Fallujah, Nov. 12,
2004.(Xinhua photo)
An Iraqi man was captured by US troops in Fallujah, Nov. 12,
2004.(AFP photo)
Some Iraqi old men met US soldiers in Fallujah, Nov. 12, 2004.
(Xinhua/AFP photo)
US and Iraqi forces said they had captured almost three quarters
of Fallujah, the bastion of IraqiSunni Muslim insurgents, on Wednesday and aimed
to control all ofthe city by Saturday despite strong resistance from the
insurgents.
The fierce three-day-old battle continued into Thursday night, moving from
sheer US firepower on suspected insurgent fighting positions to house-by-house
battles to secure neighborhoods from north to south, news reaching here said.
As night fell, fierce fighting broke out in the Jolan district of
northwestern Fallujah, where the heart of the resistance is thought to be. Fires
were seen throughout the war-torn streets, witnesses said.
US Marines backed by Iraqi troops started an all-out offensive late Monday in
a bid to regain control of the rebel hub of Fallujah as part of government
efforts to pacify security situation ahead of the January elections.
The Pentagon said Thursday that the assault on Fallujah has been "very, very
successful" and "hundreds and hundreds of insurgents" have been either killed or
captured.
"We hope that in the next few days we'll be able to return Fallujah to the
citizens there without the intimidation that the insurgents brought," Air Force
Gen. Richard Myers said on CBS's "The Early Show."
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who was on a Latin-America tour in El
Salvador, confirmed Thursday that "hundreds" of insurgents have been killed in
Fallujah as US and Iraqi troops sweep through the besieged city.
Admitting that some insurgents had probably escaped the attack, Rumsfeld said
that "we also know that there are a number of hundreds (of rebels) that didn't,
and have been killed," adding that "others have been captured."
However, Rumsfeld declined to put a specific number on the dead.
Meanwhile, 18 US troops and five Iraqi soldiers have beenkilled and 178
Americans and 34 Iraqis wounded in action since the start of the battle on
Monday, commander of the operation RichardNatonski told reporters in Fallujah.
In an apparent effort to ease pressure on their besieged allies in Fallujah,
insurgents mounted major attacks in Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city 354 km to
the north.
Rebels attacked nine police stations and battled US and Iraqi troops around
bridges across the Tigris River in the city. The US military also said it
attacked suspected rebel targets in Mosulwith air and ground fire on Thursday.
Violence also flared in the refinery city of Baiji in the southwhere gunmen
attacked the local administration building.
In Baghdad, a car bomb exploded Thursday moments after a US patrol passed on
Saadoun Street, killing 17 bystanders and wounding 30.