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Iraq
Royal Marines storm Basra suburb
2003-04-01
Long article.
Triumphant Royal Marine commandos yesterday mopped up the final traces of resistance in the south of Basra after the success of the first urban infantry assault of the war by British troops.
Under cover from smoke shells fired by British gunners, troops from Delta Company of 40 Commando renewed the assault at first light, attacking two enemy positions, known by military planners using the operation's James Bond theme as Pussy and Galore.
Damm, the Brits have all the cool nicknames.
Attempts by Iraqi troops to flee from the British advance over the Shatt Al-Arab waterway were confounded when two boats crammed with soldiers were attacked by mortars and helicopter-borne missiles.
They're fish food now.
By midday some sort of normality had returned to the riverside suburb of Abu Al Khasib and Royal Marine foot patrols were already deployed Northern Ireland-style, looking for Saddam loyalists.
This is an area where the Brits have an advantage, they've been doing this for years.
They received a warm welcome from the members of the 30,000-strong population, with children and adults giving the thumbs-up, smiling and shouting "Mister, mister, England good".
Smile
The success of Operation James may now embolden senior commanders to order a full advance on the heart of Basra, a city believed to be controlled by a desperate pro-Saddam minority. While there were some Royal Marine casualties from accidents in the battle for Abu Al Khasib, none was caused by enemy fire. Looking at the devastation around the town, that seemed astonishing. Under plumes of black smoke from two burning oil tankers, more than 10 destroyed Iraqi tanks could be seen in one stretch of road alone. Each had been stopped in its tracks, its thick steel armour peeled open. There did not appear to be any Iraqi dead inside, but plenty of hastily removed uniforms were strewn here and there. "It looks like the crews got out before the tanks were actually engaged," Brig Jim Dutton, the commander of 3 Commando Brigade, said. "That says something I suppose about the level of commitment from the enemy we face." The Challenger 2 tanks from C Squadron the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards were crucial to the battle. "Plenty of rocket-propelled grenades were fired at our call signs but they simply bounced off the armour," said Capt Fraser McLeman, 26, from Stratford-upon-Avon, the leader of one of the tank troops. One British armoured vehicle was attacked by 70 rocket-propelled grenades but it was not destroyed and its occupants were unhurt.
Bet they have the Mother Of All Headaches
A Royal Marine told of a grenade glancing off his helmet and another told of how an Iraqi colonel driving a car with a briefcase full of cash refused to stop and was shot dead. "I didn't know what to do with the money so I gave it to the kids, bundles of the stuff," the Royal Marine said.
Be good for toilet paper
For the Iraqis the arrival of the British also appeared to be welcome news. British troops discovered evidence of the brutality of the regime in a police station in the suburb where they found what appeared to be a torture chamber. "If any proof was needed of the nature of Saddam Hussein's regime then things like this give it," Lt-Col Gordon Messenger, the commanding officer of 40 Commando, said. Local people were not yet in any mood to discuss the past, but life appeared to be returning to some sort of normality yesterday. Shops opened, selling bags of spices and nuts, and at least one bakery was producing fresh, unleavened bread in a wood-fired oven.
The Royal Marines now patrolling the streets of the town reported good relations with the local population, who tipped them off on Sunday about an ambush being prepared by Saddam loyalists. Using this information, the British soldiers surprised their ambushers, killing three of them. For Col Messenger yesterday, there was only a residual sense of pride in the performance of his men. "To the layman the achievements in Abu Al Khasib of these men might sound strange but I know them well and it came as no surprise to me," he said. "Quite simply, they were magnificent."
Bravo!
Posted by:Steve

#7  4ID started arriving in Kuwait today...
Posted by: Fred   2003-04-01 13:32:23  

#6  Liberalhawk. My bet is they've got something going out west. All we're hearing about is the northern and southern front, and it appears Sammy's pulling forces from the north to the south. In the west, they took 2 airfields the first day and we haven't heard much since. I think they took those airfields for more then eliminating the Israeli Scud threat.
Posted by: tu3031   2003-04-01 13:03:23  

#5  You realize that all this is during a "6 day pause".

We need more pauses like this.
Posted by: OldSpook   2003-04-01 12:52:46  

#4  More good news! I love it! Further proof that once they kick in the door good and hard, the whole rotten edifice will come down. The Iraqi people just need to believe we won't abandon them (again), and then the battle is won.

This scenario will be playing out all over Iraq in the next few weeks. We just have to be patient and supportive.
Posted by: Dar Steckelberg   2003-04-01 12:47:28  

#3  Liberalhawk, what do you mean by 'supposed to'? Is this a monthly thing, an annual thing, a scheduled-months-ago-thing, or something scheduled since that strike? Would make all the difference if the Iraqis had recently promised he'd be on air in the last few days...
Posted by: Bulldog   2003-04-01 11:45:07  

#2  saddam was supposed to give a speech at noon EST today. The speech was read by the information minister.

Didn't even have a tape of Saddam. Odds that he's dead or badly injured are very high now, I'd say.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-04-01 11:38:54  

#1  interesting to contrast this with WaPo, which this AM says brits are sitting outside Basra, essentially waiting for Bagdad to fall first, and have not moved into city at all. Telegraph's map al Khasib as within 10 miles of center of Basra - shows Brits within 10 to 20 miles all around.

Im not sure whats happening - the usual fog of war and reporters "looking through a straw" (and US reporters not understanding the "sandhurst way of war")or if there is deliberate disinformation going on, one way or the other.

Too many contradictions
1. Brits are pushing into Basra, and sitting quietly outside it
2. 3rd ID and Marines are waiting for air campaign and raids to reduce RG, or are pushing towards Bagdad.
3. Iraqis are pulling RG's rapidly from north, while we are quietly wrestling with the Kurds and Turks about what to do about Kirkuk - Kurds say the northern front wont happen in obvious way.

I think (hope?) something important and largely invisible is underway, im certainly not sure what.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-04-01 10:54:00  

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