Forces Drub Baghdad Defenders, WMD Search Continues
By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 6, 2003 - U.S. military combat action in Baghdad yesterday may have inflicted thousands of casualties
on the enemy, a senior U.S. Central Command spokesperson said today.
"It certainly demonstrated our ability to operate within Baghdad at a time and place of our choosing and to inflict
severe damage on anyone that opposes the force that comes into Baghdad," Army Brig. Gen. Vince Brooks, CENTCOM deputy
director for operations, said at the organization's forward headquarters in Qatar.
Based on U.S. military estimates of yesterday's combat in Baghdad, enemy casualties "could be on the order of 2,000, it
could be more than 2,000, it could be somewhat less than 2,000," Brooks noted.
There are still parts of three Iraqi divisions in and around Baghdad, the general remarked, but no movements of large
enemy forces have been seen lately.
U.S. forces in Baghdad have been confronting company-sized enemy units, which "are dealt with" when encountered, Brooks
said.
He pointed out that Hussein's regime continues to put Iraq's civilian population at risk by hiding ordnance and other
military assets close to residential areas. U.S. and coalition forces' mission is to destroy the regime and its military
capability, not the Iraqi people, he emphasized.
Brooks noted that the U.S. military has also secured Baghdad's international airport, contrary to what Iraqi propaganda
is saying on the country's state-controlled television network.
Yesterday's U.S. military action in Baghdad "also makes a very clear statement about how much control the regime does or
does not have," the general pointed out.
The ouster of Saddam and his gang is just one part of U.S.- coalition objectives, Brooks pointed out, along with the
requirement that Iraq also "be free of weapons of mass destruction when this operation is complete."
U.S. and coalition forces have looked for WMDs in Iraq, Brooks noted. But right now, he stressed, the priority is the
removal of Saddam Hussein's regime.
Brooks said a more concentrated search for WMDs in Iraq would occur after the Iraqi people are liberated.
"We still believe that the regime still has" WMDs, Brooks remarked, "and, we also believe that they have the will to use
them."
ENDS