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thedrifter
04-13-03, 06:36 AM
Apr 13, 7:02 AM EDT

TV Shows Weakened Iraq Defenses in Tikrit

By NICOLE WINFIELD
Associated Press Writer


CAMP AS SAYLIYAH, Qatar (AP) -- U.S. Marines were operating Sunday near the dusty desert town of Tikrit, a power center for Iraq's Sunni Muslim tribes that is believed to be the one of the last strongholds of fighters loyal to President Saddam Hussein, U.S. Central Command said.

A task force from the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force was within about 35 miles of the town, approaching from the south, having "moved north along Highway 1 to Tikrit from Samarra," said Lt. Mark Kitchens, a Central Command spokesman. Named Task Force Tripoli, it includes several regimental combat teams and light-armor reconnaissance battalions.

"It's still unknown how much resistance awaits coalition forces in Tikrit," Kitchens said.

U.S. officials have played down the prospect of a major battle in Saddam's hometown because of desertions and damage from repeated airstrikes. The first TV news footage of Tikrit, aired live Sunday by CNN, indicated its northern defenses had been weakened, but the CNN crew fled after coming under fire.

Kitchens said the Marines were operating "in the vicinity of Tikrit" but he refused say how close they were to the city itself, or whether troops had entered it or its outskirts.

He said the Marines' orders were to push forward, move north, and if they engage any enemy forces "to attack those forces and eliminate them."

He didn't say if there had been any significant fighting since the Marines left Baghdad on Saturday. Tikrit is about 90 miles north of the Iraqi capital.

Another prong of Marines that left the capital Saturday met "minimal resistance" along Highway 5 as they moved toward the town of Baqubah, about 30 miles northeast of Baghdad.

The live report by CNN suggested intense U.S. airstrikes had taken a heavy toll on the Tikrit's military forces. However, the convoy of CNN vehicles came under small-arms fire as they tried to enter the city center. A CNN security guard returned fire at least twice, and the news crew quickly drove away.

Two members of the CNN party were injured, according to Eli Flournoy, CNN's senior international assignment editor. He said an Iraqi Kurd serving as a security guard was grazed by a bullet, and a CNN producer was hit by shattered glass.

Before the shooting, CNN correspondent Brent Sadler had reported that U.S. military officers were negotiating with tribal chiefs in Tikrit for a peaceful surrender of the city. But after the gunfire, he said Saddam's loyalists in Tikrit were "clearly still in control."

As Sadler described the unfolding situation, gunfire was visible hitting the road ahead of them, kicking up dust. "That was a pretty ugly moment," Sadler said. "I have never come under such direct fire."

Central Command spokesman Capt. Stewart Upton said he had no reports of any surrender negotiations with any remnant fighters in the city.

Upton said troop movement north from Baghdad was "extremely fast."

Elsewhere, Special Operations forces were intercepting regime loyalists along Highway 2 between the northern city of Mosul and the Syrian border, and along roads north and south of the town of Bayji, about 25 miles north of Tikrit, Kitchens said.

A U.S. Special Forces soldier was shot and wounded Sunday while on a patrol aimed at improving security in Mosul. Maj. Fred Dummar said the soldier was in a Land Rover, driving past a waving crowd, when a bullet smashed through the rear window and struck his leg. The wound was not believed to be life-threatening, but it was expected the soldier would be evacuated to Germany for further treatment.

Sempers,

Roger