American ground forces are 100 miles inside Iraq
and driving on Baghdad, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air
Force Gen. Richard Myers (right) said Friday during a Pentagon news
conference. The U.S. air campaign against Saddam Hussein's regime
began with a tremendous bombing campaign against military targets
against Baghdad, Kirkuk and Mosul, he said. With the beginning of
the air campaign, Operation Iraqi Freedom is now fully under way,
he said.
Myers gave a chronology of the actions.
He said the operation started Wednesday with coalition strikes
against air defense sites, surface-to-surface missile sites and
artillery positions. "Some of these targets included radars in
western Iraq and near Basra in southern Iraq," Myers said.
Later that day, coalition special operations forces went into
action throughout western and southern Iraq to conduct
reconnaissance operations and to take down visual observation posts
on the southern Iraqi border. Into this plan came the senior
leadership target of opportunity, the chairman said. "Specifically,
we struck at one of the residences in southeastern Baghdad, where
we thought the leadership was congregated," he said. "We also
… struck intelligence service headquarters in Baghdad and a
Republican Guard facility."
Myers said coalition forces hit the targets with
nearly 40 Tomahawk land attack cruise missiles. "Two Air Force
F-117s also dropped precision-guided, 2,000-pound penetration
weapons on these leadership targets," he said. On March 20,
coalition ships launched more than 20 Tomahawks against eight
targets in Baghdad. One of the targets housed Saddam Hussein's
Special Security Organization. Ten Tomahawks also hit three Iraqi
Republican Guard targets in Kirkuk.
"In the last 24 hours, special forces have seized an airfield in
western Iraq and have secured border positions in several key
locations," Myers said. "Additionally, Navy SEALs and coalition
special forces have seized Iraq's two major gas and oil terminals
in the northern Persian Gulf."
Sailors from coalition ships boarded three Iraqi tugboats in the
Khor Abdullah waterway and found weapons, uniforms and mines, Myers
said. "Our naval vessels are being extra vigilant to ensure the
Iraqi navy has not placed any mines in international waters," he
said.
Myers
said ground action started when the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force,
along with British allies, crossed into Iraq. He said they have
secured the port city of Umm Qasr and the al-Faw Peninsula.
"They have also secured the main oil manifolds along the al-Faw
waterways and have moved through the southern Iraqi oil fields," he
said. "These fields, if we're successful, should be secured
sometime later today, and they will be a great resource for the
Iraqi people as they build a free society."
At about 10 p.m. EST March 21, "the rest of the ground campaign
began in earnest when the 3rd Infantry Division rolled into
southern Iraq," Myers said. "At this hour, our ground forces have
pushed close to 100 miles inside Iraq."
Since Operation Iraqi Freedom began, coalition aircraft have
flown more than 1,000 sorties and dropped scores of
precision-guided munitions on Iraqi military targets. Myers said
the coalition is clearly achieving its objectives, and while they
are following the plan, there are "many unknowns out there."
"We have dropped millions of leaflets over Iraq
telling the Iraqi people our intentions and asking the Iraqi
military to lay down their arms," he said. Some Iraqi soldiers have
surrendered and others are abandoning their positions, he said.
"Certainly, many Iraqi military are heeding our message that it is
better to fight for the future of Iraq than to fight for Saddam
Hussein," Myers said.
At 1 p.m. EST March 21, the air campaign against the regime of
Saddam Hussein started. Myers said that several hundred military
targets would be hit over the coming hours.