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Friday, May 24
The Indiana Daily Student

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Thousands of US troops enter 'red zone'

Bombs shake Baghdad; Army helicopter downed

American forces fought their way to within sight of Baghdad's skyline Wednesday and claimed the destruction of a pair of menacing Republican Guard divisions. An Army helicopter was shot down, killing seven of its 11 crew members.\nBombs shook the capital as Army and Marine armored columns took separate, converging paths toward the city from the south. "The dagger is clearly pointed" at the heart of Saddam Hussein's regime, said Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks.\nThe rapid advances brought thousands of troops within the so-called red zone -- an imaginary line on the map near the capital where Iraqi use of weapons of mass destruction is most feared. Troops in some lead Army units donned chemical protection suits, and Marine helicopter pilots were ordered to be prepared to do so.\nThe Army Black Hawk helicopter was downed by small-arms fire near Karbala, site of fierce fighting between the Army's 3rd Infantry Division and Iraqi troops, including Republican Guard forces. Seven soldiers were killed and four were wounded and rescued, officials said.\nThe military campaign unfolded as Pfc. Jessica Lynch, a 19-year-old prisoner of war freed in a daring nighttime rescue, was flown to Germany for medical treatment.\nBut the joy over her freedom was tempered by word that the special forces who rescued her also found 11 bodies. "We have reason to believe some of them were Americans," said Navy Capt. Frank Thorp.\nIncreasingly, there were signs that Iraqi civilians were eager for the arrival of invading forces.

Some smiled and waved as Marines rolled through Nasiriyah in tanks and other military vehicles.

\nThere were moments of humanity, as well, in the 2-week-old war. In Nasiriyah, American snipers summoned help for an Iraqi woman in labor in a pickup truck. Navy Hospitalman 1st Class Kyle Morris delivered a healthy baby and named her "America."\n"It was a pretty cool way to start the day," he said.\nBut there was bad news, too. The U.S. Central Command, which is overseeing the war, said it was investigating reports that warplanes had bombed a Red Crescent maternity hospital in Baghdad.\nDespite the gains on the battlefield, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and others cautioned that some of the toughest fighting of the military campaign may lie ahead, seeking to dampen speculation that the war might end quickly.\nIraq insisted the battlefield was tilting its way, and Al-Jazeera, an Arab satellite TV station, said about 30 Yemenis arrived in the capital carrying AK-47s and shouting pro-Saddam slogans.\n"Victory is ours," Saddam said in a statement issued in his name.\nBut that was increasingly at odds with the accounts offered by American military commanders as well as reporters covering front-line Army and Marine forces swiftly advancing on Saddam's capital.\n"Our guys are able to see the skyline. That's how close we've gotten," said one military official, speaking on condition of anonymity.\nThe official said the plan was to begin to form a cordon around Baghdad and press the regime to surrender.\nFailing that, there was no word on when -- or whether -- forces would enter the city of 5 million.\nFollowing days of heavy airstrikes, artillery barrages and skirmishes designed to weaken Republican Guard divisions, Army units swept toward Baghdad from the southwest, past battered Iraqi forces near Karbala. The troops moved through a gap west of the city. Special forces earlier seized control of a nearby dam, erasing fears that Iraqis would blow it up and cause a flood that could have been a disaster for the American forces.\nAdvancing Army forces captured a bridge over the Euphrates River at Mussayib after defusing explosives left by retreating Iraqis. There was little resistance. Coalition warplanes also dropped nearly 40 JDAM bombs on a military storage facility in Baghdad.\nSoutheast of Baghdad, near Kut, Marines took a key bridge as they advanced. "Now we're on his (Saddam's) side of the street," said Lt. Michael Belcher as troops crossed to the western side of the Tigris River.\nBrooks told reporters that the Baghdad Division of the Republican Guard, which was positioned near Kut, "has been destroyed." At the Pentagon, Maj. Gen. Stanley McChrystal said both the Baghdad Division and the Medina Division, near Karbala, were "no longer credible forces."\nLate Wednesday, Pentagon officials said the Iraqis were sending more Republican Guard units to the south in an apparent effort to shore up their defenses.\nThe four remaining Republican Guard units, as well as the Special Republican Guard, have also suffered losses, officials said, but not as extensive. Baghdad is also defended by a paramilitary force estimated at 6,000 and 8,000.\nOne Iraqi tore off his uniform in an attempt to hide his identity. He wasn't quick enough, and was seized.\nHe was not alone in attempting to escape notice. Troops rolling through Numaniyah, 40 miles southeast of Baghdad, saw the road littered with discarded Iraqi military clothing.\nDespite the American success on the battlefield, officials warned of difficult fighting ahead.\n"We are not expecting to drive into Baghdad suddenly and seize it," McChrystal said.\nLynch's hometown in West Virginia celebrated her release. An American flag was folded across her chest as her stretcher was loaded for the flight. Officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said she was suffering from broken legs, a broken arm and at least one gunshot wound.\nTwo of the 11 bodies were found in a morgue in the hospital where she was being held, while the nine others were buried outside the building, Brooks said.\nWhile most of the day's military action was south of Baghdad, there was fresh bombing around Mosul, in the northern part of Iraq.\nA 40-vehicle convoy carried food, fuel and medicine to American troops from neighboring Turkey as part of a hard-won agreement with the Turkish government.\nAnd a contingent of U.S. troops set up at a large airstrip in nearby Irbil, a facility that has not been used for more than a decade.

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