Allied troops continue inching towards Baghdad and bearing down on the Republican Guard divisions trying to hold them at bay. The coalition has now pushed as far as Hindiya, within 50 miles of Baghdad.
In the neighborhood of Nasiriya, meanwhile, Marines are on the hunt for Saddam Hussein's cousin, nicknamed "Chemical Ali" for ordering the use of chemical weapons on Iraqi Kurds in 1988. The Iraqi commander has been spotted in the town of Shatra, 30 miles north of Nasiriya.
An update on the attack in Kuwait that injured 15 U.S. soldiers: the driver of the pickup truck that rammed the group of soldiers was shot, and is in critical condition. Sources say the man was neither American, Kuwaiti, or Iraqi, but an Egyptian electrician hired to work at the Udairi military base.

A U.S. Marine passes by a traffic sign on the main highway heading to Baghdad near Al Diwaniyah in south central Iraq, Monday, March 31, 2003. (Associated Press)
The Other Side - Analysis, angles and opinions on the Web
Kuwait diary: How to spot a mine, Financial Times - The kind of lessons journalists on the front lines are learning about self-preservation.
Dancing in defiance for the devil they know, Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) - Did the U.S. fail to understand that for Iraqi citizens, being anti-Saddam doesn't necessarily mean being pro-America?
'Embedded' reporters are far too close to the action, The Age (Australia) - The Iraq war journalism experiment has destroyed any standard of objectivity, says this editor.
U.S. must show disinterested motive in Iraq, ABS-CBN.com (Philippines) - Should the phrase "Iraqi liberation" be taken with a grain of salt, and is the U.S. making its motives too obvious?
Posted by uswarblog
at 12:03 PM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 1 April 2003 11:28 AM EST







