U.S. forces are soon to be nearly doubled: the Pentagon has signed the orders for 130,000 additional troops to be deployed to the Persian Gulf. 30,000 members of the Army's 4th Infantry Division and other units will depart immediately; another 100,000 troops will be dispatched next month.
In the meantime, bombs continue pounding Baghdad, the latest sorties involving two 4,700-lb. "bunker-busters" dropped from B-2 Stealth bombers. Additional strikes have been concentrating on Republican Guard divisions dug in outside the city.
Relief has finally arrived in the port city of Umm Qasr. A British supply vessel has docked with 232 tons of water, food and other necessities. Getting some of that aid to the city of Basra, however, which needs it most, will be a difficult task. The U.N. has also gotten back in the game, approving a resolution to resume its food-for-oil program with Iraq, which was suspended just before coalition forces entered the country.
Iraqi boys play soccer in front of smoke from raging oil fires billowing above Baghdad, March 28, 2003. Bombs and missiles crashed into Baghdad again during the day as the United States kept up a relentless bombardment, but a defiant Iraq promised "living hell" for the Americans and their British allies. (Reuters)
The Other Side - Analysis, angles and opinions on the Web
Image versus reality in the Iraq media war, The Nation (Thailand) - Could it be that Saddam Hussein is even scoring surprise points in the television war?
Iraq's guerrillas shock an awesome machine, Financial Times - Disabling Abrams tanks is a clear example of how the Iraqi army has learned and adapted from the 1991 Gulf War.
A long, hard and bloody war ahead, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Seven miscalculations made by the U.S. about the Iraq war.
Planning Iraq's Wireless Future, PC World - Focusing on what's really important here: Can U.S. companies cash in on cell phone sales in the new, post-war Iraq?
How to follow the granularity when blues go kinetic, London Times - Keeping track of the English jargon spawned by the military establishment.
One voice not afraid to air Pentagon's dirty secrets, Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) - An article about Seymour Hersh's take on the state of American democracy.
For Saddam, survival is victory, The Age (Australia) - How will the military strategy change once coalition forces enter the urban jungle of Baghdad?
A clash of orthodoxies, Washington Times - Exploring the chasm between the Arab and Western worlds.
Iraq Body Count - A controversial website tallying civilian casualties in Iraq.
Posted by uswarblog
at 10:39 AM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 1 April 2003 11:45 AM EST