Cell phone tracking helped find al-Zarqawi
U.S. military: Terrorist alive briefly after airstrike

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Intelligence from cell phone technology helped
U.S. forces find and kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, said an Iraqi army
colonel Friday in an exclusive interview with CNN.

Col. Dhiya Tamimi said he worked with U.S. forces to monitor al-
Zarqawi and his associates' cell phones, helping to lead to Wednesday
night's airstrike on a safe house near Baquba.

Two F-16 warplanes flew the mission, one of which fired two 500-pound
bombs on the house, reducing it to rubble and killing Iraq's most
wanted man and five other people. (How it went down)

Authorities also relied on intelligence from Iraqi civilians and
information from al Zarqawi's terrorist network, al Qaeda in Iraq.

The U.S. military said Friday that al-Zarqawi was alive for a brief
time after the strike.

When U.S. troops arrived at the scene, Iraq's most wanted terrorist
was on a stretcher and "mumbled a little something indistinguishable",
trying to move before he died, U.S. Army Maj. Gen. William Caldwell
told reporters.

"Zarqawi did survive the airstrike," Caldwell said. "We did in fact
see him alive." (Watch for answers on medical care for al-Zarqawi --
3:57)

He said al-Zarqawi did not appear to have been shot -- and although
the military has done analysis of the body -- Caldwell said he was
unsure whether an autopsy had been conducted. (Transcript)

Caldwell answered questions Friday after getting further briefing on
the attack aftermath, and a day after he told reporters that al-
Zarqawi was already dead when Iraqi security forces arrived.

"The first people on the scene were the Iraqi police," Caldwell said
Friday. "They had found him and put him into some kind of gurney,
stretcher ... and then American coalition forces arrived." (Map of
target)

"According to the person on the ground, Zarqawi attempted to ... turn
away off the stretcher," he said. "Everybody re-secured him back on to
the stretcher but he died almost immediately thereafter from the
wounds he had received from the airstrike."

Acting on intelligence including information from al-Zarqawi's 
terrorist network, U.S. forces targeted a "safe house" near Baquba in
which al-Zarqawi was staying Wednesday evening. Two F-16 warplanes
flew the mission and one dropped two 500-pound bombs on the house,
reducing it to rubble. (Watch how al-Zarqawi's final moments unfolded
-- 2:27)

Bush thanks special ops
President Bush, appearing at a news conference Friday at Camp David,
Maryland, said he phoned U.S. Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal to
congratulate him on finding al-Zarqawi.

McChrystal heads one of the most secret covert special operations
forces in the U.S. military, called the Joint Special Operations
Command.

The president offered no other details of the conversation.

"Zarqawi's death helps a lot," Bush said. "Zarqawi was [Osama] bin
Laden's main advocate outside of some remote parts of the world."

"He was the person who made the declaration that it's just a matter of
time for America and other democracies to leave so that they could
then develop safe haven from which to launch further attacks," Bush
said.

"It's not going to end the war, it's not going to stop the violence
but it's going to help a lot."

Raids yield military gear
During his Baghdad briefing, Caldwell said that U.S. troops had 
conducted 39 overnight raids in Iraq, some of which followed up on a
"treasure trove" of intelligence found in raids that took place the
night before, during the al-Zarqawi attack.

Caldwell said troops found caches of "military gear and suicide gear"
in the raids, including suicide vests, armament, passports,
identification cards, a night observation device and Iraqi army
uniforms. (The road to al-Zarqawi)

At least 37 Iraqis died in Baghdad bombings Thursday, even as the
Iraqi parliament ended a stalemate by finally naming key security
ministers. (Full story)

FBI tests DNA
FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said the agency had matched the dead man's
fingerprints with al-Zarqawi's records and also would do a DNA
analysis. Al-Zarqawi's death was confirmed on Islamic Web sites.

The FBI said results from DNA testing would be available as soon as
Monday.

A green canvas bag carried from Iraq to FBI headquarters in Quantico,
Virginia, on Thursday contained three boxes of samples, officials
said.

The FBI would not say if DNA from the samples would be compared with
al-Zarqawi's DNA already on file -- or DNA from his family.

Allegiance to bin Laden
Al-Zarqawi, 39, gained notoriety in February 2003, when then-
Secretary of State Colin Powell appeared before the U.N. Security
Council to make his case supporting the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Powell
pointed to al-Zarqawi, then believed to have been in Baghdad, as
evidence that al Qaeda had a presence in Iraq. (Watch how al-
Zarqawi's kin feel about his death -- :20)

Al-Zarqawi was the leader of one of the nation's many insurgent 
factions. In October 2004, al-Zarqawi pledged his allegiance to al
Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden, and renamed his group al Qaeda in Iraq.
(Relief for bin Laden?)

Al Qaeda in Iraq was blamed for brazen terrorist attacks, including a
2003 suicide bombing of U.N. headquarters in Baghdad that killed the
U.N. envoy to Iraq and 21 others, and the November bombing of three
hotels in Amman, Jordan, in which 60 people died.

Al-Zarqawi is believed to have been involved in the abductions and
beheadings of several Western hostages. In addition, the United States
believes al-Zarqawi had appealed to al Qaeda for help in starting a
civil war in Iraq and encouraged sectarian violence. (Watch how
al-Zarqawi murdered his way to the most-wanted list -- 2:50)

CNN's Cal Perry, Jamie McIntyre, Barbara Starr, Henry Schuster and
journalist Randa Habib contributed to this report.

Copyright 2006 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press
contributed to this report.








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