Saddam recently in Tikrit area - U.S. Army

By Ian Simpson

TIKRIT, Iraq (Reuters) - Ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein is believed to
have been near his home town of Tikrit recently and is leading resistance to
the U.S.-led occupation, a senior officer of the U.S. Army unit controlling
the area said Monday.

"We have clear indications that Saddam was here recently," said Maj. Troy
Smith, executive officer of the 1st Brigade of the 4th Infantry Division.
"Do I know where he is? No."

Smith added that the fugitive former president might still be in the area
around Tikrit, about 95 miles north of Baghdad. He declined to provide
details but said residents had told U.S. forces Saddam was in the region.

Smith told reporters in a briefing the area around Tikrit was the last
bastion for Saddam and his supporters.

"We feel like we're dealing with Custer's Last Stand of (Saddam's) Baath
Party in this area," he said. "It's really the only area he's got left."

Saddam was a Sunni Muslim and drew strong support from the Sunni heartland
north and west of Baghdad, where Tikrit lies. Dubbed the "Sunni Triangle,"
the area is now a hotbed of anti-American guerrilla activity.

In the latest attack on U.S. troops there, the gunner on a Bradley fighting
vehicle was killed in central Tikrit Monday when a rocket-propelled grenade
struck the vehicle. A second soldier died northwest of Baiji, about 20 miles
north of Tikrit, late Sunday when his Bradley hit a mine.

Saddam has a $25 million reward on his head and is the ace of spades in a
U.S. military deck of cards of most-wanted Iraqis. Saddam's sons and many
others high on the U.S. list have been killed or captured.

A chart Smith displayed showing U.S. projections of the guerrillas' 
organization in the brigade's area of responsibility put Saddam at the top.
The 1st Brigade occupies a swathe of Salahaddin province in central Iraq
roughly centered on Tikrit.

Smith said the insurgents headed by Saddam were bankrolling attacks on U.S. 
forces, often hiring people with little weapons experience.

He said those fighting the U.S.-led occupation have switched tactics in
recent months away from close-quarter attacks to assaults using bombs often
placed on roadsides, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars.

"As long as he can remain relevant there is still the possibility that he
can disrupt coalition forces," Smith said.
   
10/13/03 12:40 ET

Source: Reuters
www.reuters.com 



________________________________

Changes to your subscription (unsubs, nomail, digest) can be made by going to 
http://sandboxmail.net/mailman/listinfo/sndbox_sandboxmail.net 

Reply via email to