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To mark the tenth anniversary of the Iraq war, I am re-posting diary entries that I wrote at the time for the Guardian's website...

  

Iraq war diary: 24 March, 2003 

Saddam Hussein: "Be patient, victory is coming."

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It is day five, and suddenly the clinical, precision war talked about by General Tommy Franks at the Centcom press conference on Saturday is looking very messy.

Five US soldiers from a maintenance unit, including a woman, were paraded on Iraqi television yesterday afternoon, looking battered and confused. They had been taken prisoner after their vehicle lost its way in Suq al-Shuyukh, near Nassiriya.

The Arab satellite channel, al-Jazeera, also showed pictures of the corpses of several US soldiers who were killed in the same area.

Terry Lloyd, a reporter with the British television news channel ITN, was confirmed dead yesterday. Two of his colleagues are still missing in the Basra area.

Evidence of civilian casualties on the Iraqi side emerged over the weekend, when al-Jazeera broadcast horrific pictures from both Basra, in the south, and the area in which the Ansar al-Islam group was bombed, in the north. One showed a child's head split open.

Although some of the invasion forces have sped on towards Baghdad, others have been left behind to mop up local resistance, a job which is proving a lot more difficult than reports had at first suggested.

Umm Qasr, the port town just across the border from Kuwait, has been reported as having been "secured" several times, but it is still not certain whether the invasion forces have total control there.

The Iraqi vice-president, Taha Yassin Ramadan, yesterday gave an upbeat press conference, claiming that "operations are going on in an excellent and comfortable manner for Iraq".

He continued ominously: "They say that they are heading towards Baghdad, and that they covered more than 160 or 180km towards Baghdad.

"I would like to tell them that, in the course that they are following, let them continue up to 300km and let them mobilise all the tanks and marines they have, and we will not clash with them soon. We will give them enough time.

"However, in any contact with any Iraqi village or city, they [the invasion forces] will find what they are now witnessing in Umm Qasr and Suq al-Shuyukh."

This morning, two British soldiers were reported missing after their vehicle came under fire in southern Iraq. The defence ministry in London gave no further details.

Over the weekend, a British Tornado warplane returning from a mission in Iraq was mistaken for an incoming missile, and was shot down by Patriot rockets in Kuwait. The crew of two died.

In a bizarre incident on Saturday, one US soldier died and 15 more were injured when one of their colleagues threw grenades into tents at a camp in Kuwait.

This was at first reported as a terrorist attack, but it seems more reminiscent of the "fragging" phenomenon witnessed during the Vietnam war, when disaffected soldiers attacked their officers with fragmentation grenades on several occasions.

So far, most of the confirmed deaths among the invasion forces have not come as a result of combat with Iraqis. Fourteen British and six US personnel have died in accidents, two Britons have been killed by friendly fire, and one American died in the grenade incident.

A crisis is also brewing on the northern border, where Turkish forces appear to have defied the US by entering the Kurdish area of Iraq. Adopting the same line of argument used by the US to justify its own invasion, Turkey says that it is merely 
taking "pre-emptive action".

An exclusive report in the Jerusalem Post this morning says that US forces are investigating a large factory in southern Iraq that could be connected with chemical weapons. If this turns out to be true, it would provide a huge boost to those who favoured military action rather than continued weapons inspections.

As yet, however, there is no confirmation, but more details may emerge during the course of the day.

Meanwhile, in a televised address to the country, the Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein, promised triumph over the coalition forces. He hailed Iraqi resistance and said: "Be patient, victory is coming."
  

Posted by Brian Whitaker 
Sunday, 24 March 2013  

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Iraq war diary, 2003

Introduction

19 March: British parliament votes for war

20 March: Saddam becomes a 'target of opportunity'

21 March: The war starts in earnest

24 March: Saddam Hussein: 'Victory is coming'

25 March: Invading forces advance on Baghdad

26 March: Uprising reported in Basra

27 March: Bomb hits crowded market

28 March: Richard Perle resigns

29 March: Fifty dead in Baghdad market blast

30 March: First suicide bombing

31 March: Military chiefs accuse Rumsfeld

1 April: US troops kill women and children at checkpoint

2 April: Pentagon at war with State Department

3 April: Battles continue in Washington

4 April: Doubts about a clear-cut victory

5 April: Saddam Hussein's Baghdad walkabout

6 April: US tanks make foray into Baghdad

7 April: US forces enter presidential palace

8 April: Baghdad is safe, says Iraqi information minister

9 April: Looting starts in Baghdad

10 April: The toppling of Saddam Hussein's statue

11 April: Murder in the mosque

12 April: 'Freedom is untidy,' says Rumsfeld amid looting

13 April: Syrian border closed

14 April: US forces enter Saddam's home town

 

  
  
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Books about Iraq

A History of Iraq 
Charles Tripp, 2007. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

Iraq: From War to a New Authoritarianism 
Toby Dodge, 2013. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War 
Michael Isikoff and David Corn, 2007. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq 
Thomas Ricks, 2007. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

The Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq 
Patrick Cockburn, 2007. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

Failing Intelligence: The True Story of how we were fooled into going to war in Iraq 
Brian Jones, 2010. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

A War of Choice: The British in Iraq 2003-9
Jack Fairweather, 2011. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

The Occupation of Iraq: Winning the War, Losing the Peace 
Ali Allawi, 2007. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

The War We Could Not Stop: The Real Story of the Battle for Iraq 
Randeep Ramesh (ed), 2003. Available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk

 


  

 
 
 
 
 


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Last revised on 12 April, 2013