March 25, 2003
www.iraqwar.ru
The
IRAQWAR.RU
analytical center was created recently by a group of journalists and
military experts from Russia to provide accurate and up-to-date news
and analysis of the war against Iraq. The following is the English
translation of the IRAQWAR.RU report based on the Russian military
intelligence reports.
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March 25, 2003, 1230hrs MSK
(GMT +3), Moscow - As of the morning March 25 the situation on Iraqi
fronts remains quiet. Both sides are actively preparing for future
engagements. Exhausted in combat the US 3rd Motorized Infantry
Division is now being reinforced with fresh units from Kuwait
(presumably with up to 1 Marine brigade and 1 tank brigade from the
1st Armored Division (all coming from the coalition command
reserves) and elements of the British 7th Tank Brigade from the area
of Umm Qasr. The troops have a stringent requirement to regroup and,
after conducting additional reconnaissance, to capture An-Nasiriya
within two days.
The Iraqis have reinforced
the An-Nasiriya garrison with several artillery battalions and a
large number of anti-tank weapons. Additionally, the Iraqis are
actively deploying landmines along the approaches to their
positions.
However, currently all
combat has nearly ceased due to the sand storm raging over the
region. Weather forecasts anticipate the storm's end by noon of
March 26. According to intercepted radio communications the
coalition advance will be tied to the end of the sand storm and is
planned to take place during the night of March 26-27. The coalition
command believes that a night attack will allow its forces to
achieve the element of surprise and to use its advantage in
specialized night fighting equipment.
There have been no reports
of any losses resulting from direct combat in the past 10 hours.
However, there is information about two coalition combat vehicles
destroyed by landmines. Three US soldiers were wounded in one of
these incidents.
Positional warfare continues
near Basra. The coalition forces in this area are clearly
insufficient for continuing the attack and the main emphasis is
being placed on artillery and aviation. The city is under constant
bombardment but so far this had little impact on the combat
readiness of the Iraqi units. Thus, last night an Iraqi battalion
reinforced with tanks swung around the coalition positions in the
area of Basra airport and attacked the coalition forces in the
flanks. As the result of this attack the US forces have been thrown
back 1.5-2 kilometers leaving the airport and the nearby structures
in the hands of the Iraqis. Two APCs and one tank were destroyed in
this encounter. According to radio intelligence at least two US
soldiers were killed and no less than six US soldiers were wounded.
The coalition forces are
still unable to completely capture the small town of Umm Qasr. By
the end of yesterday coalition units were controlling only the
strategic roads going through the town, but fierce fighting
continued in the residential districts. At least two British
servicemen were killed by sniper fire in Umm Qasr during the past 24
hours.
The coalition command is
extremely concerned with growing resistance movement in the rear of
the advancing forces. During a meeting at the coalition command
headquarters it was reported that up to 20 Iraqi reconnaissance
units are active behind the coalition rear. The Iraqis attack
lightly armed supply units; they deploy landmines and conduct
reconnaissance. Additionally, captured villages have active armed
resistance that is conducting reconnaissance in the interests of the
Iraqi command and is organizing attacks against coalition troops.
During the past 24 hours more than 30 coalition wheeled and armored
vehicles have been lost to such attacks. Some 7 coalition servicemen
are missing, 3 soldiers are dead and 10 are wounded.
The coalition commander Gen.
Tommy Franks ordered his forces to clear coalition rears from Iraqi
diversionary units and partisans in the shortest possible time. The
British side will be responsible for fulfilling these orders. A unit
from the 22nd SAS regiment supported by the US 1st, 5th and 10th
Special Operations Groups will carry out this operation. Each of
these groups has up to 12 units numbering 12-15 troops each. All of
these units have some Asian or Arabic Americans. The groups also
have guides and translators from among local Iraqi collaborators,
who went through rapid training at specialized centers in the Czech
Republic and in the UK.
The sand storms turned out
to be the main enemy of the American military equipment. Just the
3rd Motorized Infantry Division had more than 100 vehicles disabled.
This is causing serious concern on the part of the coalition
command. The repair crews are working around the clock to return all
the disabled equipment back into service. The M1A2 Abrams tanks are
not known for the their reliable engines as it is, but in the sand
storm conditions multiple breakdowns became a real problem for the
tank crews.
All attempts by the US
paratroopers to capture the town of Kirkuk have yielded no result.
The Americans counted on the support of the Kurds but the latter
refused to take a direct part in the attack and demanded guarantees
from the US command that it will prevent a Turkish invasion. The
Turkish themselves are avoiding making any promises.
Additionally, the situation
[at Kirkuk] is affected by the lack of heavy weapons on the part of
the US paratroopers. The aviation support alone is clearly not
sufficient. The northern group of forces commander Marine Brig. Gen.
Osman has requested artillery and armored vehicles.
All indications are that so
far the US is unable to form a combat-capable strike force in this
area.
According to satellite
reconnaissance it seems likely that the Iraqis had time to remove
the captured Apache Longbow attack helicopter of the 11th Aviation
Regiment. The pieces remaining at the landing site following a US
bombing strike indicate that the bombs hit a crudely constructed
mockup.
Aerial bombardment of
Baghdad has so far failed to produce the expected results. All
targets designated before the war have been hit 3 to 7 times, but
this had almost no effect on the combat readiness of the Iraqi army,
their air defenses or the command and control structures.
It seems that during
preparation for the war the Iraqis were able to create new,
well-protected communication lines and control centers. There is
plenty of intelligence information indicating that so far the US
electronic reconnaissance was unable to locate and to penetrate the
Iraqi command's communication network, which is an indication of the
network's high technological sophistication.
A particular point of
concern for the US command is the huge overuse of precision-guided
munitions and cruise missiles. Already the supply of heavy cruise
missiles like the "Tomahawk" has been reduced by a third and, at the
current rate of use, in three weeks the US will be left only with
the untouchable strategic supply of these missiles. A similar
situation exists with other types of precision-guided munitions.
"The rate of their use is incompatible with the obtained results. We
are literally dropping gold into the mud!" said Gen. Richard Mayers
during a meeting in Pentagon yesterday morning. [reverse translation
from Russian]
The US experts already call
this war a "crisis". "It was enough for the enemy to show a little
resistance and some creative thinking as our technological
superiority begun to quickly lose all its meaning. Our expenses are
not justified by the obtained results. The enemy is using an order
of magnitude cheaper weapons to reach the same goals for which we
spend billions on technological whims of the defense industry!" said
Gen. Stanley McCrystal during the same Pentagon meeting. [reverse
translation from Russian]
Since the early morning
today the coalition high command and the Joint Chiefs of Staff are
in an online conference joined by the Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld. This meeting immediately follows an earlier meeting last
night at the White House. During the night meeting with President
Bush emergency actions were outlined to resolve the standstill in
Iraq. The existing course of actions is viewed as "ineffective and
leading to a crisis". The Secretary of State Collin Powell warned
that, if the war in Iraq continues for more than a month, it might
lead to unpredictable consequences in international politics.
The Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Gen. Richard Mayers reported on the proposed actions
and corrections to the plan of the operation in Iraq. George Bush
demanded that the military breaks the standstill in Iraq and within
a week achieves significant military progress. A particular
attention, according to Bush, should be paid to finding and
eliminating the top Iraqi political and military leadership. Bush
believes that Saddam Hussein and his closest aides are the
cornerstone of the Iraqi defense.
During today's online
meeting at the coalition headquarters Gen. Franks was criticized for
inefficient command of his troops and for his inability to
concentrate available forces on the main tasks.
According to [Russian
military] intelligence Pentagon made a decision to significantly
reinforce the coalition. During the next two weeks up to 50,000
troops and no less than 500 tanks will arrive to the combat area
from the US military bases in Germany and Albania. By the end of
April 120,000 more troops and up to 1,200 additional tanks will be
sent to support the war against Iraq.
A decision was made to
change the way aviation is used in this war. The use of
precision-guided munitions will be scaled down and these weapons
will be reserved for attacking only known, confirmed targets. There
will be an increase in the use of conventional high-yield aviation
bombs, volume-detonation bombs and incendiary munitions. The USAF
command is ordered to deliver to airbases used against Iraq a
two-week supply of aviation bombs of 1-tonn caliber and higher as
well as volume-detonation and incendiary bombs. This means that
Washington is resorting to the "scorched earth" tactics and
carpet-bombing campaign.
(source:
iraqwar.ru,
03-25-03, translated by Venik)
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