On
the other hand, al-Jazeera Satellite TV correspondent in Baghdad
reported that the Iraqi capital seemed secure, with no signs of
American troops in the areas reported by the invasion forces to be
under their control.
The
report seems to support earlier statements by Iraqi Information
Minister Mohamed Saeed al-Sahhaf that the invasion forces conduct
“media raids” into some areas, take video clips, then evacuate,
aiming to show the world they were in control.
As
the world's news media filmed U.S. tanks rolling down the western bank
of the Tigris, the Iraqi government insisted it was repelling the
assault.
"Don't
believe these invaders and these liars," said a smiling and
defiant al-Sahhaf at an impromptu press conference. "They are
none of their troops in Baghdad."
"We
killed them, we made them drink poison and taught them a lesson that
history will never forget," he said.
Iraqi
state-run television showed Saddam chairing a meeting of top military
brass.
The
Rashid Hotel has long been the residence of foreign dignitaries and
journalists in Baghdad.
It
became famous after the 1991 Gulf War for a mosaic portrait of the
former U.S. president George Bush set into the entrance, forcing all
visitors to walk over his face.
Reported
Fighting In Baghdad
 |
|
9
civilians were killed when a missile crashed into a residential
neighborhood
|
However,
foreign correspondents reported that fighting raged in Baghdad Monday
as U.S. troops thrust into the heart of the Iraqi capital, while
Britain said "Chemical Ali", a feared ally of Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein, was believed to have been killed in the
battle for southern Basra.
As
battles flared at Saddam's sprawling Republican Palace and near
al-Rashid hotel, U.S. tanks and armored personnel carriers reportedly
sped in from the west to assault Saddam's symbols of power, while U.S.
Marines advanced from the southeast.
The
raid turned the center of the capital into a battlefield - thick smoke
smeared the skyline and the smell of sulfur hung in the air as
small-arms fire rattled around the city, scored by the booms of large
explosions.
Pickup
trucks loaded with Kalashnikov-toting militiamen, ammunition strapped
across their chests, sped along the deserted main roads of the
battered city.
U.S.
officers described the incursion as a tactical raid to give a
"powerful message" to the Iraqi regime, not the start of the
much-expected final battle to seize the capital, one of Saddam's last
strongholds.
As
part of the "message," a tank blew a huge statue of Saddam
off its pedestal in central Baghdad, U.S. military officials said.
Nine
civilians were killed when a missile crashed into a residential
neighborhood in central Baghdad Monday, witnesses told AFP.
The
raid saw three battalions of the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division,
comprising more than 100 tanks and fighting vehicles, push towards the
western bank of the Tigris river.
They
reportedly captured Saddam's main official residence in the heart of
Baghdad, as well as another palace in the city center and a third near
the airport, said Lieutenant Colonel Peter Bayer, the 3rd Infantry
Division's operations officer.
"There
are two palaces (in the city center), we own both of them," he
said.
From
the southeast, U.S. Marines entered Baghdad undeterred after Iraqi
forces blew up two bridges on the Diyala River, which runs east of the
Iraqi capital.
“We're
in Baghdad and we're in Baghdad to stay," said Brigadier General
John Kelly, assistant commander of the First Marine Division.
Pentagon
spokesman Major Ben Owens said the raid was meant to send "a
powerful message that we can go where we want, when we want ... We are
not at this point going to say that this is the start of the Battle of
Baghdad."
Two
U.S. soldiers and two reporters were killed and some 15 people wounded
when an army position south of Baghdad was hit in a rocket attack,
according to US military sources at Baghdad airport.
Basra
Front
In
the south of the country, British invasion troops poured into the
second largest city of Basra.
"The
battle (for Basra) is more or less over now," Lieutenant Colonel
Hugh Blackman of the 7th Armored Brigade said.
"We
are covering all the areas of Basra, including the old city. There are
soldiers and armored vehicles inside (the old city) right now."
Royal
Marine commandos seized Saddam's presidential palace in Basra and
other troops were in control of the city's main university after
killing a dozen Iraqi militiamen holed up there.
British
Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon said there was strong evidence that Ali
Hasan al-Majid, the notorious Iraqi official better known as
"Chemical Ali," had been killed in a coalition air strike
three days earlier.
"We
have some strong indications that he was killed in the raid conducted
Friday night but I can't yet absolutely confirm the fact that he is
dead. But that would be certainly my best judgment in the
situation," Hoon told a London press conference.
Ali,
a cousin of Saddam, won his grisly nickname for (allegedly) ordering
gas attacks that killed thousands of Kurds in 1988.