HILLA,
Iraq, April 1 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Few hours after
massacring 33 Iraqi civilians in southern Baghdad on early Tuesday,
April 1, Anglo-American warplanes bombarded again the outskirts of the
Iraqi capital, sending towers of black smoke into the sky.
Thirty-three
civilians, including children, were killed and 310 wounded in a
U.S.-British coalition bombing of the southern province of Babylon
Tuesday, a hospital director said.
Murtada
Abbas said the bombing targeted the Nader residential area at the
southern outskirts of the farming town of Hilla, 80 kilometers (50
miles) south of Baghdad, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
He
was speaking at the Hilla hospital where a large number of children lay
wounded under blankets on the floor due to a shortage of beds.
At
the scene of the bombing, dozens of what seemed to be parts of cluster
bombs equipped with small parachutes were peppered over a large area, an
AFP correspondent at the site confirmed.
Iraqi
army soldiers were seen collecting the bomb pieces, which witnesses said
coalition warplanes had dropped over the neighborhood.
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An
Iraqi boy injured in the U.S.-led bombardment of Baghdad
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The
soldiers poured fuel on the bombs before setting them on fire to explode
the ordnance.
Dozens
of homes were razed to the ground in the Anglo-American bombing that
also killed donkeys and chickens, the correspondent said.
Two
U.S. and British aircraft dropped laser-guided munitions on an Iraqi
radio relay facility near the western desert outpost of Rutba on
Tuesday, the U.S. Central Command confirmed.
"The
Coalition targeted the station to erode the command and control
capabilities of regime leaders," a statement claimed, restating
part of the strategy of U.S.-led invasion forces.
"A
full assessment of the strike's effectiveness is in progress,"
added the statement.
Rutba
lies 125 kilometers (75 miles) east of Iraq's border with Jordan and 320
kilometers (200 miles) from Baghdad.
Republican
Guards Gearing For Baghdad Battle
Iraq
brought up reinforcements for Republican Guard units defending the
approaches to Baghdad, U.S. officers said Tuesday, as the occupation
troops pressed their operations ahead of an expected major push on the
capital.
The
U.S. army's elite 101st Airborne Division stepped up its campaign around
the city of An-Najaf, 150 kilometers (95 miles) from Baghdad, flying in
Apache and Kiowa attack helicopters to support infantry troops, officers
said.
U.S.
commanders have said their troops were within 100 kilometers (60 miles)
of the capital, with some signaling a major tank battle could be shaping
up in the next week.
The
U.S. army's 20,000-strong 3rd Infantry Division, supported by the 101st
Airborne, was south of Baghdad and geared for an attack. Two formations
of U.S. marines were to its east.
Officers
said mixed and matched elements of five Republican Guard divisions,
elite troops backed by heavy armor, manned a southern arc in front of
Baghdad, bracing for a decisive drive in the nearly two-week-old
campaign.
There
was no immediate estimate how many troops this would represent but it
could run into the tens of thousands.
Iraqi
divisions normally comprise 12,000-15,000 troops.
Major
John Altman, intelligence officer for the 3rd Infantry Division's First
Brigade, said the Iraqis were reinforcing the Republican Guard after
days of punishing air strikes and probing ground attacks by U.S.-led
forces.
"What's
happening is that you reinforce the unit you expect to be in contact and
you fill a unit that is attired," Altman told AFP near An-Najaf.
He
claimed the Republican Guard's armored Medina Division had been heavily
battered by days of air strikes, artillery attacks and assaults by the
tank-busting Apaches.
The
Iraqis brought down from north of Baghdad elements of the armored
Hammurabi and mechanized Nebuchadnazzar divisions, Altman said.
Troops
of the Al-Nida armored and Adnan divisions were also in place south of
the capital.
"Elements
of five Republican Guard divisions are oriented along the southeast and
southwest of Baghdad," Altman said.
The
intelligence officer said that fighting had been heavy around a key
bridge that crosses the Euphrates River southwest of the Shiite Muslim
city of Karbala, 80 kilometers (50 miles) from Baghdad.
"We
made great headway," Altman claimed. "We can easily own the
ground there and use the bridge."
Colonel
Greg Gass, the 101st's aviation brigade commander, described the
fighting as the heaviest his forces had been involved in since the start
of the war on March 20.
"They
fought pretty hard from first light (into the afternoon)," Gass
admitted of the Iraqis, adding eight Apaches sustained hits "from
just a hole in the rotor to significant tail damage."
U.S.
officials also said the Army 3rd Infantry Division attacked Iraqi
positions Monday, March 31, in quarries below Karbala, which like
An-Najaf is a Shiite holy city.
They
said elements of the 3rd Infantry Division also hit out northward at
what they called pockets of Iraqi resistance in the area.
Two
air defense artillery systems, two armored personnel carriers, one
artillery piece and nine technical vehicles were destroyed, they said.
Several Iraqis were killed and about 30 taken prisoner.