NEWS

Deadline over; US, allied troops close in

March 20, 2003 06:55 IST

US President George Bush's 48-hour deadline to his Iraqi counterpart Saddam Hussein to flee or face the consequences passed at 2000 EST [0630 IST, 0100 GMT] with American and allied forces massing at the Iraqi border with Kuwait to launch a ground assault.

The soldiers, in armoured personnel carriers and other military vehicles, were waiting for a nod to move into Iraqi territory from Bush, their commander-in-chief.

CNN quoted an official as saying that Bush could wait to give "go" order and let Iraqi military "stare up at the sky for a little bit".

A few hours before the expiry of the deadline, about a dozen American and allied warplanes, armed with precision-guided bombs, struck 10 Iraqi artillery pieces from the Kuwaiti side, Pentagon officials said.

Jets from the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln also struck Iraqi positions in the southern no-fly zone. This was apparently in response to Iraqi firing on allied warplanes.

Even before the start of the assault, 17 Iraqi soldiers had surrendered. The US Air Force encouraged Iraqis to surrender by showering Iraq with more than 2 million leaflets.

During a visit to the USS Kitty Hawk in the north Persian Gulf, the commander of the armada massed against Iraq promised that a US-led air campaign would be the fastest and most powerful ever unleashed.

“The campaign will be unlike any we have seen in the history of warfare, with breathtaking precision, almost eyewatering speed, persistence, agility and lethality," Vice-Admiral Timothy Keating, commander of the 5th Fleet, said.

Keating visited all three US carriers in the Gulf to boost of the morale of the sailors, pilots and aircrews.

At a Pentagon news conference in Washington, a senior US Air Force planner echoed the thoughts.

"I do not think our potential adversary has any idea what's coming," Colonel Gary Crowder, chief of strategy for the Air Combat Command, said.

The US and its allies will unleash thousands of precision weapons on the first day of the campaign to shock the Iraqi regime into surrender, he said.

"The effect that we are trying to create is to make it so apparent and so overwhelming at the very outset of potential military operations that the adversary quickly realises that there is no real alternative here than to fight and die or to give up," he said.

At the state department, spokesman Richard Boucher said the US had brought together its largest-ever emergency humanitarian response team to assist Iraqi civilians.

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