July 24, 2003

Husseini "boys" deaths no "assassination"

washingtonpost.com: Troops Didn't Know Brothers Were in Villa

It was 10 a.m. when the four Humvees pulled up outside the handsome villa on Shalalat Street and disgorged a party of U.S. soldiers. Over a bullhorn, they told the occupants to come out with their hands up.

What followed was a firefight from the ground and air that reduced the comfortable villa to a smoking hulk. And only then did the troops find out how high the stakes had been: Their targets, they discovered, were Saddam Hussein's sons Odai and Qusai, second in power only to their father.

The raid was a "turning point" in the campaign against Iraq's deposed regime, the commander of coalition forces in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, said Wednesday in Baghdad. President Bush said it would help convince Iraqis that Saddam's regime is over for good.

But soldiers who participated in the raid said they didn't know what they were getting into when they headed out to the wealthy al-Falah neighborhood in the northern city of Mosul on Tuesday morning.

The night before, an unidentified Iraqi had tipped off the Americans that Odai and Qusai were in the house, Sanchez said afterward. But all Sgt. George Granter knew on that blistering hot Tuesday morning was that intelligence was reporting the house was occupied by Baath Party members.

"They heard high guys, but they didn't know how high," said Granter, of Merrillville, Ind., an engineer with the 326 Battalion of the 101st Airborne Division who took part in the battle.
[The Screaming Eagles show their stuff once again!--Jen]

The action that played out on the wide boulevard lined with villas, shops and a mosque began like countless others across occupied Iraq: with orders in Arabic to surrender.

"The intent is always to ask the people to come out voluntarily," said Col. Joe Anderson, commander of the 101st's 2nd Brigade.

The owner of the house, Sheik Nawaf al-Zaydan Muhhamad, walked out with his son Shalan, their hands on their heads, and were whisked away by troops, neighbors said Wednesday.

The other occupants were less cooperative. So after 10 minutes troops tried to enter the building. From the fortified middle floor of the three-floor building came Kalashnikov fire, raking the troops and wounding four of them. The Americans fell back to regroup and reinforcements were summoned.

Soldiers fanned out in the neighborhood and evacuated families from surrounding houses, said Maj. Greg Ebeling of the 101st's 926 Engineer Group.

By 10:45, reinforcements had arrived, and the Americans began firing machine guns, grenades and rockets, Sanchez said. The area was surrounded so "there was no rush," the general said.

Witnesses said beige and maroon tiles popped from the garish facade, and dust flew from the concrete columns. Still, gunfire rattled back from the mansion.

Just before noon, two Kiowa helicopters skimmed in over the rooftops, and rockets streaked into the villa. More and more troops poured into the neighborhood, witnesses said, until about 200 were surrounding the house.

It was their fire from the ground that proved decisive: .50-caliber machine guns, grenade launchers, then TOW missiles that blew out windows, cratered walls and killed Saddam's sons and a bodyguard, Sanchez said.

At 1:21 p.m. soldiers stormed the wrecked mansion. They rushed up the stairs and shot the final holdout, apparently Qusai's teenage son Mustafa.

On the floor where Saddam's sons had chosen to make their last stand lay clothes, bloodstained bedding, a Pepsi can and a box of Mars Bars.
[Both products of "evil" globalization from the Anglo-sphere!--J.T.]

"It began as gunfire and then it became a battle," said Nasser Hazim, who lives around the corner from the villa.

The person who tipped the Americans off to the hide-out is in protective custody, his identity a secret, U.S. authorities said.

Neighbors, however, suspect the tipster was Muhhamad, the house owner, who obeyed the surrender call. They said his wife and four daughters left the house several hours before the raid.
[...]Muhhamad's ties to Saddam cut two ways - making him rich, but causing him personal grief. Saddam threw Muhhamad's elder brother in jail, reportedly over a tribal disagreement, but released him 18 months into a 17-year sentence.

As the bodies of Odai, 39, and Qusai, 37, were taken to Baghdad International Airport to be flown out of the country, several hundred people gathered outside the razor wire surrounding their still-smoking hide-out Wednesday, chanting pro-Saddam slogans.

"This is terrorism! They are killers!" screamed Saad Badr, a 50-year-old taxi driver who was pressed so close to the razor wire that his left toe was bleeding.
[These pro-Saddam Iraqis sound like the Dimocrats here! LOL--Jen]
"Americans are unbelievers, and Saddam Hussein is a Muslim. This makes me even more angry at the Americans," said 14-year-old Mohammed Qassem, to a chorus of agreement from the crowd.

As psychological [Is the WaPo using a technical term here or their own editorializing one, which would be soooo *unlike* them?--Jen] operations specialists combed the gutted house, Army engineers examined neighboring houses that suffered damage in the raid, and promised over loudspeakers to repair them.
[...]
"This makes me feel great," Granter said as he gazed at the destruction. But already, he was looking ahead to the biggest prize of all.

"Saddam, he's the big one," he said. "If we can get him, we can go home."

News of this made me feel great,too!
These were the deaths in combat of "enemy combatants" by Coalition forces, not the "political assassination" of heads of state.
[I was in the second grade in Dallas, TX when President Kennedy was assassinated: I know the difference.]
I don't know much about Qusay, except that he was being groomed to be Saddam's successor for all that that implies, but I know Uday was totally crazy and not in a good way.
The stories of the horrible torture, maiming, rapes and horrific murders of innocent Iraqis that he performed personally are too numerous to cite.
We'll probably never know how many suffered at his hands, but we can know with their earthly end that the Iraqi people and the free world won't be dealing with the terror of living in a world with these psychos in it anymore!
Thank you, Screaming Eagles!
I'm so glad we had no fatalities from this raid and hope the wounded soldiers recover quickly.
And we're grateful for the Iraqi who turned "the boys" in, whoever they are-you're an Iraqi patriot and a lover of Liberty (as well as being $30 million richer).
And for those who would shed tears over 14-year-old Mustafa, yes, it's sad that he had to be killed, but his dad could have sent him out when they were offered the chance to surrender and chances are very good that he was "unsalvageable" as a human being after being raised in the one of the world's most dysfunctional families...
How many 14-year-old "Palestinian", gun-toting "militants" have we heard about that the IDF has had to take out?
And Uday didn't scruple about murdering children, some far younger than his nephew.
Such is war.
But the "legacy" of Saddam thereby comes to a very final end, as indeed it should.