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Nov 16, 2003
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Photo, caption below.
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HANDSHAKE IN TOKYO — Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi stretch to shake hands for the photographers as they meet in Tokyo, Japan, on Nov. 14, 2003. Rumsfeld was in Japan to meet with U.S. military forces and local officials. DoD photo by Tech. Sgt. Andy Dunaway, U.S. Air Force
Presence of U.S. Forces in Iraq May Continue After June
By K.L. Vantran / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 16, 2003 U.S. military forces may remain in Iraq when full sovereignty is given to the Iraqi people in June and the Coalition Provisional Authority dissolves, Ambassador L. Paul Bremer III, CPA administrator, said in an interview from Baghdad, Iraq, today.
     "Every indication we have in our discussions with the governing council (and) with the ministers suggests a strong desire from the majority of the Iraqi people to have the coalition forces stay until the situation is stabilized," he said on Fox News Sunday. "We're in a war against terrorism here, and a low- intensity conflict against former Baathists. We want to help the Iraqis win both of these wars."
     With recent attacks on coalition forces, the ambassador said it's important to remember that 95 percent of these attacks are being conducted by a few thousand men in a small part of the country, posing no strategic threat to operations. More
Rumsfeld in Asia: U.S.-Japan Security Arrangements Vital
By Kathleen T. Rhem / American Forces Press Service
     TOKYO, Nov. 15, 2003 The security relationship between the United States and Japan is just as vital today as it was during the Cold War and immediately following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Japan's chief defense official said here today.
     "The importance of U.S.-Japan security arrangements have not changed at all," Japan's minister of state for defense, Shigeru Ishiba, said through a translator at a joint press conference with U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.
     Rumsfeld was in complete agreement. "It is quite true that (the security agreement) was fashioned in the last century and we're living in a new security environment," the secretary said during the press conference, which was held at the headquarters of the Japanese Defense Agency. More
Rumsfeld Visits Okinawa; Meets With Troops, Local Officials 
Japanese PM Tells Rumsfeld Iraq Mission 'Important Cause'
By Kathleen T. Rhem / American Forces Press Service
     TOKYO, Nov. 14, 2003 — Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi told Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld today that he agrees that the cause of rebuilding Iraq is important to the international community.
     "He said he believes that Japan's support of successful reconstruction of Iraq is within the national interest of Japan," said a senior U.S. Defense official present at the 45-minute meeting. The Japanese government has made significant financial contributions toward rebuilding Iraq, including a $1.5 billion grant in 2004 and $3.5 billion in loans over the following three years. More
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Army Launches 'Ivy Cyclone II'
To Target Insurgents
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 16, 2003 — The Army's 4th Infantry Division and Task Force Ironhorse have launched a combined-arms operation called Ivy Cyclone II in the effort to root out and crush insurgents in Iraq, U.S. Central Command officials announced today.
     Officials said the operation combines "actionable intelligence" with close-air support, Army aviation, armor, artillery, mechanized infantry and air-assault operations for rapid deployment of dismounted artillery. Coalition forces, officials added, will continue to deploy large numbers of forces in specific areas that have been identified as platforms for coordination and control of enemy operations. More
Mosul Crash Leaves 17 Dead, Five Injured, One Missing
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2003 — Seventeen soldiers are dead, five others are injured, and one more still is unaccounted for following today's crash of two U.S. Army UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters in West Mosul, Iraq.
     The helicopters crashed about 250 yards apart in a residential neighborhood at about 10:30 a.m. EST, U.S. Central Command officials said.
     The injured were taken to the 21st Combat Support Hospital at the Mosul airfield. More
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Iraq Weekly Progress Update (Governance, Electricity, Education, Oil, Security, Economics, Health Care)
U.S. Defense Dept. slides with facts &
figures on reconstruction efforts in Iraq.
The New Iraq: Progress & Accomplishments
U.S. State Dept. fact sheet on the latest developments in restoring Iraq's essential services, security, economy & governance.
Rumsfeld Visits
USS Blue Ridge in Japan
     YOKOSUKA, Japan, Nov. 15, 2003 — Stressing the importance of its service in the Pacific region, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld visited the crew of the USS Blue Ridge here today.
     The Blue Ridge is the command and control ship for the Navy's 7th Fleet.
     Aboard the ship, Rumsfeld had lunch with Blue Ridge and 7th Fleet sailors and Marines, airmen from nearby Yokota Air Base, and soldiers from Camp Zama. In brief remarks, the secretary commented on the military's role in the Pacific region. More
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Proud Families Hang Tough
For Late Arriving Loved Ones
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Allan Hill II, 5, colors a picture while waiting for his sister, Katrina, to arrive at Baltimore- Washington International Airport Nov. 14. A private first class with the 228th Transportation Detachment out of Allentown, Pa., Katrina was due in on a rest and recuperation leave flight from Iraq. Fog in Germany delayed the flight's arrival by six hours. Photo by K.L. Vantran     BALTIMORE, Nov. 15, 2003 — "Today is Army day," proclaimed 5-year-old Allan 'AJ' Hill II on Nov. 14 as he stood in the arrival area for international flights at Baltimore- Washington International Airport.
      "'TiTi' is coming home," he added and quickly looked at his father. "Right, Dad?"
A confirming nod from Allan Hill of Reading, Pa., put a smile on the youngster's face. More
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Photo Essay - banner image
House Calls in Iraq  More Photo Essays
Photo, caption below.
In a small village in northern Iraq, members of Task Force 1-63 Armor arrive on a medical visit during Operation Iraqi Freedom, Nov. 12, 2003. U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jeffrey A. Wolfe  6 More Photos
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PRESIDENT BUSH
Extols Importance of Employer Support for Guard, Reserve
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — President Bush recognized the importance of employers in making their employees' military service possible as he signed a proclamation marking National Employer Support for the Guard and Reserve Week.
     "In times of need, our nation counts on the Guard and Reserve members to fulfill their commitments of service," Bush said during a White House ceremony. "We value their courage and we honor their sacrifices. They're defending their nation in the war on terror and they are serving in a just cause."
     The president said reserve component service members depend on the understanding of their employers for their service. More
Wolfowitz Praises Top Civilian Employers of Guard, Reserve
By Gerry J. Gilmore / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul D. Wolfowitz today praised the exemplary support provided by nine civilian employers of Guard & Reserve members.
     Speaking at the 2003 Secretary of Defense Employer Support Awards ceremony at the U.S. Chamber of Congress, Wolfowitz noted that 156,000 Guard and reserve members are now on active duty in support of the war on global terrorism. More
Wolfowitz: Women's Rights Must be Guaranteed in Iraq
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — "One can't separate the rights of women from the rights of all people," Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz told a delegation of Iraqi women visiting the Pentagon today.
     The 21 women, on a tour sponsored by the World Bank, the Woodrow Wilson Center and the American Bar Association, pushed the deputy secretary to appoint more Iraqi women to official positions in Baghdad. More
Feith Defends Coalition's Move To Take Down Saddam Hussein
By Gerry J. Gilmore / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — Former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's regime presented a clear and present danger to the United States and to the world and had to be removed, DoD's top policy official told a think tank here Nov. 13.
     Speaking before the Council on Foreign Relations, Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas J. Feith defended the actions taken to remove Saddam, which occurred with the fall of Baghdad in early April. More     Transcript
Coalition Continues Crackdown Second Night of Iron Hammer
American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — Army and Air Force aircraft reportedly pounded insurgent staging and operating facilities and killed seven people preparing an attack on U.S. forces during the second night of Operation Iron Hammer in Iraq.
     According to news reports, an Army AH-64 Apache helicopter attacked and killed seven men believed to have been preparing a rocket attack on a U.S. military base near Tikrit. Soldiers later reportedly found hundreds of rockets and missiles at the site. More
Fighting Terror War Involves Choice Between Freedom, Fear
By Kathleen T. Rhem / American Forces Press Service
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld speaks to troops at the Magellan Inn dining facility during his visit to Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, Nov. 14. Troops from all armed services, including the Coast Guard attended the event. Photo by Senior Airman Joshua Strang     TOKYO, Japan, Nov. 14, 2003 — American and other coalition military forces fighting the war on terrorism are making a choice between living in freedom and living in fear, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told a crowd of service members in Guam.
     "Free people are people who can do what they want and say what they want," the secretary told some 200 U.S. troops having lunch at an Andersen Air Force Base dining facility. "Free people cannot live in fear." More
Gen. Abizaid: Iraq's 'Despicable Thugs' Can't Defeat Coalition
By John D. Banusiewicz / American Forces Press Service

     WASHINGTON, Nov. 13, 2003 — The terrorists trying to undermine coalition efforts in Iraq are a "despicable bunch of thugs," but no military threat exists in Iraq that can drive the United States out, the commander of U.S. Central Command said today.
     "The enemy will stop at nothing to create the impression that we can't win," Army Gen. John Abizaid said. "They put ammunition and explosives in ambulances. They store ammunition and explosives in schools and mosques. The same things that you saw from this enemy during the march to Baghdad, you see from this enemy now. More     Transcript

Special Ops Troops Serve as Force Multiplier in Terror War
By Gerry J. Gilmore / American Forces Press Service

     WASHINGTON, Nov. 13, 2003 — Multitalented special operations troops provide senior U.S. military commanders with an array of options in addressing the multifaceted challenges presented by the war on global terrorism, said DoD's top special operations official.
      Army, Air Force and Navy special operators have proved their worth in places like Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere, noted Thomas O'Connell, assistant secretary of defense for special operations/low intensity conflict. More

Coalition Will Press Fight in Iraq, Vice Chairman Pace Says
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 13, 2003 — The coalition will continue to press the fight in Iraq, Marine Gen. Peter Pace said during television interviews Nov. 12.
     The vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff expressed his sympathy to the families of the Italian Carabinieri killed in the Nov. 12 car bombing in Nasiriyah. "We never want to minimize the single death of a soldier from our country or the coalition," Pace said. "Each one of those is tragic." More
U.S. Army Veterinarian Treats
Ailing Brown Bear at Baghdad Zoo
By U.S. Army Spc. Chad Wilkerson / 372nd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment
     BAGHDAD, Iraq, Nov. 12, 2003 — A tranquilizer gun is a rare type of weapon to see in central Baghdad. Although most U.S. Army servicemembers in Iraq carry assault rifles or machine guns, the veterinarians’ “weapon” of choice at Baghdad Zoo is a syringe dart filled with anesthetic.
     This tranquilizer is not meant to cause damage, however, but rather as an aid in repairing damage caused by various medical problems. More
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Global War on Terrorism
Pace: U.S. Making Progress In Global War on Terrorism
. President Signs $87.5 Billion Package for Iraq, Afghanistan
U.S. Believes Terrorists Still Pose Threat to Civil Aviation
On Iraq
Two Army Helicopters Crash in Mosul, Iraq 
Iraqis Seek More Responsibility for Governance; U.S. to Assist 
U.S. Forces in Iraq Wield 'Iron Hammer' to Nail Insurgents 
Rumsfeld: Italians Firm in Their Resolve After Attack in Iraq 
Terrorists Strike Italian HQ in Iraq; More Weapons Seized 
Military News
Up-or-Out Personnel Policy 'Lousy Idea,' Rumsfeld Tells Sailors
Rumsfeld Says U.S. Military is Preparing for Modern Threats
Predictability, Stability at Heart of New Troop Rotation Policy
. National Guard, Reserve Update
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Iraq Update Afghanistan Update
Iraq Update Afghanistan Update
Special Forces Major Honored for Heroism in Afghan Prison Battle
     MACDILL AIR FORCE BASE, Nov. 14, 2003 — The first Distinguished Service Cross awarded since the Vietnam War, and the highest military decoration awarded to date in the war on terror, was presented today to Army Special Forces Maj. Mark Mitchell.
      Mitchell earned the medal for his leadership during the Battle of Qala-I-Jangi Fortress during Operation Enduring Freedom. He was the ground force commander of a rescue operation where he ensured the freedom of one American and posthumous repatriation of another. More
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Afghanistan Update
America Pays Tribute to the Troops
Florida Church Launches
Operation Sweet Tooth
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — When Mary Massey adopted Robert Campbell earlier this year, she had no idea what to expect. Like others who adopt, she thought that adoption might be a positive and kind gesture that would help another person. Little did Massey know that shortly after adopting Campbell, he would ask for enough cookies to feed 600 of his friends. More
starSign an On-line Thank You Note
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Ambassador Bremer: 'Future of Hope' in Iraq Includes Justice
     WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2003 — Justice is part of the "future of hope" in Iraq, the Coalition Provisional Authority administrator told the Iraqi people in his weekly broadcast address from Baghdad today.
     Ambassador L. Paul Bremer III said "the quest for justice takes on a special importance and urgency" in a country such as Iraq, which has known "much injustice." More
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Veterans Welcome
R&R-Bound Troops
Richard Udoff, Veterans of Foreign Wars District 7 commander, greets a soldier just off a rest and recuperation flight from Iraq. Soldiers participating in the R&R leave program have 15 days' leave. The plane landed at Baltimore-Washington International Airport around 11:30 a.m. Nov. 14. It was delayed six hours due to fog in Germany. Photo by K.L. Vantran
     BALTIMORE, Nov. 14, 2003 — The moonlight dances with the lights on the tarmac at Baltimore-Washington International Airport as the winds blow rustling leaves across the runway. It's 4 a.m., or "oh-dark thirty" as those in the military like to say. More
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Maryland National Guard
Unit Delivers Good Will
Capt. Robert Estes (left) stands next to newly promoted Spc. Jamie Limongelli and Staff Sgt. James Saunders as the soldiers get ready to go on patrol near Kabul, Afghanistan.
     Deployed away their families and friends in a remote country and defending, freedom members of the Maryland National Guard are taking the occasion to help children in an orphanage in the Kabul district of Afghanistan.
      The young children, many newborns and up to 10 years old are too young to understand religion, politics and let alone war. In their short lives they have only known fear and loneliness. More
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Iraq's 55 Most Wanted
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Iraq Update
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Saddam's Iraq: Reign of Terror
Iraqi Freedom
bullet U.S. Views — Quotes by President Bush & other U.S. leaders
bullet Defense Views — Quotes by U.S. defense leaders
bullet Maps of Iraq — Maps of the nation of Iraq and the region
bullet Women of Iraq — U.S. is committed to women's participation in rebuilding Iraq
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Demining Iraq — U.S. is committed to demining program in Iraq

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President George W. Bush

"It's very important that our commanders on the ground be given flexibility to be able to adjust tactics to an enemy that is changing its tactics. First of all, the enemy wants to create the condition of fear. They want people to fear them. They will lose that aspect of the battle because we -- our will will remain strong. And secondly, we must use more Iraqis to gather intelligence and to be on the front line of securing their own country. And that's exactly what we're doing. And third, when we find actionable intelligence, we will strike fast to bring killers to justice. And that's what we're doing, as well. "
Remarks at the White House, Nov. 14, 2003
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Afghanistan Update
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Profile
Frank Schaeffer
Lance Cpl. John Schaeffer, USMC
Author Frank Schaeffer said his attitude toward the military changed dramatically after his youngest son became a Marine. He and his son, then Marine Lance Cpl. John Schaeffer, co-wrote the book,      PENSACOLA, Fla., Nov. 13, 2003 (NNS) — The only Navy pharmacist to have deployed inside Iraq doubles as the head of the pharmacy department at Naval Hospital Pensacola.
     When he’s not “making meds” in the desert of southern Iraq or preparing to implement the first-ever bar coding prescription tracking device at a military medical facility, he’s taking a day off to accept an award as the Navy’s Senior Pharmacist of the Year. More
More Profiles
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On the Ground
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In Afghanistan
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Goodwill Game Volleys Coalition Relationship to New Height
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Players from the Korean hospital and U.S. Army hospital at Bagram Air Base take aim at the volleyball during Sunday's goodwill game hosted by the Korean hospital staff. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Johnny A. Thompson      BAGRAM, Afghanistan, Nov. 11, 2003 — With intent to foster unity between the coalition forces based here, elements of the Korean hospital and the U.S. hospital at Bagram Air Base joined for a friendly volleyball game and luncheon. The event, held at the Korean compound, afforded the two countries the opportunity to test each other’s athletic skill. More
B-Huts Improve Life at Bagram
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Khuda Dad, a local national laborer, does his part to help build B-huts in the new Marine compound on Bagram Air Base. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Kelly Hunt      BAGRAM, Afghanistan, Nov. 11, 2003 — They’re going up everywhere on Bagram making life a little more comfortable for coalition troops supporting Operation Enduring Freedom here at Bagram Air Base. B-huts are replacing the standard shelter option for troops. More
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In Iraq
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Task Force 1-35 Aid Station Staff Honored
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'On The Ground' Archive
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America's Greetings

Send Your 'Best Wishes' to the Troops
Pay tribute to service members supporting the global war on terrorism. Send your message.  Read messages to the troops.

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