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Dec 15, 2003
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OPERATION RED DAWN — Maps used in the Dec. 13, 2003, capture of Saddam Hussein. U.S. soldiers
with the 4th Infantry Division found Saddam hiding at the bottom of a hole
hidden on a farm near his hometown of Tikrit. Dept. of Defense Slide
More Briefing Slides Photos  |
| Rumsfeld: Captured Saddam Compliant, But Not Cooperative |
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| By John D. Banusiewicz /
American Forces Press Service |
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WASHINGTON, Dec. 15, 2003 — Saddam Hussein has been compliant since he was captured Dec. 13, but so far is not cooperating, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld told Lesley Stahl on the CBS News program "60 Minutes" Dec. 14.
"He has not been cooperative in terms of talking, or anything like that," Rumsfeld said. "He clearly was compliant or resigned, in effect, as he was being examined and as he was being transferred from the hole to the transport that took him away, but I think … it's a bit early to try and characterize his demeanor beyond that."
Saddam, who had exhorted his followers to fight to the death both before and after the war that removed him from power, seemed "not terribly brave" when confronted by American soldiers as he hid in a 6-by-8-foot hole, the defense secretary said. More
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Saddam ‘Caught Like a
Rat,’
4th Infantry Commander Says |
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| By Kathleen T. Rhem / American Forces Press
Service |
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WASHINGTON, Dec. 14, 2003 – Saddam Hussein was “caught
like a rat” and
offered no resistance when U.S. soldiers captured him near Tikrit
Dec. 13,
the U.S. general in charge of the operation said today.
Saddam was found hiding at the bottom of a hole hidden on a
farm near his
hometown. Roughly 600 U.S. soldiers were involved in the operation,
but no
shots were fired. Two other men were captured in the compound,
Maj. Gen
Raymond T. Odierno, commander of the Army’s 4th Infantry
Division, said
during a press briefing in Iraq. The 4th Infantry Division is
responsible
for coalition operations in the Tikrit area.
Odierno surmised the pressure on
Saddam had become so tight that he couldn’t
risk traveling with a large entourage, and therefore had no bodyguards
with
him. “It was him and just a couple other people with him,
so he really
didn’t have much of a security force,” the general
said. “And he was in the
bottom of a hole, so there was no way he could fight back, so
he was just
caught like a rat.” More |
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Saddam Hussein:
Disoriented and Bewildered |
WASHINGTON,
Dec. 14, 2003 — Saddam Hussein had been living in “two
small rooms in an adobe hut” and seemed disoriented
and bewildered when captured by U.S. soldiers, the general
in command of those soldiers said today.
Army Maj. Gen Ray
Odierno, commander of the 4th Infantry Division, during a
briefing from Iraq shortly after 11 a.m. EST, described the
area in which Saddam was caught.
The small compound near the
village of Adwar is about 15 miles southeast of Saddam’s hometown of Tikrit,
which generally is considered the seat of resistance in the country.
The immediate area contained two farmhouses, a farmer’s
field, a sheep pen, and a hut in the middle where Saddam
was hiding. It was close to the Tigris River, and soldiers
found boats nearby, Odierno said.
The bedroom of the two-room hut contained one chair, one
bed and “lots of clothes strewn all over the place,” Odierno
said. A rudimentary kitchen had a sink with running water
and an area to cook in. More |
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| ON
SADDAM'S CAPTURE |
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Defense
Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld |
"Today
is a momentous day for the Iraqi people. The Iraqi people
have now been liberated in spirit, as well as in fact. As
they celebrate, we also stop to remember the many U.S. and
Coalition forces who gave their lives to make this moment
possible – including many brave Iraqis who served in
their new security forces and who have died fighting for
their country.
"Thanks to all of them, the Iraqi people face a future, not
of terror, but of freedom. Today, many Iraqis can dare to
believe what we have said from the beginning: that the era
of the brutal dictatorship of Saddam Hussein is over. His
terrorist regime is finished.
Yesterday's successful capture was the result of close coordination of intelligence and a rapid, skillfully-executed military action by U.S. forces. More
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U.S. Army
Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez |
"Today
is a great day for the Iraqi people and for the Coalition.
Last night at approximately 8:00 p.m. local, forces from
the 4th Infantry Division commanded by Major General Ray
Odierno together with Coalition Special Operations Forces
conducted Operation Red Dawn to capture the former Iraqi
dictator Saddam Hussein. This was done during a cordon and
search operation at a remote farmhouse near the city of Tikrit.
"There
were no injuries, and in fact not a single shot was fired.
Saddam Hussein, the captive, has been talkative and is being
cooperative." More |
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Briefing
Transcript Briefing
Slides
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| COALITION
PARTNER |
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| British
Prime Minister Tony Blair |
"The
shadow of Saddam is finally lifted from the Iraqi people.
We give thanks for that, but let this be more than a cause
simply for rejoicing. Let it be a moment to reach out and
to reconcile.
"To the Sunnis whose allegiance
Saddam falsely claimed I say there is a place for you playing a full part
in a new and a democratic Iraq. To those formally in Saddam's
Party, there by force and not by conviction, I say we can
put the past behind us. Where his rule meant terror and division
and brutality let his capture bring about unity, reconciliation
and peace between all the people in Iraq. |
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Iraqi Cooperation
Credited
For Precise Coalition Strikes |
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13, 2003 — Thanks
to Iraqi cooperation, coalition forces are making precise
offensive strikes to capture or kill former regime forces
and anti-coalition fighters, the military commander in the
country said today.
Speaking in Baghdad, Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of Combined Joint
Task Force-7, said the coalition is receiving "actionable" intelligence
from the Iraqi people and that is making for success for the coalition.
In the west of the country, Iraqi police and soldiers from the 82nd Airborne
Division captured the cell that was responsible for the Nov. 29 attack on a Spanish
convoy that resulted in the deaths of seven Spanish officials. More |
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