Associated Press
March 24, 2003, Monday
HEADLINE: Coalition warplanes bomb barracks in northern Iraq
BYLINE: By BORZOU DARAGAHI, Associated Press Writer
DATELINE: CHAMCHAMAL, Iraq
BODY:
Coalition warplanes bombed a military barracks in northern
Iraq on Monday, shattering windows for miles around and igniting
huge plumes of smoke. Frightened residents fled the area in
a stream of cars, taxis and buses.
At least six bombs struck Iraqi positions with such force
that the ground shook three miles away in the city of Chamchamal
.
A top Kurdish military official, Rostam Kirkuki, said the
Americans bombed the entire corridor between Chamchamal and
Kirkuk , a key oil center.
The few residents who had not yet fled started to pack up
and leave. Vehicles of all sizes poured onto the main road
out of the town.
"People are evacuating, but not because of the bombing.
They are afraid Saddam will respond with chemical weapons,"
said Ahmad Qafoor, a schoolteacher.
Warplanes continued to fly overhead after the first wave of
bombings that struck the Bani Maqem barracks, close to the
line that separates the Kurdish-held area, including Chamchamal,
from territory under the control of Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein.
In the nearby village of Shoresh , civil servant Ali Nouri
Karim said he spotted Iraqi soldiers evacuating the area and
pulling people into ambulances.
Residents contacted by telephone in Kirkuk , 25 miles to the
west of Chamchamal, said the city came under heavy bombardment
by coalition aircraft. An unknown number of casualties were
brought to local hospitals, they said.
Minutes before the bombings in Chamchamal, several loud explosions
heard from the direction of Qara Hanjir, according to Kurdish
soldier Mohammed Omar Mohammed.
Qara Hanjir is situated between Chamchamal and Kirkuk and
is the site of an Iraq military barracks and command post.
The United States has been building up its presence in the
Kurdish north, bringing in warplanes and military personnel.
Over the weekend, U.S. air strikes in northern Iraq pounded
positions of the militant Ansar al-Islam group, an Islamic
group with alleged al-Qaida and Baghdad ties.
The Kurdish autonomous area has been under American and British
aerial protection against Saddam since the 1991 Gulf War.
The United States wanted to use Turkey to attack Iraq from
the north, but the Turkish parliament refused to grant access
to ground troops.
Mohammad Haji Mahmoud, leader of the Kurdistan Social Democratic
Party and a key member of the Iraqi opposition, said the Americans
are welcome to use Kurdistan as a staging ground for a northern
assault against Saddam's regime.
"We're not going to say no to anything the Americans
want," he said. " America is the true liberator
and the only one who could liberate us from this regime. We
couldn't do it with our rusty Kalashnikovs in more than 40
years."