Van Helsing
My glass is half empty.
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2004
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A coalition strike Friday in Fallujah might have come close to killing Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born Islamic militant believed to have ties to al Qaeda, a senior Defense Department official said.
The official said U.S. warplanes targeted a suspected safe house.
As they began to drop 500-pound bombs on the house, a convoy of cars pulled up to the home. A man got out of a car as the bombs fell and was thrown to the ground by a blast. According to the official, he was hustled back into the car, clearly alive, and driven away.
The official said al-Zarqawi is thought to be the only person in that network of terrorist insurgents who travels with such a large security detail.
The man they saw fall to the ground "wasn't wearing a name tag," but they believe it may have been al-Zarqawi.
The strike killed 20 to 25 people, a senior coalition official said.
It was the third such U.S. airstrike in a week. On Saturday and Tuesday, so-called safe houses in Fallujah allegedly linked to the al-Zarqawi network were targeted by U.S. forces, and about 38 people were killed.
There is fresh intelligence that al-Zarqawi uses Fallujah as a base of operations, the official said.
The official said there were "eyes on the target" while the airstrike was conducted. That could mean an unmanned Predator drone aircraft was flying overhead, observing the convoy.
Coalition spokesman Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said the target was "based on confirmations of actionable intelligence provided by both Iraqi and coalition intelligence sources."
Again more innocent people die in a Bungled U.S raid

The official said U.S. warplanes targeted a suspected safe house.
As they began to drop 500-pound bombs on the house, a convoy of cars pulled up to the home. A man got out of a car as the bombs fell and was thrown to the ground by a blast. According to the official, he was hustled back into the car, clearly alive, and driven away.
The official said al-Zarqawi is thought to be the only person in that network of terrorist insurgents who travels with such a large security detail.
The man they saw fall to the ground "wasn't wearing a name tag," but they believe it may have been al-Zarqawi.
The strike killed 20 to 25 people, a senior coalition official said.
It was the third such U.S. airstrike in a week. On Saturday and Tuesday, so-called safe houses in Fallujah allegedly linked to the al-Zarqawi network were targeted by U.S. forces, and about 38 people were killed.
There is fresh intelligence that al-Zarqawi uses Fallujah as a base of operations, the official said.
The official said there were "eyes on the target" while the airstrike was conducted. That could mean an unmanned Predator drone aircraft was flying overhead, observing the convoy.
Coalition spokesman Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said the target was "based on confirmations of actionable intelligence provided by both Iraqi and coalition intelligence sources."
Again more innocent people die in a Bungled U.S raid


