Text Only
Search

 
US Military: Fallujah Security May Depend on US Forces for Some Time


18 November 2004
Simeone report - Download 231k - Download (Real) audio clip
Simeone report - Download 231k - Listen (Real) audio clip

A U.S. Marine commander in Fallujah is warning it may be some time before it is safe for residents to return to the Iraqi city, after nearly two weeks of fighting there to flush out insurgents. And U.S. forces may have to remain in the city if Iraqi forces prove unable to keep it from falling back into rebel hands.

Fallujah, until this month a no-go area for American and Iraqi forces, is now considered secure, although not yet safe enough for it's estimated 200,000 residents to return.

Lieutenant General John Sattler is commander of the First Marine Expeditionary Force. "The town of Fallujah is secure but we're in that search and clear phase which will make it safe and relatively safe is the best word. We will then turn that relatively safe town over, over a period of time, to the Iraqi security forces," he said.

How well those Iraqi forces perform will determine whether U.S. forces have to go back in. "Until they are completely prepared and they ask us to leave in total, we will stay at arms length so that if in fact we have to come into town with a quick reaction force or shore up any force anywhere in the town, we will be prepared to do that," he said.

But an intelligence analysis prepared by General Sattler's unit warns Fallujah will likely again become a bastion of radical insurgents when U.S. forces pull out. Here at the Pentagon, a Marine spokesman calls that a plausible prediction, and one that could be made about other towns in Iraq's Sunni triangle where insurgent violence has raged.

At this point though, the Marines say Fallujah has become secure enough to begin allowing in humanitarian aid and for coalition forces to begin rebuilding a city devastated by heavy urban combat that has killed at least 51 Americans, eight of their Iraqi allies and 1,200 insurgents.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
At Least Three Killed In Separate Iraq Explosions
US, Iraqi Forces Battle Insurgent Resistance in Fallujah, Mosul
 
  Top Story
Berlin Wall Celebration Marked by Joy and Caution  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Officials Warn of Possible Collapse of Palestinian Authority
Hariri Names New Lebanese Government After Five Week Vacuum  Audio Clip Available
US Had Previously Monitored Fort Hood Shooting Suspect
US, Germany Press Afghan President on Reform  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges 'Compassion' for Americans Detained in Iran  Audio Clip Available
Iran Charges 3 US Detainees with Espionage
Iraq Electoral Official Says Vote Will Happen On Time   Audio Clip Available
Afghans React To Possible US Troop Surge  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Kills 3 in Northwestern Pakistan
China Executes Nine Ethnic Uighurs in July Unrest
APEC Economies Report Improved Trade Finance, Discuss Free Trade  Audio Clip Available
Scientists Report Abnormal Sea Level Rises Off Western Australia  Audio Clip Available
Tropical Storm Ida Aims For US Gulf Coast;  State of Emergency in Effect
Obama Makes First China Tour as Economic Interdependence Grows  Video clip available