E-MAIL THIS LINK
To: 

US on major drive for ex-Iraqi leaders
Using intelligence gained in part from the capture of Saddam Hussein, US forces have mounted a blitz to capture mid-level leaders of the former Iraqi regime who are believed to be key to the insurgency in Iraq.
"Get 'em while they're hot!"
"In the past 48 hours, we have had a very good haul," General John Abizaid, chief of the US Central Command, told reporters in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Wednesday. He said the leaders of several Baathist cells had been captured. Abizaid's assessment of the impact of the capture on Saturday of Saddam Hussein on a farm south of his hometown of Tikrit was the most upbeat yet by a senior commander. "Make no mistake: the loss of Saddam Hussein is a huge psychological blow and will pay dividends over time," said Abizaid. "We have got a lot of fighting ahead of us, but this is a big win for the young soldiers that made it happen, and for the young intelligence professionals that were smart enough to put the information together to lead us to the right place."
And we don't have nearly as much fighting ahead of us as we had a week ago...
In what appears to have been a major intelligence coup, US commanders have said a trove of documents were seized in the raid that netted Saddam, including minutes to a meeting of resistance attacks leaders that listed by name those who attended.
Whoa! Toilet paper usage just spiked in the old Triangle!
The find shed light on a leadership network that financed and issued general guidance to some 14 cells operating in the Baghdad area alone, Brigadier General Martine Dempsey, the commander of the 1st Armored Division said on Tuesday. "We continue to use information that we have gained from the intelligence system,.. some of which came from the capture of Saddam, to continue to take down those folks that are conducting attacks against the coalition," Abizaid was quoted as saying.
The intel guys are wallowing in red meat, trying to digest it all before it spoils...
Abizaid said US forces were focusing on mid-level leaders of the former regime who are believed to be running the resistance attacks. Other military officials have said that many are former majors, lieutenant and colonels from the former Iraqi military and security services who have risen to prominence since the regime's collapse. "From fighting this particular enemy, (we have learned that) knocking out the mid-level leadership is the key to success," Abizaid said. "If they were to take out our lieutenant colonels and colonels, we would have trouble, too. That is what we are doing to them." Abizaid added coalition forces captured several mid-level Baathists who were leading cells in areas where previously there had not been a clear picture of the enemy. "We have a full-court press on, understanding the environment better and connecting the various pieces of information we have from various sources," he said.
Posted by: Fred Pruitt 2003-12-18
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=22915