American Planes Strike Radar Site in Southern Iraq

American Planes Strike Radar Site in Southern Iraq
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. planes bombed a site in southern Iraq on Tuesday to knock out a radar that helps Baghdad track and target Western aircraft, in the latest of a string of hits on Iraqi military targets, the Pentagon said.The second strike in less than a week was conducted at about 8:15 a.m. EDT at an-Nasiriyah, about 175 miles southeast of Baghdad, and came on the heels of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's assertion that Iraq had sharply improved its air defense.(Read map caption below)
``Coalition aircraft struck a surface-to-air missile site near an-Nasiriyah,'' said Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. Craig Quigley.
He described the target as ``another element in the Iraqi integrated air defense system that had been very active in threatening coalition air crews.''
The Pentagon has said the Iraqi military has become more aggressive recently in trying to shoot down U.S. and British planes patrolling the ``no-fly'' zones in southern and northern Iraq. Raids by U.S. and British planes have targeted Baghdad's increasingly sophisticated anti-aircraft network.
A defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a few U.S. Air Force F-16 fighter jets used precision-guided weapons to target a single site, in a strike that was on a smaller scale than last week's bombardment.
'DAMAGE ASSESSMENT' UNDER WAY
Precision-guided weapons include missiles and bombs that are guided to their targets by satellites.
A damage assessment was under way of Tuesday's target, which was a ``fire-control'' radar that provides information used in the firing of surface-to-air missiles, defense officials said. In Baghdad, a spokesman for the Iraqi air defense division said that there had been a Western air attack on ``infrastructure facilities'' in Missan province, 225 miles southeast of Baghdad. He gave no details about whether there were any casualties.
Asked about the apparent discrepancy with the location cited by Iraq, Quigley said: ``We're not 50 miles off. This was the site that we intended to hit.''
Tuesday's strike followed a more severe bombardment on Friday when dozens of U.S. and British warplanes struck three air defense sites in southern Iraq. That followed a strike on targets in northern Iraq earlier last week.
Asked to assess Friday's raid, Quigley said, ``I will just say that on balance we were very pleased with the results.''While no Western aircraft have been shot down by Iraq, Rumsfeld said recently Iraq was improving its air defenses ''both quantitatively and qualitatively'' with fiber-optic communications cabling.
MAP CAPTION

Western planes conducted an air strike on August 14, 2001 on a surface-to-air missile site in southern Iraq to knock out a radar that provides information for missile firing, the Pentagon said. (Reuters Graphic)

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