WAR UPDATE BATTLEFIELD
From CNN.Com
POWs Reported Taken:
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- A group of fewer than 10 U.S. soldiers have been captured or killed by Iraqi military forces, Pentagon officials said Sunday.
The process of informing the soldiers' families has begun, officials said.
The soldiers, attached to a maintenance unit in south-central Iraq, went astray and were confronted by Iraqi military, officials said.
Some U.S. soldiers were killed, and others were being held as prisoners of war, officials said.
Iraqi television filmed interviews Sunday with what it said were American soldiers captured in southern Iraq.
The Arabic language, Qatar-based news network Al-Jazeera broadcast a tape Sunday of what appear to be U.S. soldiers identifying themselves and their place of origin. At least two of the soldiers interviewed appeared to be wounded; one of the wounded was a woman.
Richard Myers, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, called the soldiers' appearance a violation of the Geneva Convention.
"This is just one more crime by the Iraqi regime," a grim-faced Myers told reporters at the Pentagon shortly after the capture had been confirmed.
The news came as coalition ground forces faced pockets of strong resistance as they drove Sunday through the Iraqi desert toward Baghdad and other strategic targets.
U.S. Marines encountered heavy resistance and have suffered casualties Sunday in fighting near the southeastern Iraqi city of Nasiriyah.
Marines entered the city after Iraqi forces ambushed a U.S. military convoy bringing supplies to coalition forces in the region, according to CNN's Alessio Vinci, who is with the Marines.
Coalition forces had opted Saturday not to try to occupy Nasiriyah in order to speed up their advance to Baghdad.
Several thousand Marines are involved in the operation, according to Vinci.
BATTLES
• U.S. Marines encountered heavy resistance and have suffered casualties Sunday in fighting near the southeastern Iraqi city of Nasiriya. Marines entered the town after Iraqi forces ambushed a U.S. military convoy carrying supplies.
• The U.S. Army 7th Cavalry's 3rd Squadron encountered heavy artillery fire Sunday in south-central Iraq. Earlier, reconnaissance soldiers told CNN that Iraqi forces were using women and children as human shields at key military positions.
• Australian commandos operating deep in Iraq called in allied fighter jets to destroy an Iraqi ballistic missile site, defense and government officials said Sunday. Full story
• U.S. Marines Sunday ended a skirmish with a small pocket of Iraqi forces in the port city of Umm Qasr, calling in an air strike from a Harrier jet and rounding up prisoners of war. Full story
Gallery: Photos of the war | Video: U.S. war report
AIRSTRIKES
• Iraqi crews searched the Tigris River on Sunday, looking for a coalition warplane that crashed in Baghdad, Arab media reported. U.S. and U.K. military sources said they have no reports of downed aircraft.
• A Patriot missile shot down a British Tornado GR4 aircraft with two crewmembers near the Iraq-Kuwait border, U.K. officials said Sunday. Full story
• Iran said Sunday a missile that landed in the western region of Sardasht last week belongs to Iraq -- not the United States, as first suspected. U.S. officials say they are still probing another incident in which three U.S. Tomahawk missiles fired Friday mistakenly landed in southwestern Iran.
• Manned and unmanned coalition planes continued to strike targets around Iraq on Sunday, honing in on Baghdad as well as the oil-rich northern Iraqi cities of Mosul and Kirkuk, a Pentagon official said.
CASUALTIES
• One U.S. soldier was killed and another injured in a vehicle accident Sunday in southern Iraq.
• Jordan's foreign minister said Sunday that airstrikes in Mosul killed four Jordanian students, adding that it is unclear who fired the missiles.
• At least 14 U.K. and 9 U.S. military personnel have died during the conflict, according to coalition military sources. Fewer than 10 soldiers may be unaccounted for in southern Iraq, Gen. Richard Myers said.