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New video shows Saddam among crowd

Possible Saddam address: 'Hit them hard'

A U.S. tank stops near the entrance of Baghdad's international airport on Friday as coalition forces approach.
A U.S. tank stops near the entrance of Baghdad's international airport on Friday as coalition forces approach.

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A message purported to be from Saddam Hussein is broadcast on Iraqi TV.
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CNN's Walter Rodgers reports during a firefight near Saddam International Airport.
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U.S. MILITARY BRIEFING, FRIDAY

U.S. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks

• Coalition forces in the north control roads into and out of Iraq and between Baghdad and Tikrit.

• Forces may have encountered elements of the elite Special Republican Guard after penetrating the defensive ring set up around Baghdad.

• Troops north of Basra found a cache of 56 anti-aircraft missiles and four missile launchers.
IRAQI INFO MINISTRY COMMENTS, FRIDAY

Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf

• U.S. forces will face "a non-conventional act" on Friday night, "not necessarily military."

• Iraq will not use weapons of mass destruction.

• "We will do something to them" (coalition forces) "that will be a great example ... I'm not revealing a secret because working in the dark is useful with these mercenaries."
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•  Commanders: U.S. | Iraq
•  Weapons: 3D Models

NEAR BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- As coalition forces reported significant gains Friday, seizing Baghdad's international airport in their drive toward the capital, a number of Arabic-language television networks showed video of a man said to be Saddam Hussein walking through the streets of Baghdad in the midst of an excited, cheering crowd.

On the video, aired by Lebanese Broadcasting Corp., some members of the throng that surrounded Saddam held rifles aloft as he worked his way through the crowd, smiling broadly. A man walking next to him appeared to be Abid Hamoud, Saddam's press secretary.

In one shot, what appears to be a column of smoke can be seen and a large volume of automobile traffic is visible from time to time.

It is not known when the footage might have been taped, but CNN's Nic Robertson said it appears to have been shot on the western outskirts of the capital, close to the Jordanian Embassy.

Earlier, in another prerecorded appearance on Iraqi state television, Saddam exhorted his followers to fight the U.S. and British troops "with what you have available."

He said that only a small number of coalition forces had bypassed Iraqi forces around Baghdad and he urged Iraqis to "hit them hard."

He also praised a farmer, a man Iraqi officials earlier had said shot down a U.S. Apache helicopter. It was the first time that he has referred to an incident that happened after the United States attacked the Iraqi leadership in a so-called decapitation attack on March 19.

Saddam's apparent absence since mid-March has led some U.S. officials to speculate that he may have been killed in the attack. Also, experts say the Iraqi leader has been known to use body doubles in the past.

Threat of something 'not conventional'

Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf said Friday that the U.S. forces at Baghdad's international airport are "an isolated island," and Iraqi troops have "nailed down" or turned back other coalition advances.

He said U.S. forces will face "something that is not conventional" Friday night.

Sahaf said Iraq will not use weapons of mass destruction against advancing U.S. or British troops, but he threatened widespread use of "martyrdom," and said the action would be "not by military."

Meanwhile, U.S.-led coalition troops battled Iraqi forces Friday after penetrating the Republican Guard's defensive ring around Baghdad and seizing the airport.

Iraqi forces were driven from the airport , which is about 12 miles outside of the Iraqi capital, earlier in the day, but CNN's Walter Rodgers, embedded with the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division, 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, said that the area was still hostile territory.

More than 20 Iraqi tanks have been seen operating between the perimeter of the airport and the 3-7th, which is a few miles away, guarding the flanks of the 3rd Infantry soldiers working to secure the airport.

Rodgers said the unit he was with was "under constant fire, and has been for hours and hours."

Iraqis had tried to stop the U.S. advance by charging with dump trucks, pickup trucks and buses filled with Iraqi soldiers firing their weapons, according to reports from CNN's Rodgers. The Army called the soldier-filled vehicles "suicide buses."

U.S. tanks easily destroyed the Iraqi vehicles, he said. At least one of the buses blew up as if it had explosives inside. (Full story)

U.S. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks called the airport "the gateway to the future of Iraq," in announcing Friday that American forces were in control of the facility.

He also said that coalition forces control the roads leading in and out of northern Iraq as well as the route linking Baghdad with Tikrit, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's ancestral home.

A convoy of U.S. Marines advanced from positions near Kut toward the southeastern suburbs of Baghdad on Friday, passing dozens of smiling, waving villagers.

CNN's Martin Savidge, embedded with the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, said the convoy passed Iraqi military uniforms piled beside the road, alongside abandoned tanks and artillery equipment -- evidence, he said, that Iraqi soldiers may have given up the fight and gone home.

Northwest of the capital, three coalition troops were killed and two were wounded Friday when a car bomb exploded at a checkpoint about 11 miles away from the strategic Hadithah Dam, Central Command said.

The U.S. Central Command said a pregnant woman got out of a car and began "screaming in fear" at the checkpoint and the car exploded as the troops approached the vehicle. The woman and the car's driver were also killed. (Full story)

Other developments

• Brooks confirmed a report Friday that coalition forces had found a stash of boxes of unidentified powder and liquid and other materials in an industrial facility near Baghdad but could not characterize the find except to say it was "an item of interest." But a senior U.S. official familiar with initial testing told The Associated Press that the materials were believed to be explosives. CNN is working to confirm the reports.

• Two medical volunteers from the group Doctors Without Borders have been missing in Baghdad since Wednesday, the group announced Friday. The volunteers were part of a six-member team that had been in Baghdad for several weeks, and had been providing medical help at the 250-bed Al-Kindi General Hospital in the northeastern part of the city, according to a statement from the Paris-based international medical support group.

A British soldier from the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, called the
A British soldier from the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, called the "Desert Rats," fights near Basra in southern Iraq on Friday.

• Washington Post columnist and Atlantic Monthly editor-at-large Michael Kelly is the first American journalist to die in Iraq, said Alan Shearer, editorial director of the Post Writers Group. Kelly was embedded with the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division and reportedly was killed in a Humvee accident Thursday night. (Full story)

• Burning Iraqi military vehicles, including a truck with the bodies of three Iraqi soldiers, littered the road heading east to Mosul after the northern Iraqi town of Khazar fell to Kurdish forces Friday. The town's capture came after more than a day of fighting between those forces -- known as Peshmerga -- and Iraqis firing artillery and mortars. U.S. special forces in white Land Rovers were seen spotting targets for laser-guided bombs. After several hours of U.S. bombing strikes, the Iraqi soldiers retreated and the Peshmerga moved in.

• An Iraqi man who helped U.S. Marines plan the rescue of the 19-year-old American prisoner of war, Jessica Lynch, has been granted refugee status and described by the Marines as a "hero." (Full story)

CNN correspondents Martin Savidge, Walter Rodgers, Jane Arraf, Tom Mintier, Nic Robertson, Brent Sadler, Ben Wedeman and Barbara Starr, and producer Mike Mount, contributed to this report.

EDITOR'S NOTE: CNN's policy is to not report information that puts operational security at risk.


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