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Assassins' Gate

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Assassin's Gate in Baghdad, Iraq

For the 2005 book by George Packer, see The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq.

33°19′13″N 44°24′03″E / 33.3202°N 44.4007°E / 33.3202; 44.4007

The Assassin's gate at the Green Zone in Baghdad

The Assassin's Gate is one of four primary points of entry to the Green Zone in Baghdad, Iraq.

The name originates from Assassins Company, a US Army armor unit (Alpha Company - radio call sign "Assassins" - 4th Battalion, 64th Armor Regt., 2nd Brigade, 3D Infantry Division, which combined with combat engineer and infantry companies to form Task Force 464 in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.)

In the taking of Baghdad on April 7, 2003, Assassins Company led the assault on the government center and palace district that later became the Green Zone. On April 8, the unit repelled a significant pre-dawn counterattack through Assassins' Gate, by the Jumhuriyah Bridge. As many as 60 Iraqi soldiers and fedayeen fighters are reported to have been killed in about four hours of fighting. Several of the American tankers up in their hatches were wounded by fire coming down from surrounding buildings before A-10 Warthogs and F/A-18s were called in to destroy the buildings and work over a bunker complex in the adjacent park. Around mid-morning, while searching for a suspected Iraqi forward artillery observer whose radio transmissions were being monitored, one of the tanks fired at the Hotel Palestine from the Jumhuriyah Bridge, killing two European journalists the tank commander said he believed were enemy observers. This prompted accusations by media groups of purposeful targeting of journalists. A Spanish judge brought murder charges against the tank commander, the company commander and the battalion commander. A US military investigation cleared the soldiers of any intentional wrongdoing.

Assassins Company provided security at the gate for several months after the invasion, at one point facing a hostile crowd at the barricade, with the order given to fix bayonets, while at least one soldier was stabbed and wounded by someone in the crowd, according to soldiers who were present.

The name Assassins' Gate does not have any Iraqi origin. It is described as "a sandstone arch." This gate was also the site of a devastating attack from a vehicle-borne improvised explosive that left a 3-foot (0.91 m) deep crater early one morning on January 18, 2004. Many civilians were killed as they entered the gate for their daily jobs inside the Green Zone.

References

  1. Zucchino, David. (2004). Thunder run : the armored strike to capture Baghdad. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 0-87113-911-1. OCLC 54001391.
  2. Nance, M.W. (2014). The Terrorists of Iraq: Inside the Strategy and Tactics of the Iraq Insurgency 2003–2014, Second Edition. EBL-Schweitzer. CRC Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-1-4987-0691-9. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  3. Packer, George (2005). The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 312–313. ISBN 978-0-374-29963-7.
  4. Mickolus, E.F.; Simmons, S.L. (2006). Terrorism, 2002–2004: a chronology. Terrorism, 2002–2004: A Chronology. Praeger Security International. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-313-33476-4. Retrieved August 5, 2018. January 18, 2004. Iraq. At 8:00 a.m., a suicide pickup truck bomber set off 1,000 pounds of PE-4 plastic explosives and several 155-mm artillery shells at the Assassins' Gate to the U.S. Occupation Headquarters in Baghdad's Green Zone, ...

External links

Media related to Assassins' Gate at Wikimedia Commons


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