A look at U.S. and British ground units, their commanders and the role they are playing in Gulf War II






101st Airborne Division

173rd Airborne Brigade

1st Marine Expeditionary

3rd Infantry Division

82nd Airborne Division

Combined British Forces


DESMOND BOYLAN/REUTERS; (inset) MARK RICHARDS/AFP
1ST   M A R I N E   E X P E D I T I O N A R Y

ITS MISSION:
The 1st Marines, based at Camp Pendleton, Calif., are best known for winning World War II's Battle of Guadalcanal. The force can call on its more than 100 F-18 and AV-8B warplanes and 50 AH-1 Cobra helicopter gunships to soften up the Iraqis before ground troops advance. The first U.S. soldier to die in Gulf War II was a 1st Marine, who was shot while approaching an oil station in southern Iraq.

THE COMMANDER: Colonel Lieut. General James T. Conway, 55, served in Desert Storm, ran the Marine Corps University at Quantico, Va., and recently held one of the military's top terrorism-fighting jobs. He commands more than 85,000 troops and told his soldiers, "This isn't a fair fight. We didn't intend it to be." The U.S. mission, he said, is to depose Saddam, "not to lay waste to this place."

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Defense; U.S. Army
From the March 24, 2003 issue of TIME Magazine; Posted Sunday, MARCH 16, 2003

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