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March 20:
-- The United States launches war on Iraq with limited air strikes on Baghdad, after Iraqi President Saddam Hussein rejects a US deadline to leave the country
March 21:
-- The United States fires 1,000 cruise missiles on hundreds of targets in Baghdad and elsewhere
March 22:
-- US troops meet stiff resistance around the key southern port of Umm Qasr and in Nasiriyah, a key crossing over the Euphrates River
March 23:
-- US air raids pound Baghdad, the northern city of Mosul and positions held by Kurdish Islamist group allegedly linked to al-Qaeda
March 24:
-- Iraq's northern oil capital of Kirkuk is rocked by 24 hours of bombardment
March 25:
-- British and US forces take control of Umm Qasr
March 27:
-- 1,000 US paratroopers parachute into the Kurdish-held north
-- US President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair hold a summit in Washington, predicting victory while warning the conflict could drag on
March 28:
-- At least 30 people are killed in an air strike on a busy Baghdad market, Iraq says
March 31:
-- US forces report their first serious battle with the Republican Guard, south of Baghdad
April 1:
-- US forces shoot dead seven women and children at a military checkpoint
April 2:
-- US forces attack four elite Republican Guard divisions at Karbala in central Iraq
April 3:
-- US troops reach Baghdad airport, 20 kilometres (13 miles) from the city centre
-- Coalition forces say they hold more than 9,000 Iraqi prisoners of war
April 4:
-- US forces capture large parts of Baghdad airport
-- Kurdish fighters cross a bridge near the strategic northern junction of Khazer after more than 24 hours of fierce fighting
-- Expatriate UN aid workers return to Iraq
April 6:
-- 18 Kurds are killed and 45 wounded near Arbil in northern Iraq when US aircraft mistakenly bomb a Kurdish-US convoy
April 7:
-- US forces move into Baghdad and seize several presidential palaces
April 8:
-- Bush pledges after a two-day Belfast summit with Blair that the UN will play a vital role in post-war Iraq
April 9:
-- US Marines help Iraqis pull down a huge statue of Saddam in central Baghdad, as scenes of jubilation spread throughout the capital
-- US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld says the tide is turning against the Iraqi government and that the regime has been dealt a serious blow
April 10
-- US-backed Kurdish forces seize the heart of the northern oil city of Kirkuk without a fight
-- Iraqis begin widespread looting of ministries, shops and museums across Baghdad
April 11
-- US and Kurdish fighters shore up their foothold in the oil-rich north, claiming control of Iraq's third city Mosul and securing Kirkuk
-- The United States issues a list of its 55 most-wanted Iraqis
April 12
-- Saddam's chief weapons advisor, Lieutenant General Amer al-Saadi, turns himself in to US forces and insists the ousted regime did not have weapons of mass destruction
April 13
-- US troops enter Saddam's ancestral home town of Tikrit
-- Iraqi presidential advisor and former interior minister Watban Ibrahim Hasan is arrested
-- Bush accuses Syria of having chemical weapons and warns it must cooperate with US forces to eradicate last remnants of Saddam's regime
-- Seven US prisoners of war, the last remaining POWs in Iraqi hands, are found in good shape by US troops
April 14
-- US forces take control of Tikrit with barely a fight, effectively ending the military campaign
-- US Central Command says all Iraqi oil wells are under control of US and British forces
-- Iraqi police escorted by US soldiers begin first joint patrols in Baghdad
April 15
-- Fifteen people are killed in Mosul by US troops, witnesses say. US forces later admit to shooting dead seven people
-- The United States threatens Syria with diplomatic and economic sanctions amid reports Damascus has given refuge to fleeing Iraqi officials
-- US officials announce the capture in Baghdad of Abu Abbas, the Palestinian mastermind of the 1985 Achille Lauro hijacking
April 16
-- Bush says the United Nations should lift crippling economic sanctions on Iraq and that Saddam's regime has "passed into history"
April 17
-- Coalition forces arrest Barzan al-Tikriti, half-brother of Saddam Hussein
-- The commander of US-led forces in Iraq, General Tommy Franks, enters Baghdad for the first time
-- US General Richard Myers congratulates the military on a "tremendous combat victory" in Iraq, becoming the first top US military or administration official to declare victory
-- Russia says it will not support the lifting of UN sanctions on Iraq unless it is confirmed that the country has no weapons of mass destruction
-- Two Iraqis with close ties to the opposition Iraqi National Congress, Mohammed Mohsen Zubeidi and Jaudat Obeidi, declare themselves governor and mayor of Baghdad respectively. US forces say their appointments were not approved by Washington
April 18
-- The US military announces the capture of top Baath Party official Samir al-Aziz al-Najim
-- Thousands of Iraqis stage anti-US protests
April 19
-- Washington says former Iraqi finance minister Hikmat al-Azzawi, who figures 45th on a US list of 55 most-wanted Iraqis, has been arrested by Iraqi police
April 20
-- A 50-truck convoy carrying the first substantial food aid to Iraq arrives in Baghdad from Jordan
-- The US military says it has captured Abd al-Khaliq Abd Al-Gafar, Iraq's former minister of higher education and scientific research
-- The opposition Iraqi National Congress says Jamal Mustafa Abdullah, deputy head of the tribal affairs office and a son-in-law of Saddam, has surrendered.
-- A US general says Baghdad's international airport will open within a week for aid flights
April 21
-- Retired US general Jay Garner, the US administrator tasked with rebuilding Iraq, arrives in Baghdad and vows to restore water and power as soon as possible
-- Hundreds of thousands of Shiite Muslims gather in the holy city of Karbala for a pilgrimage banned under Saddam
-- The graves of nearly 1,000 political prisoners are discovered near Baghdad
-- Electricity is restored to parts of Baghdad after a blackout of more than two weeks
-- Key Iraqi opposition leader Ahmad Chalabi says Saddam is still in Iraq
-- The US military says it has arrested Mohammed Hamza al-Zubaidi, a key member of Saddam's inner circle and number 18 on Washington's most-wanted list
-- US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld says there is little likelihood of a long-term US military presence in Iraq
April 22
-- Hundreds of thousands of Shiite Muslims hold the second day of their holy pilgrimage in Karbala, banned during Saddam's 24-year rule, where 3,000 shout anti-US slogans
-- Retired US general Jay Garner meets Kurdish leaders in the northern city of Suleimanyah for talks on restarting vital services, before moving on to Mosul.
-- The International Committee of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent Society flew teams back into Iraq
-- US forces confirm they are holding Jamal Mustafa Abdullah Sultan, one of Saddam's sons-in-law
-- US Central Command confirms US forces have reached a ceasefire agreement with the Iraq-based Iranian armed opposition group, the People's Mujahedeen.
-- France calls at the UN Security Council for suspension of crippling economic sanctions on Iraq since 1990, but says their removal -- which the US wants -- requires the UN to certify Iraq free of banned weapons
April 23
-- US Secretary of State Colin Powell says France will face consequences for its opposition to the war in Iraq
-- The White House says that economic sanctions on Iraq must be lifted, "not merely suspended," an apparent rebuff of Paris' proposal to the Security Council
-- Iraq's US civil administrator, retired general Jay Garner, says that a post-Saddam elected government would be headed by one leader who could represent the country's diverse ethnic make-up
-- Iraqi Shiites wrap up a massive pilgrimage to the holy city of Karbala with only a muted display of anti-Americanism
-- The Iraq-based People's Mujahedeen guerilla group says a ceasefire agreement reached with US forces lets them keep their arms while maintaining their war against the Iranian government
-- British Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon, the first senior coalition official to visit Iraq, says he thinks deposed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein is still alive and in the country.
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