In this image from video shown on Al-Jazeera television, Chief Warrant Officer Ronald D. Young, Jr., 26, from Georgia, left, and Chief Warrant Officer David S. Williams, 30, from Florida, are seen. Young and Williams are the two-man crew believed to be aboard an Apache helicopter that was allegedly forced down in central Iraq.
A British Royal Air Force 18 Squadron Chinook helicopter flies over the northern Arabian Gulf on Monday.
Shehad Khalil, 7, lays in Al-Numan hospital after she was seriously wounded when a missile reportedly landed in a residential neighborhood of Baghdad, Monday, March 24, 2003, killing three and wounding 23.
Caption Vehicles drive towards a cloud of black smoke in Baghdad, Monday March 24, 2003. Oil fires ring the city as a defense against incoming U.S. missiles and bombs.
A South Korean little boy holds one of anti-war placards during a rally near U.S. Embassy in Seoul Monday, March 24, 2003, protesting against the U.S.-led war and a government plan to dispatch about 600 South Korean military engineers and 100 medics to Iraq.
Muhammed, whose mother was one of three killed when a missile landed in a residential neighborhood of Baghdad on Monday, waits outside the morgue at Baghdad's Al-Numan hospital for her body to be released for funeral.
Army Pfc. Patrick Miller, second from left, is one of five prisoners of war shown Sunday on Iraqi television. Here, he is shown with his family in a photo taken in May 24, 2002. From left are sister Kimberly Miller; Pfc Miller; mother Mary Pickering; brother Shane Parker; and half brother Thomas Hershberger.
Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair leaves 10 Downing Street on his way to the House of Commons to make a statement on the war in Iraq on Monday. Blair said the invasion had reached a "crucial moment."
A Scottish flag flies on an armored personnel carrier of the British forces Queen's Dragoon Guards as it speeds on Kuwaiti territory, in this photo made available Monday.
An unidentified wounded U.S. soldier is carried off a C-141 military plane at the U.S. Air Base in Ramstein, southwestern Germany. A total of 12 U.S. soldiers wounded in the Iraq war were brought to the nearby Landstuhl Medical Center for medical treatment.
Um Khaled, 80, covers her face with a handkerchief to shield herself from smoke as she walks from the market in New Baghdad, a suburb of Baghdad, on Monday. Oils fires have been set in a ring around the city as a defense against incoming U.S. missiles and bombs.
Saddam Hussein is seen March 24 in an image from Iraqi Television. He promised an Iraqi victory and referred to current battles as he praised the Iraqi people's courage. It was not immediately clear if the speech was live, as claimed, or taped.
People flee the town of Khurmal after U.S. forces fired Tomahawk cruise missiles at suspected positions of the Ansar al-Islam guerrillas in northern Iraq. Khurmal lies about 8 miles from the Iranian border and 6 from the checkpoint where a car bomb killed at least five people including an Australian cameraman near an Ansar al-Islam militant group camp.
A British soldier with the 1st Armoured Division searches an Iraqi at a checkpoint on the road to Basra. Security around military convoys and encampments has been stepped up after British Army officers warned that their soldiers had come under attack from guerrilla-style paramilitary shootings in southern Iraq.
Police arrest an anti-war demonstrator in front of the Transamerica building in San Francisco on Monday. Activists aimed their morning protest at the Carlyle Group, a global investment firm that they say is one of the nation's biggest defense contractors.
A U.S. Air Force B-52 returning from a mission in Iraq is about to be refueled in flight over the Black Sea on Monday. The same B-52 is seen at the bottom of the picture in a mirror of the boom operator's compartment. The KC-10 refueling plane belongs to the 409th U.S. Air Force Expeditionary Group, based in Bulgaria.
Two Iraqi children look through their window in New Baghdad, a suburb of Baghdad, Monday, March 24, 2003. Oils fires ring the city as a defense against incoming U.S. missiles and bombs.
Soldiers of 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), mourn the loss of Capt. Christopher Seifert at a memorial ceremony at Camp Pennsylvania in Kuwait. Seifert was killed when a grenade was thrown into a tent early Sunday by a fellow U.S. soldier. The attack left 15 other soldiers wounded.
U.S. Marines from the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit set up a position during a scouting mission at a village in Az Zubayar, southern Iraq's desert, on Monday.
Members of the Royal Fusiliers, known as the Desert Rats, drive their Warrior tank into a monument of Saddam Hussein in Basra, southern Iraq, on Monday.