Iraq
(AFP) Two US troops killed, seven wounded in an attack on one of the small operating bases that characterize the new plan.
This is the danger of these isolated neighborhood bases. We haven't seen many direct attacks on these bases yet. This is new.
(AP) A major bombing in Karbala killed at least 56. This bombing was at a checkpoint on the road to the Shia holy site, the Imam Hussein shrine. As a target it is particularly inflammatory.
Same article, there was another bombing attempt against another major bridge spanning the Tigris. 10 killed. (Are they trying to cut the city in half? Limit ethnic cleansing? Limit US mobility?)
(AP) Civilian deaths are down in Baghdad, but deaths outside the capitol have gone up. Roughly the same number are dying. (I question the numbers in this article. This article cites Iraqi police numbers, whereas the Ministry of Health numbers and Red Cross numbers are roughly twice that. It doesn't mean the trend isn't there, but the base numbers are very low.)
(NYTimes, WaPo) The disastrous Osprey heads to Iraq.
The US military announced the deaths of three American soldiers killed south of Baghdad on Friday, two of whom died with two Iraqi interpreters when their patrol base was ambushed in an attack that saw combat helicopters scrambled.
This is the danger of these isolated neighborhood bases. We haven't seen many direct attacks on these bases yet. This is new.
(AP) A major bombing in Karbala killed at least 56. This bombing was at a checkpoint on the road to the Shia holy site, the Imam Hussein shrine. As a target it is particularly inflammatory.
Hundreds of people swarmed around ambulances, crying out and pounding their chests in grief. Police fired into the air to disperse crowds and clear roads for emergency vehicles, but angry mobs attacked them and set two police vehicles on fire.
Same article, there was another bombing attempt against another major bridge spanning the Tigris. 10 killed. (Are they trying to cut the city in half? Limit ethnic cleansing? Limit US mobility?)
(AP) Civilian deaths are down in Baghdad, but deaths outside the capitol have gone up. Roughly the same number are dying. (I question the numbers in this article. This article cites Iraqi police numbers, whereas the Ministry of Health numbers and Red Cross numbers are roughly twice that. It doesn't mean the trend isn't there, but the base numbers are very low.)
(NYTimes, WaPo) The disastrous Osprey heads to Iraq.
2 Comments:
I've got a friend who just got back a couple months ago after being part of the "pre-surge surge" into Baghdad. You know, when the good idea at the time was to dig a big ditch around the entire city.
He said the small operating bases are probably the dumbest concotion by the military yet. Screw organized attacks, ever hear of mortars?
By Anonymous, at 11:10 AM
Oh yeah.
The stuff I've been reading seems to describe fairly constant indirect attacks on some of the bases.
(Indirect fire is the polite euphemism for shit falling from the sky and blowing up.)
It's a nightmare. The guys are never "off." At any time, day or night, waking, sleeping, eating, whatever, Boom.
But direct attacks would represent a shift in tactics and a confidence.
The whole idea of these Forward Bases relies on the idea that they will make a difference to local security, but that's not going to happen if they fear them more than they trust us.
Eventually, that forward base will go away and it will be the infiltrated Iraqi forces responsible for security. And somebody might just remember who cooperated.
Mike
By mikevotes, at 12:34 PM
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