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Friday, August 17, 2007
Under attack
A young soldier, who the previous night had been reading from a huge Bible in the bed opposite, got up and was looking worried. “Was that outgoing or incoming” I mumbled. I haven’t been in Iraq long enough to distinguish between the two. He had. “Incoming” was the monosyllabic answer. He was already pulling his desert boots on and heading for the “duck and cover” shelter. We followed him into the concrete tunnel, just outside the other side of the huge “T-bar” blast walls. We crowded in, sitting on the dirt floor with a dozen other young soldiers, many clutching their rifles. No one seemed to know what was going on. One officer had a radio and listened intently for news, while spitting brown saliva from a wad of chewing tobacco lodged in his mouth. After a few minutes, word came through that the missile had slammed into one of the aluminium-clad buildings in the camp. Thirty-one soldiers had been hurt, two seriously. There was the annoying whine of a pilotless drone above us, probably controlled by a man, thousands of miles away. Then we heard F16 jets had been scrambled to investigate four more missiles that had been found nearby. They were pointing directly at the base. After two sweltering hours, we were allowed to emerge from the bunker. I went to investigate the damage to the building. It was staggering: A huge gaping hole on one side and a charred air-conditioning unit lying on the floor, which thankfully had taken the brunt of the impact. It was while I was walking back to our accommodation that another massive explosion rocked the base. This time it was the F16s dropping a 500 lb bomb on a "suspicious" house near the launch site. Kalsu, like many other bases across Iraq, regularly gets mortared and attacked by insurgent missiles. The army thinks this attack was the work of the Jaish Al Mehdi, a Shi’ite extremist group. That night we piled into Chinook helicopters in utter darkness, for a short flight to a nearby farm. The troops ran across the ploughed field, as the whirring blades rained the fertile alluvial soil down from the inky sky. The only light up there was from other helicopters and the sprinkled broken glass effect of millions of stars. The soldiers met little resistance. All the men had fled, save for a man in his eighties. Women and children were herded together in the farmyard, while troops with night vision goggles searched the outbuildings and houses in utter darkness. Half way through the search, there was a ripple of excitement. They’d caught some of the men trying to escape across the fields. They were interrogated by sweating, nervous officers. We could hear repeated shouts of “Shut up” from the house, but after a few minutes I was allowed to witness some of the questioning. The man was cuffed, kneeling on the floor of a room that had been turned upside down by the soldiers. Questions about his name, his age, and his military service were all barked at him. His eyes were wide and darted between the soldiers. Few hearts and minds were being won on this farm tonight. Among those detained was a general in the Ministry of the Interior. The U.S. army thinks he is the leader of the rocket cell. I find it extraordinary that a senior member of the Iraqi government machine, which is armed and supported by the U.S., is directing attacks on American soldiers. No one on the base seemed to think it was very unusual though, just as the missile attack was shrugged off. It’s all part of the daily grind of this conflict that is picking off American soldiers randomly and without warning, ensuring even within their bases they don’t feel safe and leaving many feeling they simply can’t trust anyone within the Iraqi government machine. Watch my report -- From Dan Rivers, CNN International Correspondent, in Iraq.
Dan:
Thank you for being the eyes and ears for your viewers. Back in the states we have a different perception of what is taking place in Iraq. Your report gives us a better view of what the soldiers' day to day "grind" looks like. It seems like all we hear about is the war's high death tolls and incisive political spouts of our presidential candidates. Thank you for bringing down to what a soldier may see and experience frequently.
CNN's Bill Schneider did a despicable and distorted poll aimed at discrediting General Petraeus before he issues his report. The Democrats seem intent on McGovernizing themselves.
Thank you for giving the readers a glimpse of what it's like daily for our men and women in the armed forces. As a Mom of a soldier, I have heard very similar stories from my son time and time again over the year and a half that he spent in Iraq. Your're never safe any where, only trust your fellow soldiers and always watch your back. It's a shame that they are put there to fight a war, when they never really know who the enemy is. By the way that cavalier attitude these soldiers develop when they hear incoming, doesn't follow them into civilian life. Many different day to day sounds and situations that we take for granted, bring them right back to the war zone. This is something that many families of returning soldiers need to deal with and prepare for as their loved ones try to adapt to a life outside of Armed Forces.
Forgot to mention; the author wrote about an Interior Ministry General who was arrested. These so-called "Generals" who work for various departments of the Iraqi government are not Generals as we understand the word. They are given the rank of General by the Ministry in question solely for the purposes of getting a General's
salary; somewhere around 300 dollars A MONTH. These individuals often only show up to collect their paycheck and do little if any work and have little if any authority. This is commonly done by the Shiites who control the ministries. This is done often due to family and tribal connections, but also to help fund the Shiite militias.
Mr. Rivers comment, "I find it extraordinary that a senior member of the Iraqi government machine, which is armed and supported by the U.S., is directing attacks on American soldiers" shows a typical
lack of "life savvy" particularly with Muslims. I have worked for Muslims before and these people are extremely adept at lying, cheating and stealing. Not much different from Americans, HUH?
No one even bothered thank that air conditioning device that took the rocket headon.
Our soldiers and airmen who are being asked to "take the pain" of the Iraq war are just victims of our arrogance toward other nations.
I feel the war will eject the US forces and follow them home, to us. Personally I am neutral on the war issue.
and if I could add...like Mr. Vick, who lost $100 million over just a little gambling, the U.S. has paid a HUGE price in Iraq
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