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Iraq-Jordan
Rebels craved killer conflict
2004-11-25
THE daily discovery of thousands of weapons amid the ruins of Fallujah has stunned coalition troops, who say rebel arms caches are a sign of how well prepared the Iraqi insurgency was for a fight that could have ended in a much less decisive victory for US-led forces. "The sheer amount of caches we've found would stun you," US Marine Lieutenant Colonel Dan Wilson said. "You could literally take over this country with the number of weapons we've found."

Marine combat engineers and explosives experts were again scouring homes yesterday amid the battered streets in south Fallujah's Shuhada district, where the day before gunmen traded shots with units trying to seize two homes that were later found to be hiding nearly 700 mortar shells. "We knew south Fallujah was a pretty good strong point (for the rebels)," Staff Sergeant Tim Oberst of the 1st Battalion 8th US Marines said. "They had weapons stacked up like they knew what they were doing. If they had enough people who knew how to use this stuff it could have been a lot worse, but they were definitely ready. They wanted to fight."

As US troops largely cleared the city of rebels this week, reducing the insurgency to what military officials say are a few isolated pockets of fighters harassing troops with sniper fire and booby-traps, the extent of the rebels' preparations was becoming alarmingly clear. For more than an hour yesterday a daisy chain of marines passed mortar shells - from 60mm rounds the size of a small water bottle to large 120mm mortars and artillery shells that had to carried in both hands - to a waiting truck as a convoy of vehicles snaked its way through one ruined neighbourhood cleaning out weapons caches. Elsewhere, reporters saw a captured arsenal laid out in the dirt on the edges of another neighbourhood: rockets and antiquated shotguns jumbled next to clean, well oiled assault rifles, heavy machine guns and several homemade bombs.

Outside one house, marines piled boxes of medical bandages, IV bags, saline solution and other medical supplies they say had been stockpiled before the assault before torching the home where the cache had been discovered. "These guys were prepared - medical supplies, food that would last forever," Lieutenant David J Lee said. But brutal artillery barrages before the assault had succeeded in destroying the insurgents' commanders, he said. "Once they did that it was just a fight with a bunch of disorganised guys, and a lot of them didn't know how to use this stuff. "But don't get me wrong, it was tough. But it could have been a lot worse."
Posted by:God Save The World

#11  Alaska Paul: Our forces are truly remarkable and professional.

Extraordinary indeed. Is there any institution in our society that is as competent, flexible, well-led, meritocratic and progressive, disciplined, and has more integrity than our professional military?

Think about it: the Church is a disgrace. The MSM and academia have become a joke. The lawyers are as rotten as they ever were, and medicine is demoralized and in retreat. There simply is no institution that comes close to the military for professionalism, competence and integrity. Awesome and wondrous to behold.
Posted by: lex   2004-11-25 5:11:32 PM  

#10  Alaska Paul: Our forces are truly remarkable and professional.

Extraordinary indeed. Is there any institution in our society that is as competent, flexible, well-led, meritocratic and progressive, disciplined, and has more integrity than our professional military?

Think about it: the Church is a disgrace. The MSM and academia have become a joke. The lawyers are as rotten as they ever were, and medicine is demoralized and in retreat. There simply is no institution that comes close to the military for professionalism, competence and integrity. Awesome and wondrous to behold.
Posted by: lex   2004-11-25 5:11:15 PM  

#9  At least, every Fallujah mosque used by the terrorists should be razed & its site covered with a foot of reinforced concrete. Visit Fallujah -- lots of free parking!
Posted by: Ebbavith Angang9747   2004-11-25 4:59:14 PM  

#8  without reducing the whole town to rubble

Any empty buildings should have been reduced to just that, IMO.
Posted by: Rafael   2004-11-25 2:10:10 PM  

#7  Thank God these morons don't have the training, unit cohesion, and discipline of our fine servicemen and women. This could have been a lot tougher and uglier otherwise. Our professional military: one more thing to be thankful for today!
Posted by: Dar   2004-11-25 12:06:07 PM  

#6  The thing that I find remarkable is how our forces went into Fallujah and cleaned out the place with minimum casualties without reducing the whole town to rubble. Take a look at Grozeny in Chechnya with the Russian Army. Heavy casualties, both military and civilian, and total destruction. Our forces are truly remarkable and professional.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2004-11-25 11:47:20 AM  

#5  Fox (6:30PST) had breaking news - Chem Weapons/IED lab found in Fallujah. Rooters reporting - more developing
Posted by: Frank G   2004-11-25 9:33:54 AM  

#4  This is looking like the WWII Pacific campaign. Island by island.
Posted by: lex   2004-11-25 8:26:58 AM  

#3  I feel a sense of the Soviet/Souk, best to have lotsa stuff, lots and lots... antiquated shotguns? I saw some of those 120 mm mortar rounds, I'd blown them in place... rusty looking.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-11-25 8:24:41 AM  

#2  Your wish, shaheedi, is the djinn's Marine's command. 1800 dead assholes and counting.
http://rantburg.com/comments.asp?HC=Main&D=11/25/2004&ID=49697
Posted by: ed   2004-11-25 7:12:34 AM  

#1  What about tunnels? Any underground corridors discovered?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2004-11-25 2:35:37 AM  

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