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Iraq-Jordan
U.S. forces thwart "Great Escape" in southern Iraq
2005-03-25
CAMP BUCCA, IRAQ -- U.S. military police Friday thwarted a massive escape attempt by suspected insurgents and terrorists from this southern Iraq Army base that houses more than 6,000 detainees when they uncovered a 600-foot tunnel the detainees had dug under their compound. "We were very close to a very bad thing," Major Gen. William Brandenburg said Friday after troops under his command discovered the tunnel that prisoners had painstakingly dug with the help of makeshift tools.
Within hours of the discovery on the first tunnel, a second tunnel of about 300 feet was detected under an adjoining compound in the camp, which holds 6,049 detainees. The elaborate escape is reminiscent of the 1994 movie, "The Shawshank Redemption," where a prisoner burrows his way out of prison.
Sounds more like "The Great Escape" to me. Somebody needs to spend time in the cooler.
The key difference, however, is that not one Iraq prisoner got out.

The discoveries came just hours before Brandenburg, who commands Multinational Force detainee operations in Iraq, toured the camp with Gen. George Casey Jr., the top Army general in Iraq, who was making his first visit to this remote desert camp in southwestern Iraq near the Kuwaiti border. Brandenburg said the prisoners, who include Iraqis and suspected terrorists from other Arab countries, probably were waiting for the dense fog that often rolls in at night from the nearby Persian Gulf before attempting their escape. "We get fog after midnight in which you can't see 100 feet," he said. "I think they were waiting on poor visibility and I think there was a good chance they would have gotten out of the camp."

Brandenburg, whose command also includes the better known but smaller Abu Ghraib camp near Baghdad, said soldiers in charge of Camp Bucca suspected that an escape attempt might be in the offing because they had found a small tunnel in another part of the camp about five days ago, and had been told by detainees that other tunnels were being dug.
Boy, nothing gets by these these guys, does it?
Brandenburg also said that in recent days there were "people outside the camp who we're not used to seeing," which was another indication that "something was going on."

Brandenburg, who was spending the night at the nearby Basrah airport while waiting for Gen. Casey to arrive from Baghdad Friday morning, said he was awoken at 1:30 a.m. by an officer from Camp Bucca who said, "Sir, you won't believe what we've found." When Branderburg and Casey arrived at Camp Bucca, they were shown the tunnel's exit point, which was outside the chain link fence and concertina wire that surrounds the camp's eight compounds, each of which contains more than 600 prisoners, and several smaller compounds.

The prisoners had used a cut-away five-gallon gas can attached to a 60-foot-long rope to haul the sandy soil out of the tunnel. They apparently used makeshift tools to dig and reinforce the tunnel, and covered the entry point inside the compound with a false floor made from wooden slats from their beds, which in turn they concealed under two feet of dirt. The detainees disposed of the dirt they had dug from the tunnel by flushing it down their latrines, which gave camp officials another clue that something was amiss when workers emptying the latrines complained that the filters on their trucks were getting jammed.
That's exactly how our POWs in German camps did it, they used the bed slats to shore up the tunnel.

Col. James Brown, the commander of the 18th Military Police Brigade that is in charge of Camp Bucca and Abu Ghraib, said two detainees tried to escape 10 days ago but were caught. He said the latest escape attempt was clearly planned to allow more than 100 prisoners to flee the camp. Brown said it is reasonable to assume that other tunnels will be discovered in other parts of the camp.
I think we need to send the guards copies of those great WWII escape novels "The Great Escape", "Escape from Colditz" and others. It's been so long since we've run a long term POW camp the skills have been lost.
During Casey's tour of the camp, thousands of the prisoners watched silently and sullenly as he and his entourage walked past them, and as he climbed a watchtower for a panoramic view. As Casey walked past the compound where the second tunnel was discovered, a soldier drove a large backhoe into the camp and began digging up the tunnel.

Camp officials also showed Casey a large collection of makeshift weapons taken from the detainees, including knives, slingshots, and even a fake flak jacket made from Muslim prayer shawls that resembled the real thing.
Our guys and the Brits made German uniforms and civilian clothes from blankets.
"I am never amazed at what I see," Brandenburg said of the ingenious technique used by the detainees in their escape attempt.
At the end of his tour, Casey presented a special medal to the young woman soldier, Specialist Lisa Wesson of Ashville, N.C., who discovered the larger tunnel during a routine investigation.
Another woman Soldier, kicking ass and taking names.
Camp Bucca is almost twice the size of Abu Ghraib, which was the scene of last year's prisoner abuse scandal that has prompted widespread changes in the handling of detainees. There are 3,243 detainees at Abu Ghraib, and another 114 after a camp near the Baghdad airport, which includes Saddam Hussein and other top officials of his deposed government.
Posted by:Steve

#14  Like the norks, they are not happy unless they are burrowing. Pumping sewage into the hole during the great escape and having it go artesian in the barracks is great diabolical thinking. I was thinking that gassing the tunnels during an escape would be diabolical. But then the prisoners would complain to the Red Thingy or ImNasty International and all the festivities would end. Artesian sewage. Now that's a good 'un.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2005-03-25 11:49:21 PM  

#13  As pointed out, the Great Escape movie was based on a book by one of the surviving prisoners. The real story is quite amazing.
Posted by: Spot   2005-03-25 8:16:19 PM  

#12  Steve, I think it was called The Wooden Horse. I still have it in the basement somewhere.
Posted by: HV   2005-03-25 5:37:03 PM  

#11  Ed - I stole from another Rantburger's suggestion on what to do with a tunnel found under the US-Mexico border some weeks back. ;)
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats   2005-03-25 5:07:25 PM  

#10  Paleo mole-men among them
Posted by: Frank G   2005-03-25 4:14:02 PM  

#9  Not really suprising when you think about it. Underground seems to be their natural habitat
Posted by: Michael   2005-03-25 4:11:38 PM  

#8  What happens when Ranburgers are captured.... thisn a picture of the Bridge over the River Kry.

Posted by: Shipman   2005-03-25 4:10:20 PM  

#7  Great Escape" and "Escape from Colditz" are not novels, they're the real deal

I meant to say history books. There was another whose title escapes me about a group of British POWs who dug a tunnel from underneath a vaulting horse they carried out every day and set next to the wire. While some Brits exercised on it, another inside the horse dug the tunnel. They had to cover it and conceal the opening every evening before carrying the horse back to the barracks.
Posted by: Steve   2005-03-25 4:04:59 PM  

#6   when they uncovered a 600-foot tunnel
be impressed Infidels! Where my glove?
Posted by: abu Koola King   2005-03-25 3:48:35 PM  

#5  "Great Escape" and "Escape from Colditz" are not novels, they're the real deal.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-25 3:27:25 PM  

#4  LotR. I like how you think. The fountain of sewage gushing from a barrack will ID the starting point of the tunnel.
Posted by: ed   2005-03-25 3:21:47 PM  

#3  hee hee! Allan didn't want you to escape, obviously, Jihadi-boys! Back to making big rocks into small ones to fill that tunnel up
Posted by: Frank G   2005-03-25 3:19:18 PM  

#2  They should have waited till somebody was in the tunnel digging and then filled it with sewage.
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats   2005-03-25 3:16:49 PM  

#1  "... complained that the filters on their trucks were getting jammed."

I wonder what poor SOB got the detail to clean that out.
Posted by: Xbalanke   2005-03-25 3:08:43 PM  

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