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Iraq
Marines Unearth Weapons Caches; Tipsters Lead Troops to More Caches
2006-01-02
Over the past week, U.S. Marines discovered more than 10 tons of munitions hidden in Iraq's Euphrates River Valley. Troops elsewhere found and seized other weapons caches on New Year's Day. Marines found 72 cache sites about 25 miles south of Fallujah during the weeklong Operation Green Trident, officials said today. Marines from the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, Regimental Combat Team 8, kicked off the operation near the village of Latifiyah to search suspected locations for hidden weapon caches.

More than 1,000 artillery and mortar rounds were unearthed along with scores of rocket-propelled grenades and hand grenades, officials said. Officials said most of the caches were shallowly buried along the banks of the Euphrates River and surrounding area. Insurgents commonly use artillery and mortar rounds to make improvised explosive devices, officials noted.

In the Baghdad area, U.S. solders kicked-off the new year by seizing and destroying two weapons caches, which further denies terrorists the opportunity to put the citizens of Baghdad in harm's way, officials said.

U.S. troops seized the first weapons cache at about 8:30 a.m. New Year's Day. It included a rocket-propelled grenade, an AK-47 assault rifle and seven loaded magazines. About two hours later, soldiers seized a larger cachethat consisted of a 3.5 inch rocket, eight rocket-propelled grenades, a launcher, and 60 mm mortar rounds, officials said.

Elsewhere, tips from local residents led U.S. troops to four improvised explosive devices and the capture of five suspected terrorists Jan. 1 in northern Iraq.

An early morning tip from local residents led members of the 101st Airborne Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team to an area near Kirkuk, where they found two IEDs, officials said. While a group of soldiers secured the area to wait for an explosive ordnance disposal team, the tipster led the rest of the patrol to a nearby location where they detained five suspects believed to be involved with emplacing the IEDs, officials noted.

In Mosul, Iraq's second largest city, a tip from local residents led soldiers from the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team to the site of two more IEDs near a busy intersection in the city. One of the IEDs detonated while the unit was securing the area, slightly wounding one soldier. The second IED was safely disarmed, and an explosive ordnance disposal team removed two 120 mm mortar rounds.

"Tips from concerned citizens have helped Iraqi and U.S. forces discover numerous bombs and weapons caches throughout the area," a spokesman said.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#7  We should mount the ground penetrating radar from the shuttle mapping missions on the Global Hawk or a U-2 and deep map the whole of Anbar looking for caches.
Posted by: 3dc   2006-01-02 22:03  

#6  Transl.: handheld anti-tank grenade-launcher. H.A.G.
Posted by: twobyfour   2006-01-02 21:51  

#5  minor correction: Ruchnoy Protivotankovy Granatomyot
Posted by: Glinemp Pholung8093   2006-01-02 20:32  

#4  I liked the old terms "bazooka" or "panzerfaust" myself.
Posted by: Crairong Omomotch6492   2006-01-02 20:12  

#3  scores of rocket-propelled grenades

Our glorious press has the bee in their collective bonnet that RPG stands for rocket propelled grenade, and inasmuch as that is sorta what the warhead does RPG stand for the Russian words raketa protivtanknaya grenada Or rocket, anti-tank, grenade.

Just some useless trivia to clutter the day.
Posted by: badanov   2006-01-02 18:48  

#2  Tips from locals, that's the key to the end.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-01-02 17:04  

#1  Just dig anywhere.
Posted by: wxjames   2006-01-02 16:56  

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