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Iraq
US, Iraq troops kill 33 in airborne assault
2007-08-29
BAGHDAD - US and Iraqi troops killed 33 insurgents in an airborne assault and airstrikes north of Baghdad aimed at reopening a major irrigation canal that had been seized by gunmen, the US military said on Tuesday.

“The pre-dawn assault, involving several hundred Iraqi and Coalition forces defeated numerous small-arms attacks throughout the day, resulting in a combined 13 insurgents killed,” the US military said in a statement. “Attack helicopters and close air support ... killed 20 more,” it said.

Residents in Khalis, a religiously mixed town 80 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad, told Reuters that insurgents had shovelled earth into the irrigation canal some days ago, cutting off water to farmland. The canal is in the Kobat area, which has strong presence of Al Qaeda fighters, they said. The US military said it had successfully reopened the spillway and seized weapons and explosives.

Protesting Khalis residents last week closed the main road between Baghdad and the northern city of Kirkuk to demand the local authorities take stronger steps to restore security to the area, which has witnessed bitter sectarian violence. Residents said they had also been without drinking water for nearly a month. An official in the local electricity office said a power plant that serviced the townÂ’s water treatment plant needed to be repaired. Electricity workers, however, were afraid to go to the plant in Khan Bani Saad, 65 km (45 miles) north of Baghdad, because of the presence of Sunni Arab militants in the area.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  When these terrorists fought in the cities, they were somewhat effective, but out in the open, they are as dangerous as sitting ducks. But hey, it's a surge tactic.
Posted by: wxjames   2007-08-29 09:32  

#2  "Hundreds of forces..."
If they killed 33 and captured 3 (good ratio, boys) then the ditch blockers force was big enough you would want hundreds, especially if most of them were Iraqi (and you weren't entirely trusting a lot of those).
Irrigation canals are a really big deal in deserts - I had a friend whose house was burned down (with him in it until he crashed naked through the wall) because he was pushing repairs of 'leaks' in Arkansas River irrigation canal in Colorado, so I can well imagine using water as a weapon in Iraq.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-08-29 07:19  

#1  This doesn't feel right.
Hundreds of forces to clear a ditch?
Posted by: Theregum Platypus8295   2007-08-29 06:08  

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