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Final steps of dead men walking [Fallujah - Great article]
The Times (UK) ^ | 11/15/04 | James Hider

Posted on 11/14/2004 4:41:04 PM PST by saquin

Fleeing rebels are tracked by aircraft and killed by US troops

THE last hours of the mujahidin are terrifying. With the city they once ruled with the absolute authority of medieval caliphs now overrun by American and Iraqi troops, they have to keep moving. To pause even for a few minutes can mean instant death from an unseen enemy.

A group of 15 fighters dressed in black and carrying an array of weapons ducked into a two-storey house in war-torn southern Fallujah yesterday morning. Their movement was picked up by an unmanned spy plane that beamed back live footage to a control centre on the edge of the city. Within minutes, an airstrike was called and the house disappeared in a giant plume of grey smoke.

From a house across the road, the explosion flushed out another group of guerrillas. Deafened by the blast, they stumbled out into the street, formed a ragged line and started off on the marathon to postpone their deaths, the drone dogging their every step.

“The rats are trying to move about,” Major Tim Karcher, of the Second Battalion, Seventh Cavalry, said as the figures flitted from street to street, seeking cover close to walls.

Sometimes they can throw off the drone, ducking out of sight of the men in whose power it is to summon FA18 fighter-bombers or 155mm artillery strikes. But they have no way of knowing. And, increasingly, as they run they are coming into the crosshairs of American snipers, crackshots such as Sergeant Marc Veen and his long-barrelled rifle, Lucille. Yesterday morning he spotted a black- clad man with an AK47 assault rifle peering round a corner 500 yards from the villa where Cougar Company of the Seventh Cavalry has set up a forward base.

He shot the man in the stomach: he fell, but kept crawling, so Sergeant Veen shot him again in the shoulder. Still the man tried to move away, so the sergeant blasted him with his 50-calibre machinegun.

“There’s pretty much no feeling,” the 24-year-old from Chicago explained, perched on the parapet of the house, the shell of the killer bullet tucked as a trophy into his flak jacket. “If I didn’t get that guy, that guy would get one of my buddies some time later down the line.”

The battle for Fallujah is all but over. The main north-south road in the once-dreaded Jolan district is a US military highway, smothered in dust kicked up by troop carriers and giant bulldozers. Almost every building is cracked, chipped or holed by the fighting.

Any guerrilla who could make his way back up from the last pockets of resistance in the south would see the mujahidin graffiti — “Jihad, jihad, jihad, God is Greatest and Islam will win” — replaced by slogans daubed by the US-backed Iraqi Army, posted the length of the route. Standing on a street reeking of decomposed bodies, the ruins of a five-floor building silhouetted behind him, Lieutenant Fares Ahmed Hassan said that the destroyed city would send a strong message to a nation where force has long been the lingua franca of government. “When the people of Fallujah come back and see their houses, they will kick out any terrorists. This will be an example to all Iraqi cities,” the Kurdish officer said.

Apart from a handful of women and children, the only civilians he had encountered were men of fighting age, about 500, detained for vetting. He said that some civilians had said that insurgent snipers had shot anyone trying to leave their homes. As US troops sweep through the houses, they are unearthing the insurgents’ horrifying secrets — more akin to the handiwork of psychotic serial killers than guerrillas or even terrorists — that have shocked the world and explain why this devastating offensive has met with so little opposition from the Arab world.

In the south of Fallujah yesterday, US Marines found the armless, legless body of a blonde woman, her throat slashed and her entrails cut out. Benjamin Finnell, a hospital apprentice with the US Navy Corps, said that she had been dead for a while, but at that location for only a day or two. The woman was wearing a blue dress and her face had been disfigured. It was unclear last night if the grisly remains were the body of the Irish-born aid worker Margaret Hassan, 59, or of Teresa Borcz, 54, a Pole abducted two weeks ago. Both were married to Iraqis and held Iraqi citizenship; both were kidnapped in Baghdad last month.

US and Iraqi troops have discovered kidnappers’ lairs filled with corpses or emaciated prisoners half-mad with fear, and piles of bodies of men who had refused to fight to the death with the insurgents. As the guerrillas run their last sprint from death, sympathy for their cause among Iraqis is rapidly running out.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fallujah; iraq
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To: blastdad51

The guy on the right has a lip full of chewing tobbacco. Makes the picture look like he's scowling.


41 posted on 11/14/2004 5:44:17 PM PST by IllumiNaughtyByNature (I got political capital and I intend to spend it!)
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To: saquin
Sometimes they can throw off the drone, ducking out of sight of the men in whose power it is to summon FA18 fighter-bombers or 155mm artillery strikes. But they have no way of knowing. And, increasingly, as they run they are coming into the crosshairs of American snipers, crackshots such as Sergeant Marc Veen and his long-barrelled rifle, Lucille. Yesterday morning he spotted a black- clad man with an AK47 assault rifle peering round a corner 500 yards from the villa where Cougar Company of the Seventh Cavalry has set up a forward base.

He shot the man in the stomach: he fell, but kept crawling, so Sergeant Veen shot him again in the shoulder. Still the man tried to move away, so the sergeant blasted him with his 50-calibre machinegun.


This reminds me of the onld nintendo game Hogan's Alley: Except, there is no worrying about shooting a cop, an old man, or a lady.
42 posted on 11/14/2004 5:45:02 PM PST by freakboy
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To: saquin

I can't wait until they release a video game.


43 posted on 11/14/2004 5:46:03 PM PST by freakboy
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To: The Loan Arranger

Don't hold your breath waiting for any of the MSM to report this as a success.


44 posted on 11/14/2004 5:48:16 PM PST by freakboy
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To: saquin

Marking this to print and send to a young Marine in Ramadi.


45 posted on 11/14/2004 5:49:13 PM PST by Ben Chad
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To: wildbill
You are off by 700 years.
46 posted on 11/14/2004 5:49:20 PM PST by Little Bill (A 37%'r, a Red Spot on a Blue State)
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To: denydenydeny

Note the pro-American Iraqi officer was a Kurd. We should have been working more closely to build an army with Kurds. The Kurds have talked about independence but they have said they will remain as part of Iraq.


47 posted on 11/14/2004 5:50:23 PM PST by FrankRepublican (Arlen Specter = Ted Kennedy Dem NO AMNESTY NO Open Borders w/ Mexico)
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To: K4Harty

Last night I saw a bunch of fat nerds from Western New York protesting the 'attack on Fallujah' from their clean, safe, unthreatened suburban neighbourhood.

If I had the power I would transport every one of these protesting idiots right into downtown Fallujah and make sure they toured every one of the torture sites and viewed all the CDs of beheadings.

Then I would leave them there to make their own way home. Or not.


48 posted on 11/14/2004 5:50:40 PM PST by KateatRFM
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To: K4Harty

Yeah, I had the same thought. That's right out of a Tom Clancy novel...


49 posted on 11/14/2004 5:54:10 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: Blood of Tyrants
This is what should have been done last April.

I have been saying the same thing for months and months....
How many lives have been lost due to this tactical error. Negotiate my a$$!

50 posted on 11/14/2004 5:55:36 PM PST by The Mayor ("The battle, sir, is not to the strong alone; it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave." --Patri)
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To: Scott from the Left Coast
This is where we veer sharply away from the leftists...they would bemoan the death of these wicked, worthless scum. They would even say the death of these vile things was a stain on America and a sign of evil itself.

Aren't you glad the moral relativist mouth breathers didn't win the election? I could just hear diplomatic "geniuses" like Richard Holbrooke and Madeline Albright telling us, "It's not that simple; there are varying shades of gray," until a terrorist's nuclear weapon exploded in the United States. No thanks. The grown-ups are in charge.

51 posted on 11/14/2004 5:57:55 PM PST by Uncle Vlad
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To: saquin

BUG HUNT


52 posted on 11/14/2004 5:59:41 PM PST by beebuster2000 (waiting waiting waiting)
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To: TexasCowboy

I'd hazard a guess that the reporter couldn't tell Ma Deuce from a .50 cal. Barrett sniper rifle. A sniper would more likely have the latter than the former


53 posted on 11/14/2004 6:11:56 PM PST by castlebrew
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To: castlebrew
Yeah, the clue was in his description: "...long barrelled.."

I've never seen a short barrelled .50 caliber Barrett.
But then, this guy might think a 7.62 or a 5.56 was "long barrelled", too!

54 posted on 11/14/2004 6:17:15 PM PST by TexasCowboy (Texan by birth, citizen of Jesusland by the Grace of God)
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To: GretchenM; All
And I LOVE that we have this man, ever vigilant, indefatigible and unrelenting in our course .. he *IS* the very personification of indefatigible: incapable or seemingly incapable of being fatigued; tireless

Thank God for Rummy.. God Bless him .. I so hope he's with us the next four years.

Don't MISS seeing the raw battle footage from Fallujah -- it's the top left link on Drudge .. it's COMPELLING and really really raw. God bless these brave warriors.

55 posted on 11/14/2004 6:19:55 PM PST by STARWISE (America has spoken- what part of Bush won AGAIN don't they get? Pray for the troops)
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To: Thud

ping


56 posted on 11/14/2004 6:22:40 PM PST by Dark Wing
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To: Delmont
And, increasingly, as they run they are coming into the crosshairs of American snipers, crackshots such as Sergeant Marc Veen and his long-barrelled rifle, Lucille.

Lucille???

57 posted on 11/14/2004 6:25:14 PM PST by ErnBatavia (ErnBatavia, Coulter, Malkin, Ingraham....the ultimate Menage a Quatro)
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To: saquin

"And, increasingly, as they run they are coming into the crosshairs of American snipers, crackshots such as Sergeant Marc Veen and his long-barrelled rifle, Lucille."

"Still the man tried to move away, so the sergeant blasted him with his 50-calibre machinegun. "

A 50 Cal sniper rifle is not a 50-calibre machinegun.


58 posted on 11/14/2004 6:27:52 PM PST by matchwood
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To: GretchenM
I hope Lt. Fares Ahmed Hassan is right: "When the people of Fallujah come back and see their houses, they will kick out any terrorists. This will be an example to all Iraqi cities,” the Kurdish officer said."

Me too...but I doubt it in this instance; they get just enough Al Jizm to know to yelp for American reparations.

59 posted on 11/14/2004 6:31:14 PM PST by ErnBatavia (ErnBatavia, Coulter, Malkin, Ingraham....the ultimate Menage a Quatro)
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To: HassanBenSobar
Kill them all.

They need to be thankful Bush is in charge and not me. No further comment.

60 posted on 11/14/2004 6:32:55 PM PST by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin (Freedom is the freedom to discipline yourself so others don't have to do it for you.)
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