Posted on 11/30/2005 3:40:38 PM PST by SandRat
BAGHDAD (Army News Service, Nov. 30, 2005) -- Task Force Baghdad Soldiers found multiple weapons caches on an island in the Euphrates River Nov. 28.
Military officials had been monitoring suspicious activity near the Euphrates River southwest of Baghdad for a couple of weeks. When conditions were right, Soldiers from 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division sprung into action.
The timing was right to attack the target, said 2nd BCT Commander Col. Todd Ebel. The pieces of the puzzle fit close enough.
Bombs, rockets, grenades found
Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment secured the objective and discovered three significant weapons caches.
Soldiers also searched surrounding homes and facilities, detaining two suspected terrorists.
In total, the Soldiers uncovered 11 500-pound bomb shells, C4 explosives, welding equipment, mortar rounds, miscellaneous bomb-making material, 57mm rockets, 40 bags of fertilizer, 12 directional charges, five 155mm rounds, 100 feet of detonation cord, three rocket-propelled grenades, eight bags of 20mm rounds and other munitions and explosives.
An explosive ordinance disposal team was called to the site to conduct a controlled detonation of the caches.
The large bombs and welding material are critical, Ebel said. It is likely this material was used for improvised explosive devices and possibly vehicle-borne IEDs that threaten Iraqi citizens and Coalition Forces. I could not be more proud of these 2/101st Soldiers. They do this every day to help bring peace. No one could ask more of them.
`Thunder Blitz nabs 33 terror suspects
Task Force Baghdad Soldiers teamed up with Iraqi Security Forces to conduct Operation Thunder Blitz in southern Baghdad the next day, Nov. 29, resulting in the capture of 33 terror suspects.
Moving rapidly into the area, hundreds of U.S. Soldiers from 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment and Iraqi forces from the 1st Battalion, 2nd Commando Brigade (Wolf Battalion) took the enemy by surprise by securing seven different objective areas along the Tigris River.
Operation Thunder Blitz was focused on removing weapons and terrorists from the streets prior to the Dec. 15 elections.
(Editors note: Pfc. Kelly K. McDowell serves with the 2nd BCT, 101st Airborne Division PAO. Maj. Alayne Conway, 4th BCT PAO, 3rd Infantry Division, also contributed to this story.)
It seems that caches are showing up all over the place.
Another good sign.
The Pelosi position on this still baffles me. Why snatch defeat from victory?
101st Airborne Bump!
bttt
More good news.
Merry Christmas!
The more we keep finding weapons caches, the more the Dems squeal "surrender". |
One might think there's a corollary there...
She BAFFLES you?? Good God, she's a Communist, what do you expect? Surely you jest.
She hates this country and what it stands for but the Repubs continue to grovel on the ground at the Lib's feet (Murtha for example), rolling over and over like the worthless, spineless, flea-bitten curs they are. I'll tell you how I really feel soon as I catch my breath.
LOL. That sounds like something Bart Simpson or Jeff Foxworthy would sing in a Christmas special.
...or maybe even a coronary.
Yeah!!!!!!!!!!!!! I love to hear this.
I hope they make sure they don't hurt those 33 terrified terrorists... Our mean, out of control soldiers and marines can be so nasty to poor defenseless disarmed terrorists. Just ask Nancy "nip 'n tuck" Pelosi, Teddy "the swimmer" Kennedy, John "the most VIETNAM decorated vet" (but no BOTOX) Kerry, Barbie "airhead" Boxer, "little"----> Dick "(D)Turbin", "dingy" Dirty Reid... add your own____________ D'RAT
Was there anything that violated the sanctions??
Military officials had been monitoring suspicious activity near the Euphrates River southwest of Baghdad for a couple of weeks. When conditions were right, Soldiers from 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division sprung into action.
The timing was right to attack the target, said 2nd BCT Commander Col. Todd Ebel. The pieces of the puzzle fit close enough.
More and more munitions caches confiscated...fewer and fewer attacks...and we haven't heard much from Zarqawi or Bin Laden recently.
Life is good...and getting better.
People are still finding Nazi WW2 caches in Europe (it just doesn't make the news). Losing armies have a long history of leaving behind ordnance that they couldn't fire.
Heck, in the past 5 years I've seen at least one article on U.S. civil war ordnance (C.S.A.) from the 1860's being discovered in the South!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.