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Iraq snubbed Britain and calls US into Basra battle
The Times ^ | 4/10/2008 | Deborah Haynes and Michael Evans

Posted on 04/09/2008 8:58:55 PM PDT by bruinbirdman

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To: Hugin

Unfortunately, our military leadership generally does what the US area command wants it to do.
As a Brit soldier, I found the capture, and the subsequent behaviour of the sailor contingent of the RN party, extremely embarrassing. However, as ever in the military, nothing is as it appears. The incident was never fully investigated, purely cause of arse saving, but the brief was that the RN weren’t happy with operating in those waters with the RoE placed on them. They were more than happy to fight their way out, but the realism is that with our ‘lack’ of numbers, we’re only ever going to be an assisting force, the Naval RoE is American and the orders to holdfire came from a USN admiral, not an RN one, and that is something that really pisses me off!!!

Our politicians have lost the will in Iraq, however, we’ve increased numbers of personnel on the ground in Afghanistan, and our troops are experiencing an average of more than 2 contacts a day in the Helmand province, and the politicians appear more staunch in their stand against the Taliban and Al Qaeda there. I personally have served more than once in Iraq, and Afghanistan and I did not sign up to be a glorified armed copper, so give me afghanistan anyday.....


21 posted on 04/18/2008 2:58:04 PM PDT by batco-barry
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To: LZ_Bayonet

‘.......When was the mood “miserable”? When the British were receiving fire, or when the Americans arrived?’

No, miserable because they weren’t joining in......


22 posted on 04/18/2008 2:59:41 PM PDT by batco-barry
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To: bruinbirdman

Assuming this s true what is to be learned?

1. Iraq doesn’t trust the Brits to fight. And it is not the Brit Army it is their government that won’t let them fight. Warning shots...good grief.

2. Iraq doesn’t trust the state department to keep secrets and perhaps our government.

3. You want the USA with you in a fight provided our government allows us to fight.

Analysis:

Point 1 Too bad. Fight with them and they will trust you. The present British government has their troops in Iraq for show only. They would be of better use at home trying to keep their country free. And you guys better get to work. Your country is going to h@ll.

Point 2 Well done, Iraq! I don’t trust State either. I don’t trust my government as far as I can throw it.

Point 3 Very Well Done! I wish I was young again so I could be there with you.


23 posted on 04/18/2008 4:26:29 PM PDT by Nuc1 (NUC1 Sub pusher SSN 668 (Liberals Aren't Patriots))
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To: LZ_Bayonet

We oped with the Brits when I was but a lad in the Navy. The Brits are well trained and capable. Believe me, their forces want to fight. It is their leadership that is the problem and their government that risks their country.


24 posted on 04/18/2008 4:32:10 PM PDT by Nuc1 (NUC1 Sub pusher SSN 668 (Liberals Aren't Patriots))
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To: batco-barry

Did you not note the line that said “under the rules of engagement the British had?”

Many of the Brit troops are great soldiers, very brave. But many are not and the rules of engagement the British government dictated tie the hands of even the best troops they have. Add to that high officers that prefer “conflict management” to outright conflict... and you have a disaster in the making.


25 posted on 04/18/2008 5:20:33 PM PDT by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: batco-barry
The incident was never fully investigated, .... the RN weren’t happy with operating in those waters with the RoE placed on them. They were more than happy to fight their way out, ..... the Naval RoE is American and the orders to holdfire came from a USN admiral, not an RN one, and that is something that really pisses me off!!!

Nelson ..... Copenhagen ..... Telescope ..... Blind eye.

26 posted on 04/18/2008 5:30:58 PM PDT by Polybius
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To: bruinbirdman
The only purpose of either:

  1. This occurrence, or
  2. This exaggerated story

is to try to divide the Anglo-American team.

I have no idea why Iraq would want to do that, but I do know why the press might want to do that.

27 posted on 04/18/2008 5:34:30 PM PDT by krb (If you're not outraged, people probably like having you around.)
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To: Spktyr

We are an overstretched army, being more stretched by the day. We’re increasing amount of troops in Afghanistan.

I’m going to be blunt when I say Iraq can go f*ck itself. It’s not a war there. From where I saw it when I was there, was that we were doing a job that could be handed over to the Iraq govt forces at a later date. Whether or not those Iraqi forces were ready to take over when they did, is now a bone of contention. In the early days we busted down doors and heads, we agressively patrolled. All we were ever told was that we were doing a job for the Iraqis till the Iraqis could do it themselves, nowt about poxy RoEs. It’s now obvious that the Iraqis couldn’t do that job for themselves and there isn’t enough Brit forces left there geared up to continue from where they left off.

Now, Afghanistan is a totally different ball game. We have RoEs relevant to the situation.

We can sit down and argue all day about the shortcomings of both the US & UK RoEs in Iraq, but it all depends on whose agenda you go by. Unfortunately, because of our military numbers we’re in a catch 22, if we increase manpower in Iraq they have to come from somewhere and that somewhere is Afghanistan and vice versa, which is now where we find ourselves. My government sees Afghanistan as the bigger threat so thats where the bulk of our soldiers go, and I don’t have one single problem with that, it means the barrel of my rifle gets a lot hotter than it would in Iraq!!!


28 posted on 04/18/2008 7:02:10 PM PDT by batco-barry
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To: Polybius

Yes, some people are born to disobey orders but the majority aren’t, don’t matter which army you’re in....


29 posted on 04/18/2008 7:05:15 PM PDT by batco-barry
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To: batco-barry
We (the British) are an overstretched army, being more stretched by the day. We’re increasing amount of troops in Afghanistan.

Once upon a time, when the population of Great Britain was 27 million less than it is today, the British Army suffered casualties that amounted to 19,240 dead, 35,493 wounded, 2,152 missing and 585 prisoners for a total loss of 57,470 ....... on a single day.

That single day was 1 July 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme. The final tally for British casualties including killed, wounded and captured was 419,000 for the Battle of the Somme alone.

Today, Great Britain claims that what essentially amounts to a minor mopping up operation from the World War One historical perspective has the entire British Army "overstretched".

Keeping a historical perspective, what number has "overstretched" the entire nation of Great Britain in Afghanistan in the year 2008 A.D.? According to the British Ministry of Defense, "Our forces in Afghanistan are currently around 7,800 strong."

In short, the casualties suffered by the British Army on the first day of the Battle of the Somme are over seven times greater than the entirety of the British forces in Afghanistan today.

Yet, the Great Britain of the year 2008 A.D. writes down on the pages of the same book of British Military History that is one of the proudest that Western Civilization has produced, that merely fielding a force of 7,800 (800 more than the 7,000 casualties that von Blücher's Prussians suffered in their late arrival at Waterloo) has the entire British Army "overstretched".

This is not a failure of the individual British fighting man but it is a failure of the national will of modern day Great Britain as a whole.

I’m going to be blunt when I say Iraq can go f*ck itself. ..... My government sees Afghanistan as the bigger threat so thats where the bulk of our soldiers go, ...

In strategic terms, Afghanistan is a minor theater whose "threat" to Britain, the European Union and the U.S. could be negated merely by having the political will to commit the Politically Incorrect sin of treating Muslim men wishing to immigrate into our countries as a much greater potential threat than 78 year old native-born great-grandmothers at airports.

Strategically, the only thing that operations in the Afghanistan theater have accomplished is to transfer al Qaeda training camps from Afghanistan to the mountainous tribal regions of Pakistan.

By contrast, the strategic stakes involved in Iraq, (an inherently unstable political mix of peoples created as a single nation by Great Britain itself out of the British Mandate of Mesopotamia) and in the Persian Gulf are vital strategic interests that will effect the very survival of London and the rest of Great Britain and the European Union in the 21st Century.

I discussed those vital strategic interests on this particular post and later posts on this thread.

The sad fact at the dawn of the 21st Century is that the entire European Union, a political entity that exceeds the United States of America itself in both population and economic output, no longer worries itself, as Lord Palmerston once did, about the "permanent interests" needed to merely survive in this hostile World. Worrying about such vital strategic interests and doing something about it was long ago delegated to the "cowboy" Americans.

America has become the Tommy of the entire European Union.

30 posted on 04/19/2008 5:53:26 AM PDT by Polybius
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To: Polybius

Yes, I’m aware of the British death and casualty rates of both world wars, i’m a british soldier after all!!!

You’re talking about an era where Britain was under constant threat of invasion, where high government, senior officers and the general public weren’t as squeamish about war casualties and saw it as a necessary sacrifice and where the British army was more than 10 times the size it is today. We don’t live in such an era now. Post WW2, Britain fought in many small wars and lost many soldiers in far away lands from the jungles of Malaya to the deserts Oman, before and after the US was fighting in Viet Nam. Many soldiers were killed but the British public accepted it as a result of war. When I joined the army, it was a standing joke about how the US would pull out of any conflict at the 1st whiff of a US casualty. It was a common belief amongst both the Brit public and army that the Viet Nam war was lost by the US publics lack of a will for the fight. Trouble is, our own public has slowly lost the will to fight as well. Ironically, our own public started to lose the will for a fight when we entered in to conflicts with the US, probably just a complete coincidence though....

‘Minor mopping operation’

Feel free to pull stag with me anytime your in Afghanistan. Maybe minor, but it will be as perpetual as it always is in Afghanistan.

A little while ago, I spent 3 weeks in an Army careers office whilst recovering from an injury. In that time I could count those that came in interested on 2 hands, and those I processed on one hand. People aren’t interested in joining the army anymore, and I think that suits the government.
I joined the British army 18yrs ago, the army was 130,000 strong then and the whole armed forces was about 300,000 strong. Now its less than 100,000 in the army, and probably closer to 80,000. Now, I can see that you’ve taken the figure 7,800 and used that as a benchmark for stating that we’re not overstretched, I couldn’t care less what the figures and statistics say, we’re overstretched, besides, 7800 is approx 10% of our army.
Personally, I have been out of the country on operations in the past 8 yrs more than i’ve been in it, If I was a statistics man i’d say that i’ve probably been away for about 85% of that time, much to the annoyance of my ever suffering wife and children. I have been to both Afghanistan and Iraq more than once, I have been to Sierra Leonne along with 2 other African countries, I’ve been to Kosovo, and in all this time I spent was intermittently in the US over an 18 month period from late 2000, as a liaison. I have spent more time in Iraq and Afghanistan than 99.9% of US soldiers, as have the bulk of my men.

I suppose what I was trying to get at is that by todays army standards, we’re overstretched, by 1916 and Napoleonic standards, we’re positively comfortable, so I do take your point. A lot of people on here only look at our involvement in Iraq, with no consideration for the many other places our soldiers serve like Afghanistan, Kenya, Sierra Leonne and Eastern Europe. The last forces review I saw, we had more than 50% of personnel overseas.

My grasp on the finer points of the politics of the EU is limited. I guess I have a few stand points on it, and that’s that they can go fu*k themselves, I don’t want to be a part of Europe, I don’t consider myself European. I think the EC is corrupt and that there’s too much ‘water under the bridge’ and personal nationalistic interests for it to ever work. Britain is no longer Britain.....


31 posted on 04/19/2008 4:42:18 PM PDT by batco-barry
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