Posted on 01/01/2015 5:21:15 PM PST by tcrlaf
Trending now on Twitter, but no English Language articles yet.
Apparently, there was some kind of a hostage rescue mission within the last couple of hours in Raqqa, Iraq, that several sources are saying "Failed", after 13 airstrikes in the Raqqa area today.
The airstrikes were concentrated at an Iraqi, now ISIS Army base at the edge of the city, per ConflictNews.
Conflict News 1 hour ago ConflictNews This ground presumed rescue operation by coalition in Raqqa today came after 13 air raids earlier in the day.
Conflict News 1 hour ago BREAKING: Coalition aircraft landed in Raqqa where clashes happened between Coalition Troops and ISIS. Rescue op failed. via Raqqa_SI
https://twitter.com/rConflictNews
https://twitter.com/hashtag/Raqqa?src=hash
I mean, come on, even a bus they should have and could have known was on that route was unexpected and had to be halted then held at gunpoint??
Any way you cut it there was just a lot more dust than he and others expected and they should have expected exactly those conditions. There is also a question of whether there were two people rather than one directing the traffic on the ground when one was supposed to be in charge with no one else directing aircraft.
I'll see if I can find the box with a book about it and if that's where such details are laid out. If so, I'll post the title and such but it'll be a while before I can clamber up into the attic.
Col. Beckwith was related to a good friend of mine also named Beckwith and I just remember him talking about how much dust there was just prior to the accident, more than he expected, and how he thought organization of the site was breaking down even prior to the crash. I also recall him saying he didn't know if it was another dust storm or something else like another aircraft winding up other than the ones he knew about. I think all of this was in his book, another one of the subject, or the Congressional report.
I got to do some drinking with Beckwith one night, and like the Air force commander, he blamed Carter for making him use Marine helicopter pilots (they replaced the Navy pilots that Beckwith drove off).
They weren't trained for what they were doing is what I remember when talking with him, not anything like the pilots being screwups or some such. Different habits and expectations is how I think he put it. He may have been more harsh at other times, I don't know.
It was, as they say, a Mongolian Cluster Flock all the way around.
He wanted to court martial one or two of the first batch (Navy), he was not happy about the pilots they had to use, at all, and the Air Commander felt the same way.
I don’t know why you say that everyone was messed up? No one else even got started, especially Delta.
Sounds like a hastily planned mission -- assuming the fight was due to mistaken identity.
Why, what happened, did ISIS kidnap someone working on Iran’s nuclear bomb?
Five coalition aircrafts reportedly hovered over Raqqa at a low altitude while approximately one dozed raids were launched upon on the outskirts of the Syrian city. Multiple ISIS buildings were believed destroyed during the Raqqa raid. While the raids were conducted, two helicopter gunships reportedly tried to deploy the U.S. Special Forces team. The gunships took heavy fire and ultimately aborted their final attempt to land. Intense clashes took place between the ISIS fighters and coalition forces on the ground.
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