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Lots of photos from the front
The Courier-Mail (Australia) ^
| 3/25/03
Posted on 03/25/2003 7:05:20 AM PST by dead
click here to read article
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1
posted on
03/25/2003 7:05:20 AM PST
by
dead
To: dead
Wow.
2
posted on
03/25/2003 7:07:48 AM PST
by
Bahbah
(Pray for our Troops)
To: dead
Great photos!
3
posted on
03/25/2003 7:08:27 AM PST
by
Sally II
To: dead
Great pictures! So long Saddam!
4
posted on
03/25/2003 7:08:59 AM PST
by
TheDon
(It takes two to make peace, but only one to make war.)
To: dead
Get yer ass outta here!
5
posted on
03/25/2003 7:09:00 AM PST
by
merrin
To: dead
|
A U.S. soldier bares a tattooed arm while carrying his weapon as he patrols a water treatment plant in the southern Iraq (news - web sites) town of Umm Qasr March 25, 2003. |
To: madfly; backhoe
bttt!
To: merrin
or... The Iraqi Democratic Party.
8
posted on
03/25/2003 7:11:14 AM PST
by
Dr.Deth
To: Oldeconomybuyer
"Live Free or Die" bump.
9
posted on
03/25/2003 7:24:23 AM PST
by
dead
To: Black Agnes
Thanks for the ping! Great pics.
10
posted on
03/25/2003 7:59:49 AM PST
by
madfly
(AZFIRE.org)
To: All
bttt
11
posted on
03/25/2003 8:08:48 AM PST
by
dead
To: dead
Bump.
12
posted on
03/25/2003 8:52:47 AM PST
by
txzman
(Jer 23:29)
To: dead
K-Dog a Bottle Nose Dolphin belonging to Commander Task Unit (CTU-55.4.3) leaps out of the water in front of Sergeant Andrew Garrett while training near the USS Gunston Hall (LSD 44) operating in the Arabian Gulf, March 18, 2003. This is a multinational team consisting of Naval Special Clearance Team-One, Fleet Diving Unit Three from the United Kingdom, Clearance Dive Team from Australia, and Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Units Six and Eight. These units are conducting deep/shallow water mine counter measure operations to clear shipping lanes for humanitarian relief. REUTERS/U.S. Navy
To: merrin
Isn't that guy too heavy for that animal to carry? < /concern for animals >
14
posted on
03/25/2003 9:05:02 AM PST
by
Snowy
(My golden retriever can lick your honor student)
To: dead
Re the dolphin pic in 13. Trained Navy :-) dolphins are utilized in minesweeping. As reported on Fox News last night. I suppose this is now unclassified.
To: Snowy
U.S. Army soldiers from the A Company 3rd Battalion 7th Infantry Regiment, cover up during an intense sandstorm which slowed U.S. military progress, near Karbala, Iraq Tuesday, March 25, 2003. Thousands of U.S. Marines were rumbling north toward Baghdad on Tuesday, taking safer dirt roads to avoid cities and towns where they could face Iraqi resistance. (AP Photo/John Moore)
To: TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
Beautiful picture.
The dolphins are on our side! (They probably just want us to help them fight them net-trawling Japs and Nordic types!)
17
posted on
03/25/2003 9:11:39 AM PST
by
dead
To: dead
Last summer on a military beach near Va. Bch. dolphins were patrolling the shores of our training/public military beach.Needless to say at the very least none of those shark attacks occured where we were. But a mile up the rd. was where a little boy got his leg torn off by a shark.Dolphins are a Navy Seal's best friend and HIGHLY intelligent.
To: dead
Tue Mar 25,10:54 AM ET
U.S. Army 3rd Infantry Division troops from the A Company 3rd Battalion 7th Infantry Regiment weather the elements as a sandstorm at dusk turns the desert blood red near Karbala Tuesday, March 25, 2003. The sandstorm grounded many US-led forces bombing overflights over Iraq (news - web sites) and slowed U.S. military progress in the area near Karbala Tuesday. (AP Photo/John Moore)
To: dead
Monday: U.S. Marines set up a position during a scouting mission at a village in Az Zubayar, southern Iraq's desert.
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