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Biggest British tank battle since El Alamein
The Times ^ | March 28, 2003 | David Charter and Alan Hamilton

Posted on 03/27/2003 4:19:08 PM PST by MadIvan

Challengers wipe out column of Iraqi T55s after chance encounter in Basra desert

THE morning sun was up, the fog of war had briefly lifted. In the distance, a moving cloud of dust betrayed a column of armour on the move.

Twenty miles southeast of Basra, 14 Challenger 2 tanks of C Squadron, Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, were on their way to reinforce 3 Commando Brigade, Royal Marines on al-Faw peninsula.

They were not expecting tanks from the north; they had another mission in mind. But they had reached the position they were in only because of some speedy and brilliant bridge building by 28 Regiment, Royal Engineers, to get them across the obstacle of the Basra Canal.

Long-range spotters with the Dragoon Guards peered at the dust cloud; distinctive lumps on the distant armour immediately identified it as a column of Iraqi T55 tanks. The Scots crews were about to engage in the biggest — and most decisive — tank battle fought by the British since El Alamein in the Second World War.

The Iraqi column, which had moved south out of Basra, had already been pounded by air bombardment and artillery. Remnants were trying to disperse across open countryside. When the approaching armour had been spotted and identified, the Dragoon Guards, who had been travelling from west to east, split into two groups of seven tanks each as they closed in on the enemy.

One group came across a troop of Iraqi T55s in the process of being deserted as their occupants realised they were being overwhelmed by air and ground assaults. The other tempted the enemy into a “kill box” in a classic hunter-killer battlefield technique.

They lured the Iraqi squadron into believing they were being attacked only by a light infantry unit of commandos. But when the old Russian-built tanks made themselves visible in a wooded area, the Challengers moved in from the flank and began picking them off one by one at a range of about 1,500 metres.

“This was shock action. It was 14 against 14, and the score was 14-nil,” a military spokesman at UK National Contingent headquarters in Qatar said after the brief encounter, which is now regarded as one of the most decisive actions by ground forces in the war so far. “It was nothing less than a suicide mission by the Iraqis; it had no military logic,” the spokesman said.

The T55s, an upgraded version of an old Soviet warhorse dating back to 1955, stood little chance against the Challengers. The British tanks opened fire simultaneously, firing up to six rounds a minute with deadly accuracy while still bouncing over the rough ground at 25mph.

Their advanced stabilisation system, the best of its kind, keeps the gun steady and aimed even when the vehicle is jolting over rocky terrain. The T55s, which cannot fire effectively on the move and have to stop to take an accurate shot, had no chance.

Inside the 61-ton Challengers, the gunners were using the world’s most sophisticated tank targeting system, using a console similar to that on a PlayStation computer game to pick out targets at will. Commanders say this system is loved by young crews used to the non-stop action of computer battle games.

But this was no game. The Challengers were firing depleted uranium shells that drill through armour to create a vacuum and incredible heat inside the target, sucking all air and life from it.

Inside the Challengers, the well-rehearsed, clinically efficient process of aiming, loading, firing and reloading was repeated 14 times. The encounter was over in a matter of minutes. All 14 Iraqi tanks were destroyed, and all 14 British, each with a four-man crew, escaped unscathed.

One British commander denied that the engagement had been a “turkey shoot”, with the enemy standing no chance. “If you see the enemy you do not wait for them to shoot first,” he said.

“This was what we call a ‘meeting engagement’ because the two forces just ran into each other. We were moving from west to east to reinforce the Royal Marines on the east side of Basra when we happened to bump into 14 T55s which were coming from the north to the south towards Umm Qsar.” Another tank officer said that the engagement had been “like the bicycle against the motor car”.

Among the Dragoon Guards there was jubilation and not a little nationalistic pride. “This is what we’ve been waiting for, and this is what Scotland’s cavalry does the best,” a regimental spokesman said.

“Until now we felt as though we had been left somewhat on the sidelines, now now we’ve had some serious tank-on-tank action that has really got the guys buzzing.”

The spokesman added: “To take out 14 tanks, which is the equivalent of an entire British squadron, is a massive achievement. It’s a severe blow to what is already a hugely demoralised army, and hopefully it might tempt some of the hard cases currently in Basra to think again.”

The mood among C Squardon was one of euphoria last night. Captain Patrick Trueman, of the Dragoon Guards, shared the moment of jubiliation.

“This has been a famous victory and one which should go down in the regiment’s history. Everyone here is delighted at the efforts of C Squadron, which have given the entire battle group a massive boost ahead of some very trying times.”

By yesterday afternoon British officers were describing the area south of Basra as “a T55 graveyard” after a series of coalition strikes that have left dozens of burnt-out Iraqi vehicles littering the terrain.

However, US Central Command admitted that reports of a giant column of more than 100 armoured vehicles charging out of Basra on Wednesday night were grossly exaggerated because of a false electronic surveillance signal.

It was, US commanders said, a classic example of the fog of war. “We determined it was a different-sized force, and we destroyed it,” a US military spokesman said.

The daylight foray by Iraqi tanks yesterday morning may have been an attempt to test the strength of British forces enclircling Basra, or a vain attempt to relieve the southern port of Uum Qsar, British sources believe.

Alternatively, they believe, the Iraqi tactic, carried out by press-ganged crews, may be to engage in regular confrontations, however suicidal, because images or reports of fighting play well in the Arab world.

But it was from military headquarters all the way back to the Dragoon Guards’ Scots homeland that yesterday’s confrontation played exceptionally well.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: basra; blair; bush; challenger2; elalamein; iraq; saddam; t55; t55s; turkeyshoot; uk; us; war
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To: MadIvan
"To take out 14 tanks, which is the equivalent of an entire British squadron, is a massive achievement."

That's some mighty fine shooting.

121 posted on 03/27/2003 10:21:46 PM PST by Mortimer Snavely (More Power to the Troops! More Bang for the Buck!)
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To: tortoise
I only reference details of the suicidal predestination which grips this reawakened petro-dollar Islamofascism, technically aided by post-commie fascist nations enriching leadership elites while we spent our peace dividends during XXX42's treasons.

I will never doubt our men in uniform at the battle, but I will always have caution over our national leadership. D.C. provides broad avenues for the 5th columns throughout our own government.

Iran and Syria are witnessing fortress Iraq smoke and stink into this summer. If Congress holds the line which GW has drawn, the Islamo & post-commie fascists, aka criminal socialist elites, may get reckless because above all else, they must protect themselves. They are at war with the USA because we are the power on earth willing and able to destroy their new world order, if we act in time.

If our mortal enemies' subjects knew everything about the corruptions of their own murdering regimes, heads would roll even after they were burned.
122 posted on 03/28/2003 3:56:34 AM PST by SevenDaysInMay
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To: JSteff
From what I've read of the first Gulf War, the cannons raise slightly while reloading, and the range of their shells are a mile less than allied tanks.
123 posted on 03/28/2003 3:49:10 PM PST by 4.1O dana super trac pak
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Uurah Brits, Get some!!

Semper Fi
124 posted on 03/28/2003 3:53:53 PM PST by Leatherneck_MT (Can't stand rude behavior in a man.... Won't tolerate it.)
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To: MadIvan
We need to continue until we rule the world.
125 posted on 03/28/2003 3:56:10 PM PST by bmwcyle (Semper Gumby - Always Flexable)
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To: MadIvan
Love those Challenger IIs


126 posted on 03/28/2003 4:03:08 PM PST by baggadonuts (God Bless our Troops)
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To: MadIvan
Thanks for the good posts.

5.56mm

127 posted on 03/28/2003 4:07:46 PM PST by M Kehoe
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To: 4.1O dana super trac pak
"the cannons raise slightly while reloading"

Is that because of the auto loader maybe? Or was that only on the later models.
128 posted on 03/28/2003 8:32:55 PM PST by JSteff
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To: MadIvan
Toast them with a Guinness or 3.

Well done and MEGA KUDOS to our British compatriots!

AWESOME!

129 posted on 03/28/2003 8:46:23 PM PST by Johnny Gage (We will not tire, We will not falter, We will not fail. - President George W. Bush)
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To: yarddog
That tune is called Scotland the Brave. MadIvan posted Rule Britannia the other day and I wanted to give the Scots Dragoon Guards their props.
130 posted on 03/29/2003 7:03:08 AM PST by johnb838 (Understand the root causes of American anger)
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To: JSteff
You're right. It was the auto loader. The Iraqi's also had a bad habit of keeping their tanks running at night to keep warm, of course our guys just checked for heat signatures and blew 'em up.
131 posted on 03/29/2003 5:06:11 PM PST by 4.1O dana super trac pak
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To: jackbill
This piper squeaks at you then.....
132 posted on 03/31/2003 9:42:10 AM PST by TexanToTheCore
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