Posted on 04/08/2003 1:54:46 PM PDT by Dog Gone
OUTSKIRTS OF BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The road led to what looked like a carport - a really long one, but a carport nonetheless. At the rear, though, was something far more interesting to U.S. forces.
A door. And behind it, lined with moss, a cave entrance - another mysterious, potentially dangerous gateway into the murky world of Baghdad Underground.
Was this a path to one of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's notorious hideouts? Were booby traps - or, worse, Iraqi soldiers lurking inside?
``We wanted to know if there was enemy in there. We thought there was enemy in there,'' said Lt. Col. Lee Fetterman, commander of the 101st Airborne's 3rd Battalion, 3rd Brigade.
Years of rumors about tunnels Saddam had built raised the possibility that just about anything could be underground - troops, weapons of mass destruction, the Iraqi leader himself.
A former Iraqi scientist who fled during the 1991 Gulf War, Hussein al-Shahristani, told CBS' ``60 Minutes'' in February that there were ``more than 100 kilometers (over 60 miles) of very complex network, multilayer tunnels.''
But he never saw them himself. Few have, said Patrick Garrett, a military analyst at Globalsecurity.org. ``There is tons of conjecture on this subject right now,'' he said, but ``there's been no official confirmation or official imagery.''
So far, a series of tunnels under Baghdad's international airport have been discovered. On Monday, U.S. forces captured an Iraqi colonel in one tunnel who was calling in artillery fire from his hideout, said Lt. Mark Kitchens, a spokesman for the U.S. Central Command.
``Obviously for the type of regime we're dealing with, the tunnels represent an ideal spot to conceal weapons and serve as a hideout and in some cases an escape route,'' he said.
The area near the airport had already seen days of skirmishes when forces from the 101st Airborne Division secured it fully on Tuesday.
The troops at the airport belong to a unit known as the ``Iron Rakkasans'' because of strips of burlap connected to their helmets - ``iron hairs'' - that distinguish them from other fighters in the division.
The Rakkasan nickname dates to World War II, when the 187th Regiment, 3rd Brigade - parachuted from planes. Loosely translated in Japanese, ``Rakkasan'' means falling down umbrellas.
They were brought to Baghdad because they are light infantry fighters, highly trained in urban combat. Their particular skill is room-clearing, which they used searching for al-Qaida fighters in caves in Afghanistan.
To reach the carport, they crossed a landscape of bombed compounds, piles of unexploded ordnance and a field of dead Iraqi fighters, their bodies blackened from coalition attacks.
When the American forces got to the carport, they initially believed it to be one of the intricate tunnel systems that dot the Iraqi capital. That was nerve-racking in itself: Over the weekend, during the night, two Iraqi fighters had popped up from a tunnel on the airport grounds and were chased by U.S. forces into the darkness.
Carefully, about 150 U.S. soldiers headed out to explore it, first donning the night-vision goggles.
They went past the nearby lake, past the lakehouse. They went into the cave mouth, through shin-deep mud and down a set of dark stairs. Then they went in the door.
Inside, they found 12 rooms, each with white marble tile floors, 10-foot ceilings and fluorescent lighting.
In some rooms the Americans found office furniture.
They also found bathrooms, showers, and at least one area littered with cigarette butts, tea bags and other indications that the area was abandoned not too long ago.
``It was pretty neat down there,'' said Staff Sgt. Duane Taylor, 25, of Havana, Ill.
But no one was there. They found only opulence - far different from the Spartan Iraqi military quarters they have passed through in recent days.
So they emerged from their first foray knowing at least one thing: This was no enlisted man's hideaway.
For now, at least, the rest remains a mystery - including the task of making certain the tunnels aren't connected to any others.
``We're going to have to try to figure out where they go,'' Fetterman said. ``And,'' he said, ``there's no telling.''
Who is Howie Carr?
Could BaghdadUnderground be any more anti-American and slimey than the world of www.DemocraticUnderground.com?
Link of interest:
We returned the next day with shovels, beer and flashlights. Me and my friend Dennis headed in, while Ronnie stayed above ground in case anybody came snooping around.
At the far end of the 20-foot room, there was a wall that looked like it led into another room (it had an archway structure over the stones.)
Me and Dennis were drinking beer and pulling away stones, wondering if were going to find gold or skeletons back there. Finally we removed enough of the stones to push a shovel through the wall. Dennis says to me jokingly, Watch out for ghosts!
In the meantime, our friend Ronnie was wandering around through the woods, when he noticed the tip of a shovel pointing out of the hillside. He grabbed it and yanked it out of the ground and could hear me and Dennis underground screaming like schoolgirls.
That's correct, but at least some NVGs are also senstive to near infrared light to some degree. That means you can have an IR "flashlight", which couldn't be seen by someone without NVGs. It also means you can have a very dim "illuminator", that might not be visible to the naked eye at all, and certainly relections around corners, shadows and such wouldn't be visible without NVGs.
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