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1 posted on 04/01/2004 12:46:39 AM PST by Cap Huff
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To: Cap Huff
They've pissed off the marines.

Hell will visit them in a few days !

2 posted on 04/01/2004 12:48:19 AM PST by america-rules (It's US or THEM so what part don't you understand ?)
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To: Cap Huff
OK it's time to surround that city with barbed wire. Take the film footage and identify all those that were involved.

Give the residents a chance to make things right and give them up. If they don't, unleash hell.
5 posted on 04/01/2004 12:55:17 AM PST by Broadside Joe
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To: Cap Huff
Another attack?

Time to take off the gloves.
7 posted on 04/01/2004 12:56:17 AM PST by YoSoy2 ("I'm proud of the way America used to be")
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To: Cap Huff
Oh, not again. I hope none of the good guys were killed.
12 posted on 04/01/2004 1:15:43 AM PST by beaversmom (Michael Medved has the Greatest radio show on GOD's Green Earth)
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To: Cap Huff
I have to hope and assume that our tactics are evolving as we go.
28 posted on 04/01/2004 3:43:37 AM PST by samtheman
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To: Cap Huff
Unleash Hell=A10
31 posted on 04/01/2004 3:51:56 AM PST by mystery-ak (Terrorist: smoke em, if you got em.)
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To: Cap Huff
U.S. forces blocked roads leading into Fallujah after the attack a move that has been done in recent weeks at times of fighting in the city.

This entire area needs to be locked down. It's obvious the insurgents and their supporters are there and in numbers. We need to control the electricity, water, food, roads, bridges and all other sources needed to maintain the infrastructure there and bring normal life to a screeching halt. I think manpower would be our problem, though. It would require large numbers of troops.

37 posted on 04/01/2004 4:04:09 AM PST by germanicus
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To: Cap Huff
Why does the headline use the rebels? Why does the article use the term insurgents? These people are terrorists. And yes the village elders need to be turned out and have it explained to them that this type of activity is not good for their health and well being. Some monetary induce could be offered in the form of the old stick and carrot.
39 posted on 04/01/2004 4:05:57 AM PST by Jimmy Valentine's brother (Doctor Raoul has brass testicles)
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To: Cap Huff

ERASE FALLUJAH


40 posted on 04/01/2004 4:07:58 AM PST by CurlyBill (Voter fraud is one of the primary campaign strategies of the Democrats!!!!)
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To: All
In googling the company and the attack location I came up with this rather long article that is an interview with a Blackwater employee who has been working around Fallujah.

Greene County Native Providing Security For Americans In Iraq

By: By BILL JONES/Staff Writer Source: The Greeneville Sun 03-30-2004

Greene County native David Randolph isn’t a soldier, but he’s taking the same risks as U.S. soldiers and Marines in Iraq while he provides security for American contractors and high-ranking military officers.

Randolph, 33, a 1988 graduate of Chuckey-Doak High School, said during a Monday afternoon satellite telephone call from Iraq, that since early January he has been working in central Iraq as an “independent contractor” for a private security company called Blackwater USA.

Randolph, who is the son of Renda Scott and James “Buddy” Randolph, a Greene County Sheriff’s Department detective sergeant, said he was recruited by North Carolina-based Blackwater USA last December and left employment with the Horry County, S.C., Police Department to join the security firm.

A former U.S. Marine who helped protect President George H. W. Bush at Camp David, Md., in the early 1990s, Randolph said he left the Horry County Police Department, where he was working as a K-9 officer in the narcotics unit, because he could earn “substantially” more money working for Blackwater USA in Iraq.

Randolph, who said he organized the Conway, S.C., Police Department’s SWAT team several years ago, also has spent 10 years in the South Carolina National Guard. He holds the rank of 1st lieutenant in that reserve military component.

After about a month of intensive training, Randolph said, he and two other former Horry County, S.C., police officers traveled in early January to Iraq by way of Kuwait. Since January, he said, he has been in charge of a detachment of “more than 20” Blackwater security personnel who are based near the small Iraqi city of Fallujah.

Randolph described Fallujah, which he said is probably smaller than Greeneville, as “the toughest town in Iraq.”

Prior to last year’s U.S. invasion that toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, Randolph said, even Saddam feared to travel to Fallujah.

“It was run by a group sort of like the mafia,” he said. “He (Saddam) pretty much left the people who ran the city alone.”

Unfortunately, he said, that meant that “a few people lived like kings” and the rest of the population lived meagerly.

Since the arrival of U.S. forces in the area last year, Randolph said, the people who formerly enjoyed power have seen their privileges curtailed.

“They’re not happy about that, and they’re carrying out attacks as a result,” he said.

Fallujah, which is west of Baghdad, is located “at one corner” of the “Sunni Triangle,” the area mostly west and north of Baghdad, Iraq’s capital, where attacks on U.S. forces have been numerous since last year.

Randolph said the Blackwater USA personnel he supervises provide security for high-ranking U.S. military officers, U.S. State Department officials and employees of U.S. contractors involved in rebuilding the war-torn county’s infrastructure.

Frequently Escort Convoys

As part of their security operations, Randolph said, Blackwater USA personnel escort convoys from place to place along central Iraq’s dangerous roads.

In carrying out their convoy-protection duties, Randolph said, Blackwater employees frequently engage in gunfire with insurgents, who attempt to use roadside bombs, which the military calls improvised explosive devices (IED), and other arms to destroy vehicles and kill as many Americans as possible.

“You have to be vigilant all the time on the road,” he said, noting that anything that looks out of place, such as a pile of dirt by the roadside, can hide an IED. But IEDs aren’t the only worry for those moving about in convoys, according to Randolph.

“I think I’ve been fired on by every kind of weapon there is except an aircraft,” Randolph said.

He added that the insurgents doing many of the attacks in and around Fallujah often have turned out to be natives of Jordan, Iran, Syria, and of the embattled Russian-controlled area of Chechnya.

Blackwater USA personnel have been able to fend off most attacks by using tactics that make it difficult, if not impossible, for attackers to damage more than one vehicle at a time.

“They haven’t been very successful against us,” he said, “But they’re determined and keep trying.”

He also said that insurgents constantly try to draw Blackwater USA personnel and U.S. military forces into ambushes.

“They try to disable a vehicle and then attack you with small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades when you dismount,” he said.

He said Blackwater USA personnel and their U.S. military counterparts counter the ambush threat by positioning their vehicles to cover each other and by avoiding attempts to draw them into traps.

During a Monday afternoon telephone call from the Blackwater USA compound in the desert outside Fallujah where it was 9:30 p.m., Randolph said he and other Blackwater USA personnel “sleep whenever we can.”

Attacked Many Nights

He said that their compound is attacked on many nights by mortar and rocket fire. Asked if the compound had good bunkers in case of such attacks, Randolph said that although there were bunkers, “We depend on their inaccuracy.”

He explained that the mortar and rocket fire unleased by the insurgents had been highly inaccurate for the most part. “After you’ve been here for awhile, you can judge pretty well when you’re in danger.”

After repeatedly failing in attacks on Blackwater USA personnel, Randolph said, insurgents in the Fallujah area recently have began focusing their attacks on Iraqis who drive vehicles that bring food, water and other supplies to Blackwater USA-protected work sites.

“We’ve lost three water truck drivers in the last week,” he said, noting that the Iraqi truck drivers are just trying to earn a living and improve their families’ lives. The former South Carolina police officer

said he remains convinced that the casualties the United States has suffered in Iraq over the last year have been “worth the sacrifice.”

He said that whenever he sees Iraqi children smile and wave as he passes, his belief that U.S. efforts to free the Iraqi population from tyranny is reinforced.

“Now they (the children) will have a future, not just a dead end,” he said.

Telephones Wife Weekly

Randolph said he tries to telephone his wife, Susie, and the couple’s four young children at least once a week to reassure them that he is safe. He noted that he has not yet seen his youngest son, who was born after he went to Iraq in January.

Randolph and his wife also are the parents of a 4-year-old daughter and a 2-year-old son and twin daughter.

Being separated from his wife and children is difficult, Randolph said, noting that he hopes to return to his home near Myrtle Beach, S.C., by August.

After taking some time off, he said, he likely will accept other international security assignments with Blackwater USA.

In the meantime, Randolph said, he would like to receive electronic mail messages from Greene County residents.

43 posted on 04/01/2004 4:43:15 AM PST by Cap Huff
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To: Cap Huff
Fallujah and other areas within the Sunni Triangle should be given what they want, a lawless block of land separate. The other two ethenic groups should be given 1/3 of Iraq proper and separated in two States sharing the oil wealth. Fallujah should be given a reduced annunity held by the coalation to be handed over once they form a government for their area free from terrorism (a 25% penality should be imposed on their 1/3 of the oil wealth). Incentives to conform .... Food distribution (medicine & essentials) should be contingent upon recognized representatives coming out of the city with conveyence from their own resources to carry it back). We could tie the hands of the insurgents in the eyes of their own people.

The very reason this did not work between the Pali's and Israel is because of the EU/Saddam types who provided incentives to oppose reason.

45 posted on 04/01/2004 4:46:56 AM PST by Jumper
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To: Cap Huff; MJY1288; xzins; Calpernia; TEXOKIE; Alamo-Girl; windchime; Grampa Dave; ...
FALLUJAH, Iraq - Insurgents attacked a U.S. military convoy and a Humvee was burned Thursday near Fallujah, witnesses said, a day after the grisly killing and mutilation of four American civilians in the city.

It was not clear if there were any casualties in Thursday's assault. U.S. officials said they could not confirm the attack, although American forces briefly blocked roads leading into Fallujah — a move that has often been done during fighting in recent weeks.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

AP recap.

Our enemies would thank our press, but it isn't in their nature to thank infidels, even when infidels appease or do their bidding.

Pray for our troops.

 
A Great Lesson
~ A LESSON TO MY SON by A PROUD AMERICAN
Irma S. Chambers

 
 

47 posted on 04/01/2004 4:55:34 AM PST by Ragtime Cowgirl (TF160 was about terror.Delta was about terror.The Seals were about Terror!- xzins w/TF160-Reagan yrs)
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To: Cap Huff
Rebels attack U.S. convoy outside Fallujah, witnesses said

REBELS??!! I think not. The term "rebel" gives them the air of legitimacy of cause.

56 posted on 04/01/2004 5:28:13 AM PST by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: Cap Huff
It's been twentyfour hours and we still haven't done anything. The subhumans in Fallujah will be increasingly unable to connect our retaliation with their provocation. The liberal press, complicit in this atrocity, will confuse the sequence of events for its own subversive purposes. Let's at least send a Hot Squad down to the souk, drag a few of the local wiseguys into the street and fry their a$$es. Tic-toc, Tic-toc, Tic-toc . . . Comon guys!!
66 posted on 04/01/2004 6:12:00 AM PST by NaughtiusMaximus (I could never vote for a guy with a chin like that.)
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To: Cap Huff
These folks have too much free time on their hands?

Re-locate them all to Antarctica for 'insight' therapy?

/sarcasm

80 posted on 04/01/2004 10:15:47 AM PST by maestro
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To: Cap Huff
Payback's a b#tch. Send in the Kurds and the Shi'ites...
88 posted on 04/01/2004 12:00:40 PM PST by Antoninus (Federal Marriage Amendment NOW!)
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To: Cap Huff
issue and small US flag to the enitre population of that town, anyone not wearing the flag is shot on sight, no questions asked.
92 posted on 04/01/2004 1:10:20 PM PST by jpsb (Nominated 1994 "Worst writer on the net")
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