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Marines Encircle Fallouja (Operation Valiant Resolve commencing)
LA Times ^
| 4-4-04
| Tony Perry and Edmund Sanders
Posted on 04/04/2004 10:01:15 PM PDT by BurbankKarl
FALLOUJA, Iraq Thousands of Marines surrounded this anti-American stronghold early today in preparation for a complex raid to retake control of the city and apprehend those responsible for last week's slayings of four U.S. security contractors.
The highly anticipated action, dubbed Operation Valiant Resolve, was expected to be one of the biggest military offensives since the fall of Saddam Hussein's government a year ago.
All roads leading to this city of 300,000 were cut off and barricaded with tanks and concertina wire. Working through the cold and windy desert night, under a large moon, Marines set up camps for detainees and residents who might flee any fighting. Before dawn, several Marine positions were hit by mortar rounds and rocket-propelled grenade fire. Bursts of automatic gunfire could be heard throughout the city.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
TOPICS: Breaking News; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: ca; fallouja; falluja; fallujah; iraq; marines; muslims; opvaliantresolve; valiantresolve
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To: John Lenin
They won't be up and at'em for another two hours.
341
posted on
04/05/2004 12:10:45 AM PDT
by
Woahhs
To: Travis McGee
PUT that round, right at the tip of my index finger... yess, allah be praised, delicious raisins!
342
posted on
04/05/2004 12:12:43 AM PDT
by
Robert_Paulson2
(the madridification of our election is now officially underway.)
To: Travis McGee
I agree regarding types like that Mullah, however I think the delay could be because we don't want to rile the Shias, and because of the Iranian connections. I can understand to a certain degree there's a coin flip involved regarding him.
Want to see him go. He's becoming a major problem already in terms of a public face within Iraq, the Muslim world and over here. The last thing we need is the evil chaos of AQ and Iranian madness to find a safe harbor in such close quarters.
I was wondering about drone and satellite technology and the means to pinpoint more obscure targets (such as groups of individuals). Targeted missle attacks would sound like a viable option then, no?
If memory serves, the Marines have been training for this kind of urban combat since before Kosovo. Tin-foilers were thinking they were for domestic use, and others thought they were for a potential ground war (ha, ha--not with Clinton and Clark) in Yugoslavia. I think, therefore, there is an advantage in using ground forces in this situation, if my memory and assumptions are correct.
This I know I'll be getting some disagreements on--I support the idea of ground in this situation because the savage nature of the incidient begs for this kind of response. I support the idea of some creep walking out of morning prayers and be turned into a grease stain before he opens the door of his Mercedes, however I truly think we need to strike fear and respect in the hearts of the enemy.
I'm confident the Marines will do that. Again, I'm treading somewhat on the ground of emotions here.
343
posted on
04/05/2004 12:13:07 AM PDT
by
lavrenti
(I'm not bad, just misunderstood.)
To: Travis McGee
Think of Fallujah as Gaza.
=== === ===
Because of the parallel, and if things get messy in Fallujah, I expect Israel to move substantively in Gaza.
344
posted on
04/05/2004 12:13:11 AM PDT
by
tubavil
To: saquin
Thanks for the map. I hope you westcoasters can keep the flame going...I'm going to pray really hard for the troops and hit the hay. Here's hoping for happy news tomorrow.
Our troops are there to help them rebuild their country. They can damn well quit killing them, and the civilian contractors who are there to help, or we can give them a lesson in how conquerers CAN behave.
To: MEG33; LdSentinal; MNJohnnie
RE: al-Douri
FWIW, about five or six months ago there was a rumor that al-Douri had leukemia. If true, he is now most likely dead. The fact that we've heard almost nothing about him since the beginning of the year leads me to speculate that he is probably dead. That's only conjecture. If he in fact is still alive I believe we will get him.
To: BushMeister
It would seem to me that the operation will be USMC only for now. And it is doubtful that the Marines will require the U.S. Army except for possible air cover. The Marines took Seoul after Inchon and that was a city. They will get the job done on their schedule.
To: Robert_Paulson2
That picture looks like it was a pose.
To: Travis McGee
I enjoy them, I have that photo of the Mayor of Saigon shooting that VC dude in the head as my screensaver. It makes me smile when things are done the right way.
To: Travis McGee
They will be even more thrilled if we accidentally cause patently innocent civilian deaths
not to put too fine a point on it...
but if we FAIL to give them the photo essays they desire...
they will simply create them and then blame them on us.
a willing arab world, will of course, accept WHATEVER atrocity they see, as being an American one.
of course this would never happen, but if you DID nuke the town, the tv cameras wouldn't work above 4500 degrees or so.
instant news blackouts, and no mess to clean up...
so simple so clean.
350
posted on
04/05/2004 12:16:34 AM PDT
by
Robert_Paulson2
(the madridification of our election is now officially underway.)
To: Travis McGee
Well stated and good summary of the IDFs recent tactics. We've gotten some lessons from them, specifically with helos and drones. We have some capability to do what you talk about with fast movers (with targeting pods and laser guided bombs), but there's nothing surgical about a 500 or 2000 lb bomb (smaller stuff on the way soon), so all we have are hellfire and maverick missiles. The optics on the pods on the helos and drones are very good, but the latest stuff on the F16s is superior, too bad no smaller munitions unless they dig up some old Mavericks before we decommission them. Don't know how we'll get the good intel though. The IDF are the experts, but they haven't found a pristine solution (is there one?) to the urban warfare/spontaneous riot (yeah right) problem.
To: McGavin999
Al Sistani is the heavyweight in that area and he's strongly in support of a secular government. Sistani is not claiming to be the Mahdi and Sadr certainly is trying to claim that mantle. Do you know how tall Sadr is? I would like to know because the Mahdi is supposed to be tall, ride a white Arabian, be a Shiite and come out of Iraq.
To: BushMeister
You're not going to hear that the marines have entered fallejuh and after a cpl of days that fallejuh is pacified....typical hammer and anvil attack...the north along the railroas is the anvil....move troops in from the south....section by section...utilizing artillery....and push them to the anvil...2-3 weeks at most...and then the city will have seen the wrath of god and be pacified...
353
posted on
04/05/2004 12:20:21 AM PDT
by
Getsmart64
(LANTIRN - Designed to kill, maim, and destroy ....America's enemies...)
Comment #354 Removed by Moderator
To: church16
The IDF are the experts, but they haven't found a pristine solution (is there one?) to the urban warfare/spontaneous riot (yeah right) problem. You would think by now they would have developed an anti-press device of some sort. Now that would be worth the R&D.
355
posted on
04/05/2004 12:22:17 AM PDT
by
Woahhs
To: Travis McGee
I think there are differences between Fatah and a mixed bag of Baathist thugs and AQ adventurers, advantages that play well in an urban assault. The Fatah in Jenin were probably better trained to defend their environment--they're also better embedded in the population.
I don't think the bad guys in Fallujah are that close to the civilians. I also think the Baathists couldn't hit anything unless the target had its hands bound, was on their knees and two feet away from that piece of Chinese junk most of these clowns were likely issued. The AQ are trained for everything but defending a city.
I agree about boobytraps. AQ certianly proved they can do that.
356
posted on
04/05/2004 12:22:59 AM PDT
by
lavrenti
(I'm not bad, just misunderstood.)
To: Woahhs
LOL!!! Now thats one I would like to see developed.
To: Cap Huff
They captured some of his family ..I haven't heard a word lately.
358
posted on
04/05/2004 12:23:23 AM PDT
by
MEG33
(John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
To: MEG33
Just read a very disturbing article in the WP. Apparently Sadar just had a meeting with a bunch of other clerics. At the meeting were some Sunnis from Falluja.
We may be about to fight the real Iraqi War.
359
posted on
04/05/2004 12:23:49 AM PDT
by
McGavin999
(Expecting others to pay for your enjoyment of FreeRepublic is socialism: Donate now!)
To: Seniram US
Thanks. I don't doubt the Marines' ability to reduce Fallujah, I just wondered if they had the assets in place to go it alone, except for air. I'm also glad the Marines have been using the Abrams, as well. Nice to have a few dozen of the M1A1s around, and they'll be even nicer if the recommendations on making them more suited for MOUT are followed.
BTW, I heard that the 5 1st INF soldiers killed the other day by an IED were riding in an M113. I thought these things were retired. Not sure if a Bradley would have made a difference, though.
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