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Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

Surge = Training Op for Iraqis

Ongoing “surge” operations in Baghdad are doubling as training opportunities for Iraqi soldiers, airmen and government officials. U.S. strategy entails turning over responsibility for security in Iraq to native entities as soon as they’re ready; the demands of the surge have forced Iraqis to be readier, sooner.

Iraqi army battalions “disintegrated last year when we tried to move them around,” says Major General William Caldwell, spokesman for U.S. forces in Iraq, referring to several Iraqi units that refused to deploy to trouble spots from their home bases in the north or south of the country. Many of the Iraqi soldiers involved cited a lack of preparation. “Now we have them ready to move,” Caldwell stresses. “By the middle of March, we should have three Iraqi brigades in Baghdad.”

Iraqi forces in the contested city now number more than 20,000, and Iraqi officers have taken the lead in many Baghdad missions. The tiny Iraqi air force is stepping up operations, as well, flying troop transport missions for deploying units using three U.S.-donated Lockheed Martin C-130E Hercules airlifters in addition to conducting Baghdad surveillance with CH-2000 reconnaissance planes.

“There’s been an increase in Iraqi air force operations in recent weeks,” says Brigadier General Stephen Hoog, chief U.S. trainer for the Iraqi air service. “They did their first medevac mission about seven days ago – they’re setting up channel missions to take wounded northern Iraqi troops back home. And the CH-2000s are going on one or two missions every day checking out checkpoints.” All that’s missing from operations is Iraq’s sizeable force of helicopters, which are awaiting the installation of the defensive gear they need for Baghdad missions. “By the middle of summer, we’ll see much greater participation of their helicopters.”

The surge hinges on significant diplomatic efforts by Iraqi politicians aiming to cut off the flow of weapons and insurgents into Baghdad and to keep the city’s militias peaceful. “The U.S. government got the Iraqi Prime Minister [Nouri Al Maliki] to make it clear to the militias that there’s no room for militias, and that those that ignored that warning were going to be dealt with,” reports Ambassador Daniel Speckhard, deputy chief of the U.S. mission. As a result, many of them dissolved or have ended their activity or moved out of Baghdad.” Speckhard adds that Al Maliki recently took his first official trip to western Iraq to meet with tribal leaders who are key to intercepting weapons coming in from Syria.

--David Axe, cross-posted at War Is Boring

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Posted by: wowpowerleveling at April 15, 2008 03:35 AM


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Thanks and God blessed you.

Posted by: eyongfonjafredri ch agbor at April 4, 2007 02:13 PM



After a few searing memories of American bombing of
Bucharest, of carnage and destruction, of fixed for
life memory-photos of lifeless dismembered body parts,
and the frightening faces of hate from both the
Germans and later Soviet occupiers, I finally
experienced my first MILKY WAY bar, gift of a GI,
while in a refugee camp in Austria-- part of the vast
generosity of an American soldier. Now, sixty years
later I watch the PBS "American Experience" on the
fliers overcoming the 1948 Berlin Blockade, (at the
very time we walking across three Red nations in
search of freedom)-- to see once again documented in
film their gallant strut of confidence, their daring
and determination, matched only by their ingenuity and
skill. Though now a physician, I cannot accept that
these superheroes aged. I can't stop believing that
they STILL look as virile, handsome, kind and in
control as then. Such Super Heroes could never ever
age like us mere mortals but must live forever,
smiling, as they are wont to do, among the stars.

If you ever experienced these 1948-49 "liberators,"
their kindness, their "can do," and their willingness
to risk a plane crash in bad weather to deliver a
promised Hershey Bar to me and many others, unknown
kids in Berlin, you can understand why we were sure
even into full adulthood that there is a Superman, a
Batman, a Flash, a Green Arrow because ALL Americans
are supermen when they put on their uniforms. Now an
old man, instead of goo-goo-eyed in wonder, I cry and
cry, pleading for the Supermen that saved my childhood
to save me in old age. Where are all those CAN DO
American Supermen? Are they in New Orleans? are they
in the Middle East? Are they in Europe or Asia?Are
they close to my home? O Muse Clio, please answer my
query.

Daniel E. Teodoru

Now an old man with nothing but history to take my
mind off geriatric pain, I cry with joy over the
amazing fact that I had met American Superment and
they even smiled at me...those beautiful Americans,
who thought, after years of struggling to stay alive
through WWII, that it's worth risking your life in
order to keep a promise to an anonymous helpless boy
that "WE AMERICANS DELIVER"-- rain, sleet, hail or
snow.

I know a lot of East Europeans, Chinese, Vietnamese,
Berliners and Iraqis who still believe that initial
American blunders are just tricks deliberately used to
make the success so much more appreciated....Allow me
to pass on to you academics a word from Muse Clio that
she puts in the hearts of all of us who lived under
Americans as kids and grew up studying the history
around our experiences: you are our species' supermen,
above all because you care and you are kind. and you
have taught all us prisoners of thirst for revenge:
the waste of dying for hate and the glory of dying for
love...My tears scream out: "Americans, it's me
Daniel, the kid you gave the candy. I just want you to
know that I love you with all my heart and my last
words will be: thank you superheroes of
freedom....Until then, can you tell me: "Hi, I'm still
there, I'm second generation American Superhero like
your American son...America is in good hands.

Daniel E. Teodoru


Posted by: DE Teodoru, NYC, USA at April 2, 2007 01:55 PM


Dear Sir,

I'm a Ugandan by nationality, aged 23. I would like to join the military forces in irag,threfore, how can apply.

Posted by: Anywar Richard at April 2, 2007 06:49 AM


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