a little good news

Merlin1047

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Mar 28, 2004
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http://www4.army.mil/news/article.php?story=6462

Joint operation nets massive weapons cache
By Cpl. Benjamin Cossel

October 18, 2004

TAJI, Iraq (Army News Service, Oct. 18, 2004) – More than 400 rockets, 7,275 rounds of anti-aircraft ammunition and one U.S. Tube-launched Optically-tracked Wire-guided Missile were just the tip of the iceberg during a recent weapons cache discovery north of Baghdad.

“We would begin digging in a new area and we just kept finding stuff,” said the 2nd Battalion, 7th Calvary Regiment senior Iraqi National Guard advisor Capt. Mark Leslie, of the First Team’s 39th Brigade Combat Team.

The discovery began with a tip from a reluctant informant. Rumors had circulated within the Iraqi National Guard camp of a citizen who knew where a very large cache of weapons was located, but fear for his life kept him from speaking with Multi-National Forces.

“Once word got back to us, we began trying to get Soldiers with the ING to bring this guy to talk to us. But the gentleman just wasn’t having any of it,” said ING advisor Staff Sgt. Ronald Denton, of 2-7 Cav.’s Headquarters Company.

Known locally as a fair and honest person, the commander of Company D, 307th ING Battalion finally convinced the man to speak with him and to ultimately work with Multi-National Forces to recover the cache.

“Had it not been for the reputation of Lt. Col. Waleed within the community, I really don’t think we would have ever found the cache,” Denton said.

After the information was obtained, Company D, 307th ING Battalion and supporting troopers from 2-7 Cavalry gathered up detection equipment and headed to the location.

“The location of the first site put us in the far northern region of 2-7 Cav.’s AO (area of operation),” explained ING advisor Sgt. 1st Class Robert Haney of Company A, 2-7 Cav. “The initial cache discovery was exactly where the informant said it would be. But as we started spreading out, we kept finding more cache sites.”

Fanning out from the original location, Soldiers would eventually discover 12 sites, each within one kilometer of the original. The total amount of items discovered was staggering; 12 SS-30 127-millimeter rockets with launchers, 20 rocket mortars, multiple, varying intensity mortar rounds and other various armaments.

As the Soldiers began loading the discovered items for transport back to Camp Taji, the ING noticed that something just didn’t seem right.

“You’ve really got to attribute the success of this mission to the ING,” said Leslie. “They live in the areas we’re going to, so they know when something looks off. People are more willing to come up to them, talk to them and give them information we would probably not get. As we were drawing close to moving back to Taji they came up to us and voiced their concerns, and asked that we increase our search area a bit more.”

Working off the ING’s suspicion, the Troopers set to increasing their search radius, moving further and further away from the initial site. Soon enough, the search paid off.

“We found what appeared to be another significant cache location just a few [kilometers] away from the first sight,” said Leslie. “At that point, a quick look at our maps and we realized we were moving outside the 1st Cavalry Division’s AO into areas maintained by the 1st Infantry Division.”

Securing the site for the evening, wheels were set in motion to secure permission to cross AO boundaries.

“As soon as we got back to Camp Taji, we started contacting 2nd of the 108th [the command responsible for the area] to get permission to go into their AO,” Leslie said.

Even more then granting permission, 2nd of the 108th, a New York National Guard Infantry Regiment attached to the 1st ID, sent elements to assist in the security and excavation of the site.”

“This is how joint operations are supposed to work,” said Haney. “You request permission, it gets approved and they send Soldiers down to help with the mission. That’s Army teamwork!”

The second day of search operations revealed a much more significant find in terms of items seized as well the five individuals who were detained for later questioning.

“We found so many mortar rounds, it was just unreal,” said Denton. “And the amount of [Improvised Explosive Device] (IED) making material, and the list just goes on.”

Included in the discovery that day was over 150 pounds of PE-4 explosive, the explosive favored by Anti-Iraqi Forces in the construction of Vehicle Borne IEDs that have targeted Multi-National Forces and civilians alike.

Three heavy dump trucks were needed to haul the entire cache contents back to Camp Taji where it will be disposed of.

“Everything came together like it’s supposed to on this operation,” Leslie said. “Everybody worked together in a joint [operation] that should make residents of Camp Taji and Camp Anaconda sleep a little easier knowing we have denied the enemy these tools of destruction.”

(Editor’s note: Cpl. Benjamin Cossel is a member of the 122nd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment.)
 
That is good news. I suspect though that caches will be found like this well into the next decade.
 
maybe we will find a cache of WMDs this week. Wouldnt that just kinda destroy Kerry?
 
Avatar4321 said:
maybe we will find a cache of WMDs this week. Wouldnt that just kinda destroy Kerry?

Nope. They've put their take in the ground.

I suspect that even if we found all of the unaccoutned for WMDs and precursors, then the argument would change to "it's GWB's fault for not finding them fast enough."

And, of course, Hans Blix would crawl out of the woodwork (as he does every three months or so) to blame Bush for it. "See, we would have found these if the US had just given us more time." or some such nonsnese.
 
Flying Duck said:
Nope. They've put their take in the ground.

I suspect that even if we found all of the unaccoutned for WMDs and precursors, then the argument would change to "it's GWB's fault for not finding them fast enough."

And, of course, Hans Blix would crawl out of the woodwork (as he does every three months or so) to blame Bush for it. "See, we would have found these if the US had just given us more time." or some such nonsnese.

I think it would be more like "Bush planted those to get himself re-elected!"
 
Avatar4321 said:
maybe we will find a cache of WMDs this week. Wouldnt that just kinda destroy Kerry?

Maybe we haven't found any at all to date. Hasn't destroyed Bush. The inverse doesn't seem likely.
 
Hobbit said:
I think it would be more like "Bush planted those to get himself re-elected!"

Sorry, I forgot about that one.

By the way, given that Bush, the liar, was able to knock down the WTC, collude with Osama, and decieve the intelligence agenices of every country on the UNSC about unaccounted for WMDs and other Iraqi trnasgressions, why is it that he couldn't have flown in a few C-130's full of WMDs in right after the war and pretended they were Sadam's? I have yet to find an anti-warrior to even TRY to answer this question.
 

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