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View Full Version : Salon: Al Qa-Qaa Stolen Weapons 'Just The Tip Of The Iceberg"



Nbadan
10-27-2004, 04:37 AM
About the writer

David J. Morris is a former Marine officer and the author of "Storm on the Horizon: Khafji -- The Battle that Changed the Course of the Gulf War" (Free Press). He was embedded with the Marines in Fallujah, Iraq, in May and June 2004.


As I learned while embedded in Iraq, the highly lethal explosives stolen from Al Qaqaa are just a fraction of the mountain of poorly secured munitions that could be turned against U.S. soldiers and citizens.

<snip>
Having personally toured weapons caches comparable in scale to Al Qaqaa and seen similar ordnance in the process of being converted into roadside bombs at an insurgent hideout, I believe that the theft and redistribution of conventional explosives and weapons represent the largest long-term threat to American troops in Iraq. Strangely enough, it is likely that dealing with this conventional weapons threat, rather than eradicating the mythical unconventional WMD threat, will be the U.S. legacy in Iraq.
<snip>

Without being cavalier about the weapons loss at Al Qaqaa, it is crucial to remember that the cache is just one repository among thousands in Iraq. The real and persistent danger is that America's continued mismanagement of the arms caches across Iraq is arming and equipping the very enemy the United States is dedicated to destroying and providing a key service to the insurgency.

In discussing Iraq, it is easy to overuse Vietnam analogies, but it is nevertheless worth remembering that one of the key developments in the early stages of that war occurred in early 1962 when the Viet Cong began acquiring stolen U.S. small arms through the black market. For a budding insurgency beginning to solidify its movement, there are few things more invigorating than a sudden inrush of weapons and equipment. In the larger context of a shifting battlefield, such a development is oftentimes a catalyst for an even wider and deadlier war.

Salon (http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/10/26/iraq_weapons_caches/index.html)

Rumsfeld should have been fired ages ago, and moreso now. Bush's failure to do so necessitates his removal.

Brodels
10-27-2004, 06:41 AM
Salon:

:rollin

Nice source.

Yonivore
10-27-2004, 07:41 AM
You'd get better information at a salon.

Useruser666
10-27-2004, 09:52 AM
What does Saoln say about split ends?

Synopsis

Storm on the Horizon is the little-known story of the key land battle of Desert Storm: the Battle for Khafji -- and how that engagement has become part of military history. Combining some of the most powerful writing on war ever with a Marine's-eye view of combat, former Marine officer David J. Morris has brilliantly recreated this crucial battle that nearly changed the outcome of the Persian Gulf War. Storm on the Horizon is war writing at its finest.

On January 29, 1991, Saddam Hussein launched his three best armored divisions across the Kuwaiti border and into the Islamic Holy Land of Saudi Arabia. Their mission: to disrupt the massive U.S.-led Coalition preparing to evict them from Kuwait, and to bloody the Americans on CNN. Caught without warning in the path of this juggernaut were scattered groups of lightly armed U.S. Marines and Special Forces soldiers. Storm on the Horizon is the gripping and compelling story of how these elite fighting men escaped the Iraqi onslaught and reversed the assault with an unprecedented combination of high-tech weaponry and American know-how. This is the story of the first battle of the smart-bomb age.

Storm on the Horizon drops you in the middle of the most intense battle of the Persian Gulf War. The Marines are trapped and outnumbered, their weapons no match against the Iraqi tanks bearing down on them. Their only lifeline to the rear is a barely functioning radio. Drawing upon extensive veteran interviews and previously classified reports, David J. Morris's vivid minute-by-minute narrative takes you through the battle from its beginning as a scattered collection of skirmishes to its fiery final act in the streets of the abandoned Saudi Arabian town of Khafji.

Morris captures this ordeal through the eyes of the men who were there, giving readers a rare front-row seat to an incredible sequence of events. Max Morton, the pilot of a Cobra attack helicopter, is forced to make an emergency landing in the heart of Khafji as the Iraqis are attacking. He and his crew narrowly escape after locating a tank of mystery fuel at a local oil refinery. Medic Kevin Callahan, member of a team of Marines caught behind enemy lines, watches helplessly as a female U.S. Army soldier and her male comrade are captured by Iraqi soldiers and spirited to Baghdad. Ronald Tull, suffering untold wounds, wakes up next to his burning light-armored vehicle thinking that it has been struck by an enemy tank round. Only later does he learn the full horror of the events that led up to the death of his seven buddies who were on board.

But Storm on the Horizon is far more than a battle saga. It is a thoughtful examination of a new generation of fighting men coming to terms with its own war, a journey into the minds of men under supreme stress, and a heartfelt account of the innocence lost in a heartbeat and mourned for a lifetime.

At once an unflinching chronicle of men at war and an appalling tableau, Storm on the Horizon looks into the savage heart of modern combat and raises troubling questions about the era of conflict that lies ahead.

Useruser666
10-27-2004, 09:56 AM
I also find it funny that so much is brought up dealing with how these explosives have fallen into the hands of the enemy when for so many years the US WAS SUPPLYING IRAQ WITH WEAPONS! How many hundred tons of military supplies did Iraq get from that? How many stingers did Al Qaeda get from the US?

Clandestino
10-27-2004, 11:22 AM
in vietnam they didn't need u.s. weapons, russia and china gave them enough...

it was good we supplied iraq with weapons... they were the badboy of the middle east and then we just went in and smacked their asses in 2 months...

Aggie Hoopsfan
10-27-2004, 12:28 PM
The Vietnamese also had Russia backing them. Whose Al Qaeda got?

Marcus Bryant
10-27-2004, 01:08 PM
Alec Baldwin?

Clandestino
10-27-2004, 02:13 PM
Alec Baldwin?

have you seen Team America? they bash the hell out of alec baldwin...too funny!