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On Scene: How Operation Swarmer Fizzled

 
 
Reply Fri 17 Mar, 2006 06:47 pm
Not a shot was fired, or a leader nabbed, in a major offensive that failed to live up to its advance billing
By BRIAN BENNETT/AL JALLAM

Posted Friday, Mar. 17, 2006
Four Black Hawk helicopters landed in a wheat field and dropped off a television crew, three photographers, three print reporters and three Iraqi government officials right into the middle of Operation Swarmer. Iraqi soldiers in newly painted humvees, green and red Iraqi flags stenciled on the tailgates, had just finished searching the farm populated by a half-dozen skinny cows and a woman kneading freshly risen dough and slapping it to the walls of a mud oven.

The press, flown in from Baghdad to this agricultural gridiron northeast of Samarra, huddled around the Iraqi officials and U.S. Army commanders who explained that the "largest air assault since 2003" in Iraq using over 50 helicopters to put 1500 Iraqi and U.S. troops on the ground had netted 48 suspected insurgents, 17 of which had already been cleared and released. The area, explained the officials, has long been suspected of being used as a base for insurgents operating in and around Samarra, the city north of Baghdad where the bombing of a sacred shrine recently sparked a wave of sectarian violence.

But contrary to what many many television networks erroneously reported, the operation was by no means the largest use of airpower since the start of the war. ("Air Assault" is a military term that refers specifically to transporting troops into an area.) In fact, there were no airstrikes and no leading insurgents were nabbed in an operation that some skeptical military analysts described as little more than a photo op. What's more, there were no shots fired at all and the units had met no resistance, said the U.S. and Iraqi commanders.

The operation, which doubled the population of the flat farmland in one single airlift, was initiated by intelligence from Iraq security forces, says Lt Col Skip Johnson commander of the 187 Battallion, 3rd Combat Brigade of the 101st Airborne. "They have the lead," he said to reporters at the second stop of the tour. But by Friday afternoon, the major targets seemed to have slipped through their fingers. Iraqi Army General Abdul Jabar says that Samarra-based insurgent leader Hamad el Taki of Mohammad's Army was thought to be in the area, and Iraqi intelligence officers were still working to compare known voice recordings and photographs with the prisoners in custody.

With the Interior Ministry's Samarra commando battalion, the soldiers had found some 300 individual pieces of weaponry like mortars, rockets and plastic explosives in six different locations inside the sparsely populated farming community of over 50 square miles and about 1,500 residents. The raids also uncovered high-powered cordless telephones used as detonators in homemade bombs, medical supplies and insurgent training manuals.

Before loading up into the helicopters for a return trip to Baghdad, Iraqi and American soldiers and some reporters helped themselves to the woman's freshly baked bread, tearing bits off and chewing it as they wandered among the cows. For most of them, it was the only thing worthwhile they'd found all day.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1174448,00.html
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 475 • Replies: 5
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timberlandko
 
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Reply Fri 17 Mar, 2006 07:03 pm
The article clearly was written by arrogant, but incompetent boobs with no understanding of military proceedure and protocols.

A "First Effort" at an operation of this nature, it essentially was a training excersize, sort of along the lines of a final exam. Not even a fool would commit an untried, unblooded unit to such an undertaking in an environment assumed to be actively hostile. Logistically and operationally, it went according to plan, demonstrating the Iraqi military is coming into its own as a force capable of seeing autonomously to domestic security. This was merely a promise of substantial Iraqi-developed, Iraqi-planned, Iraqi-manned, Iraqi-executed security operations to come. The Iraqis are damned near ready to start taking care of themselves.
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blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Fri 17 Mar, 2006 07:18 pm
timberlandko , you Bushies would love for the Iraqi military to be ready but that is delusion and spin and dont you wish America would buy it. Seems we were sold a bill of goods on this Swarmer offensive. Lied to big time if this Time Magazine article is to be believed. Bushie needs to change American minds but his plummet shows he's lost America's hearts and minds. Lying wont help the Incompetent in Chief.
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timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 11:06 am
Keep yer hopes up
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Roxxxanne
 
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Reply Tue 21 Mar, 2006 08:01 am
It turns out that Operation Swarmer was nothing but a photo op conducted to defelct attention from the Third Anniversary of this debacle.
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Roxxxanne
 
  1  
Reply Tue 21 Mar, 2006 08:02 am
[quote="timberlandko"] The Iraqis are damned near ready to start taking care of themselves.[/quote]
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