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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rich4eagle who wrote (235339)3/8/2002 10:37:57 AM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
you sound like Dashedouttolunch.

"I am one way, till I am the other way' blah blah blah.

I AM DISAPPOINTED!!!

face it , richie, you are proabortion, no neutral point to be held. Either you are for life of the child or against the life of a child.



To: rich4eagle who wrote (235339)3/8/2002 11:39:40 AM
From: Ann Corrigan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Rich,

Disappointing to see someone's intensity fade when faced with enemy fire. Follow this example:

From the AP

Sirkankel, Afghanistan

Capt. Butler couldn’t believe his eyes. Just before the US missiles would hit, al-Qaida fighters
would duck into caves from their positions launching mortars at Butler’s troops below.

When the F-15 Strike Eagles were gone, the enemy fighters would emerge – only to throw
stones, wave and shout taunts at the Americans in a show of defiance.

“I’ve never been so frustrated and angry” said Butler, 30 from Pattenburg, NJ.

Frustration was coming easy to the US troops of the 101st Airborne Division. They were facing
a well-armed and well-entrenched foe. They’d had little sleep and were shivering in the
subfreezing temperatures that left many of their uniforms tinged with frost.

The Americans were preparing to flush out enemy fighters on ridges overlooking their positions,
their piece of action on the second day of the biggest joint offensive yet in the Afghan war.

The first sounds of incoming artillery and heavy machine gun fire cut through the air. The
mortar bursts came slowly at first, then intensified as al-Qaida and a few Taliban holdouts
zeroed in on some 200 soldiers hidden in a deep stone riverbed that had dried up long ago.

The US soldiers called headquarters to request air strikes on the enemy in the caves. But the
fighters were reslilient.

“We were moving our command post to the high ground,” said Cpl. Jeremy Gaul, 25 from
Marietta, Ohio. “When I looked out on the horizon, I saw a flash of light and I saw a projectile
coming and fall to the earth. It must have exploded no more than 30 yards away.”

Butler requested another air strike, watching through a scope. Again the enemy fighters
disappeared into caves dug into the granite, snowcapped mountains at 9,000 feet. When the
explosions ended, they emerged with wide grins, flailing their arms over their heads.

That’s when Butler had enough. He sprinted forward, running uphill on the peak – a task made
more difficult by the thin mountain air – and exposing himself to hostile fire so he could pinpoint
the enemy.

Getting a read on their location, he raced 45 yards back to relay the coordinates to his radio
man behind him. He needed six trips before he could make sure he’d gotten all the data he
needed.

Now he was ready to put his own plan into action: His forces would launch 60mm mortars just
as the jets roared toward the caves – a risky proposition because it placed the planes in
danger of being struck by friendly fire.

The jets roared ahead, and just like before, the enemy ducked into the caves emerging for a
third time to taunt the Americans.

But as they came out, the mortars detonated over their heads, spraying the al-Qaida fighters
with shrapnel. Four of them died, said US special operations soldiers who scaled the mountains
and counted the bodies.

“It was like a game of mortar pingpong,” Butler said. “They might think twice before they try
that move again.”

The al-Qaida fighters could get a few more chances; the Gardez area offensive is expected to
continue for a few more days at least. US forces are pursuing the al-Qaida and Taliban forces
together with Afghan commanders who have sent in thousands of fresh troops for the final
push.

With pockets of al-Qaida forces dug in, allied forces are trying to clear several enemy caves
honeycombed across the rugged terrain of Paktia province. Hundreds of al-Qaida fighters are
believed to be in the area.

Butler and the soldiers in the Alpha Company, 187th Infantry Regiment of the division’s 3rd
Brigade, were still fighting in the lunar-like Paktia landscape late Wednesday. He doesn’t even
know he’s being recommended for a Bronze Star by his units commanders.

“Their guys were trying to be clever,” Butler said just after the mortar match. “I guess they
don’t like it when we hit back.