SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Is Secession Doable? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (1117)11/12/2004 1:57:45 PM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1968
 
Fearsome power of marines in Falluja

The American-led assault on the city is in its fifth day
As the battle for Falluja goes on, the American military estimates 600 people, whom they describe as insurgents, have been killed as well as 18 US soldiers.
BBC correspondent Paul Wood, embedded with US marines in Falluja, has been witnessing the action and gave this account to the BBC's Today programme.

Well it is no surprise that 600 have been killed - if indeed that figure is accurate.

The marines now are pushing out south of the main road.

The insurgents are believed to be confined to a narrow corridor which runs about 2km south of that road.

URBAN WARFARE


Techniques, tactics and the history of fighting in cities
Q&A: Falluja tactics
And the technique is literally to insert the ordinary marines - the grunts as they call themselves - wait until they draw fire and then hit back with everything they have got.

So you see a fleeting glimpse of one of the militants in the back of a room or jumping across a rooftop and then literally in the two hours I was out last night, thousands of rounds of ammunition are expended, tanks fire and the place is left in ruins.

This is the kind of pressure that the militants are under.

South of the main road now is where the main effort of the coalition forces is going to be concentrated over the next couple of days.

But it will be two days of very bitter, very difficult house-to-house and street-to-street fighting.

EMBEDDED REPORTERS
They can give general troop strength and casualty figures
They can report numbers of enemy POWs
They can give broad information about previous combat actions
Journalists cannot give specific details of locations
They cannot reveal the future plans of their unit
How many civilians have been killed - people who either have not left through choice or have been unable to leave - is the crucial question.

I suspect we will have to wait for a definitive answer until the smoke has literally cleared.

As an embedded reporter, I see literally what the military sees.

It is not particularly that the marines want to censor me but I am stuck with one unit and that is all I can see.

When we went through south of the main road last night, the streets - no surprise here - were absolutely deserted, the shops were shuttered.

One can only imagine the plight of the civilians.

I have questioned many times senior officers here about the use of heavy weapons because they have been using 155mm artillery in Falluja, they have been dropping 2,000 pound bombs.

[The marines] wait until they see a guy with a gun but when they see that, they open up with everything they've got

The bullets that they fire are high velocity. The buildings are of poor construction here - the bullets travel through the walls.

And when they see what they believe to be militants - and these marines are incredibly calm under fire, they are almost unflinching - they do wait until they see a guy with a gun but when they see that, they open up with everything they have got and the question is, how much collateral damage is there going to be?

At the moment we simply do not know.