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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: paret who wrote (73723)2/25/2006 12:08:14 PM
From: ChinuSFORead Replies (3) | Respond to of 81568
 
This is it.

news.monstersandcritics.com

All those high and mighty sounding quotes is irrelevant to the world of today. We are now left to ask whether that region was more stable with Saddam in power. There was no Al Qaeda in Iraq with Saddam in power. Now they bomb mosques at will and create terror over there.

This Iraq war does not serve American interest. "It is not winnable." And in chaos, the US military may get entangled. It only needs the Kurds to declare independence and if they do so, Turkey and Iran will get sucked in because of their sizeable Kurd population.

You want to live in the past, that is your prerogative.



To: paret who wrote (73723)9/24/2006 2:43:03 PM
From: jim-thompsonRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 81568
 
This is why you don't put women in the cockpit.

Exhausted British troops 'reduced to tears'
Email Print Normal font Large font British soldiers in Afghanistan.
Photo: Reuters
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AdvertisementRichard Norton-Taylor, London
September 24, 2006

British troops in Afghanistan are exhausted and desperately short of helicopters, and there is no sign the casualty rate will fall, according to accounts from officers on the front line.

The reports, including a leaked email describing the Royal Air Force as "useless", put the UK Government under fresh pressure over whether it adequately prepared troops for the hostile south of the country.

It was revealed yesterday that a paratroop major, James Loden, described British forces as desperately short of reinforcements and helicopters and berated the RAF for being "utterly, utterly useless". In leaked emails, he referred to an attack when the pilot of a Harrier fighter bomber fired rockets closer to British troops on the ground than the enemy. "A female Harrier pilot 'couldn't identify the target', fired two phosphorus rockets that just missed our own compound so that we thought they were incoming RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades), and then strafed our perimeter, missing the enemy by 200 metres," Major Loden said.

The major also referred to the death last month of a British corporal and his colleagues' efforts to save the dying man during an intense ground battle. He described two junior colleagues, who appeared "very frightened and slow to react". He said his men were exhausted and at times were reduced to tears.

Another army officer has described the scale of casualties as "very significant and showing no signs of reducing".

-A Taliban ambush killed 19 Afghan workers in southern Afghanistan on Friday, while police killed 25 rebels in fierce fighting in Uruzgan province, where Australians are based.

- Guardian, AFP

theage.com.au