PDA

View Full Version : Vid Link To Iraq Action



platform389
06-24-2004, 06:47 AM
http://www.armytimes.com/content/editorial/editart/061804front22.jpg

Despite being struck by an enemy rocket-propelled grenade, an Army Bradley fighting vehicle brings supplies to F Troop, 4th U.S. Cavalry, during a gun battle with insurgents south of Baqubah, Iraq, that lasted 12 hours.

Now, the vid link you came here for. Lots and lots of bang bang... :D

www.armytimes.com/story.php?s=1-292925-fighting.php


Troops kill 13 in fierce 12-hour firefight near Baqubah (Video)

BAQUBAH, Iraq — The panels above the doors on the up-armored Humvee are emblazoned with the words “rolling vengeance” and the inscription “R.I.P” is stenciled on the rear and sides of the truck next to the names of six soldiers killed in a month of fighting in the western Diyala province.
The truck belongs to Capt. Ty Johnson, commander of F Troop, 4th U.S. Cavalry, the Brigade Reconnaissance Troop for the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, and it has been at the scene of several violent engagements with a stubborn and well-armed insurgency.

Not all the engagements had been on the BRT’s terms. But this fight, the one in Buhritz, would be.

For weeks, a man the U.S. military described as a “criminal gang leader” delivered a taunting message, banning the U.S.-led coalition from entering Buhritz, a suburban hamlet on the south side of this provincial seat, boasting that they would be engaged if they dared come in.

Those were fighting words for 3rd BCT commander Col. Dana Pittard, whose goal is to make the place safe before the June 30 handover of power to the Iraqi government.

Adding fuel to the fire, a pair of area Mosques were known to have been preaching continued violence against coalition forces, defying pleas by sheiks and the governor’s office to stop.

“If they want to work with us, we’ll work with them. If they want to preach hate, we’ll fight them tooth and nail,” Pittard told the province’s deputy governor a few days before the operation, but the violence continued.

There are an average of 25 attacks on coalition forces every week in the western Diyala province, but the last straw came June 16 when a civil affairs team meeting with the town’s mayor was ambushed by rocket-propelled grenades.

Settling in, taunting back

Rolling in at dawn on June 17 with a dozen tactical vehicles, three Bradley Fighting Vehicles and three times their basic load of ammunition, Johnson and 45 of his soldiers commandeered a two-story house and settled in for a fight they anticipated would begin toward evening.

The troop taunted the bad guys by playing the division’s Big Red One song, and songs by Metallica and Toby Keith on a giant loudspeaker.

Just four hours later — just before 10 a.m. — they got their fight when incoming small arms fire broke the morning calm and sent townspeople scattering for cover. View exclusive video of the firefight.

“Pop! Pop! Pop!”

Johnson high-tailed it to the rooftop where his scouts were lighting up the landscape from their fighting positions.

“What do we got men!? What do we got!?” he shouted over the gunfire before he picked up his own weapon and began returning fire.

Dozens of enemy fighters, some dressed in all black, darted through yards, alleyways and an adjacent cemetery firing grenades, rockets and mortars, while others drove by and attacked with AK-47 assault rifles. The attack was launched from every direction.

Within minutes, the floor on the rooftop looked like a brass carpet of spent shells and the scouts dodged and ducked bullets and other deadly projectiles. Their war cries and adrenaline-laced laughter punctuated the confirmed killing of fighters who proved stealthy, and the destruction of hiding places on the ground brought victory shouts.

About three hours into what became a 12-hour battle, a combat re-supply was staged in front of the house under heavy cover fire.

The fighting raged on both sides, and the soldiers manned fighting positions in shifts .

One Bradley was crippled by an armor-piercing rocket-propelled grenade and chunks of concrete sprayed the rooftop by incoming fire that narrowly missed several scouts.

The town was rocked with the deafening sound of automatic weapons fire and the pounding of 25mm rounds from the Bradleys.

The air was thick with smoke and, as temperatures soared to 120 degrees Fahrenheit, half the troop’s soldiers were taken out of the fight and given an intravenous solution to avoid dehydration.

During a brief pause in the exchange of fire, a 16-year-old boy, a member of the family that had been hastily evicted early in the morning, stepped over the soldiers and empty ammunition boxes to feed his caged birds.

The enemy had stopped firing by 10 p.m.

By Johnson’s estimate, there were close to 100 enemy fighters, 13 confirmed enemy killed, and close to 100,000 rounds of spent U.S. ammunition from M16s, 240 Bs, Mark 19s, squad automatic weapons and 50 caliber machine guns. The BRT suffered no casualties.

The next morning at 6 a.m., when the BRT vacated the house after paying the occupants $200 for their trouble, the streets were empty except for one truck that drove past and at least one bloodied fighter who staggered through looking for aid.

Hired guns

Sources in the governor’s office claim that rebels who fought in Najaf and Fallujah during the insurgency uprising there in April and May are paid to travel to Baqubah to kill Americans and to undermine efforts by coalition forces to establish a new Iraqi government.

The BRT’s job is to conduct offensive operations, carry out combat and reconnaissance patrols and fight against a seemingly endless stream of those insurgents, identified as former regime loyalists, religious fanatics, foreign terrorists and men labeled by the military as criminals who just want to fight.

The BRT forms part of the 3rd BCT’s three-****ged approach to getting things in order by June 30.

On the other side of that approach is Pittard and his battalion commanders and civil affairs teams who interact daily with local businessmen, governors, tribal leaders and municipal workers such as teachers, engineers and health professionals.

The third ****g entails information operations — getting the word out to the local population about what the brigade is doing to help foster Iraqi sovereignty and encouraging the people they reach to voluntary divulge the names and whereabouts of insurgents and individuals or groups who pay them to fight.

Trying to keep all three going is continually overshadowed by the lack of a stable environment.

“We’re working to integrate Iraqi security forces to establish the conditions for civil-military self-reliance,” said Lt. Col. Keiron Todd, executive officer of 3rd BCT. “We’re not there yet, but we’re working really hard at it.

“We’re getting [the government] more involved, more structured. The challenge becomes the security part.”

By June 30, Todd said the combat patrols will be carried out jointly with Iraqi police and Iraqi Civil Defense Corps soldiers. Intelligence-driven operations will also be a joint effort.

But the fledgling enforcers of law and order are still finding their way and barely even have enough equipment or the clout among the population to be totally effective.

“Are we at war? We’re fighting, we’re fighting. We have attacks every day,” said Todd, who was a tank company executive officer in Operation Desert Storm.

“It’s different than anything I’ve read about, It’s different than anything I’ve experienced.”

seruriermarshal
06-24-2004, 06:49 AM
You don't have permission to access /story.php on this server.

:(

platform389
06-24-2004, 06:57 AM
You don't have permission to access /story.php on this server.

:(


Due to the extreme popularity of this feature, you may experience trouble viewing the video. If this occurs, please try again later.

Hmmm, try it this way. Story is in upper left side. Click the "more" link and look for vid link embedded in story...

http://www.armytimes.com/subchan.php?showchan=new

tenda
06-24-2004, 06:58 AM
bang.....bang.... :lol:

Scottie
06-24-2004, 07:05 AM
Not working!! :(

Crazyjack
06-24-2004, 07:05 AM
bang.....bang.... :lol:
He shot me down...bang...bang

Still not working!

tenda
06-24-2004, 07:07 AM
...the link works but slowly..... :bash:

Tengu
06-24-2004, 07:25 AM
works fine here

Scottie
06-24-2004, 07:36 AM
When i press play button it says:

rtsp://rm001.infi.net:80/~atpco/realserver/1IDv1001.rm ??

Tengu
06-24-2004, 07:55 AM
make sure you have realplayer

Scottie
06-24-2004, 09:27 AM
jepp got that..

Javehn
06-24-2004, 09:34 AM
Yea , Rafael protection kit is a MF ...

SiFiOn
06-24-2004, 11:13 AM
Nice link!

He219
06-24-2004, 11:19 AM
Hehe, posted by Pook2 (http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=17674&start=16) in Today's Pic's- June 19th (http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=17674&start=0&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight=)

'COVERING FIRE'!
p-)

tuckerhat
06-24-2004, 11:25 AM
good stuff, worked for me

Bombtrack
06-24-2004, 11:45 AM
Yeah I was gonna post that, but figured someone had beat me to it, guess i should've before the server overloaded eh?
Anyways it's a pretty cool little video

Scottie
06-25-2004, 03:55 AM
Never got to see the video :( doesnt work..

muede
06-28-2004, 07:35 PM
It still works, just make sure that you have Real Player and that you visit the given URL with INTERNET EXPLORER..

But on the otherhand you aint missing much if you dont get to see this, just a another staged fire fight.. (there is no enemy, or incomming fire there...)

:|

MEGR
06-28-2004, 07:46 PM
That was nucking futs. Cool vid.

platform389
06-29-2004, 08:01 AM
But on the otherhand you aint missing much if you dont get to see this, just a another staged fire fight.. (there is no enemy, or incomming fire there...)

:|

Bzzzt... :slap:

Incorrect. Watch it again. At least one mortar or RPG round can be seen impacting in the water to the right of the Bradley. Another can be heard also. Watch the Brad turret swing around to engage right afterward.

13 enemy were killed in this action.

Upfrontreporting
07-03-2004, 11:22 AM
Great bang-bang video, anyone got a link to DL version?

Gameholic
07-03-2004, 12:32 PM
great movie woot

Abrams_MBT
07-06-2004, 04:33 PM
no way to look the vid with windows media?

Hiroshima
07-06-2004, 06:00 PM
It's awsome....any way I can download this? And what are they unloading? Food? Water? Ammo?

sas-magoo
07-06-2004, 06:37 PM
that was boring.....woohoo watching peeps get re-supplied....they should have shown the rest of it, actually seeing them engaging the enemy rather than watch sum bloke with an M249 reload.

Thanks for the link anyway though

gilgoul
07-06-2004, 06:49 PM
A 100 000 rounds for 13 killed?

You ve got to be kiding me, in the last 3 and half years we spent 1300 000 rounds all in all here in combat, and people got mad at us for that :cantbeli:

It might be a typo no?

Javehn
07-07-2004, 06:47 AM
Probably a reason why they left so soon without bullets :)

2RHPZ
07-09-2004, 04:30 PM
A couple videos from Iraq:

Insurgents blew up our ammo dump (http://images.somethingawful.com/zack/insurgents%20blew%20up%20our%20ammo%20dump.wmv)

IED explosion (http://www.frontlineproductions.tv/IEDvid.wmv)

Pille1234
07-09-2004, 04:40 PM
A couple videos from Iraq:

Insurgents blew up our ammo dump (http://images.somethingawful.com/zack/insurgents%20blew%20up%20our%20ammo%20dump.wmv)

IED explosion (http://www.frontlineproductions.tv/IEDvid.wmv)
First link doesn't work (forbidden)