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The New Band of Brothers With the 1-506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division in Ramadi
The Weekly Standard ^ | June 19, 2006 | Michael Fumento

Posted on 06/17/2006 5:29:22 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4

Ramadi, Iraq

Terrorist-infested Ramadi in the wild west of Iraq is for U.S. troops the meanest place in the country, "the graveyard of the Americans" as graffiti around town boast. There is no better place to observe American troops and the fledgling Iraqi army in combat. That's why I came. When military public affairs asked where I wanted to be embedded, I told them, "the redder, the better" (red means hostile). So they packed me off to Camp Corregidor in eastern Ramadi with the 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault). The 506th's official motto is "Currahee," Cherokee for "stands alone." But they're better known as the "Band of Brothers" – so dubbed by author Stephen Ambrose and HBO (although the term originally applied to just one company in the regiment).

During the Battle of Fallujah in November 2004, many of the enemy who had vowed to fight to the death, including foreign terrorists, slipped the U.S. cordon. Ramadi, a city of 400,000, was a logical destination. The southwest point of the Sunni Triangle, it lies about 30 miles west of Fallujah and that much closer to Syria – a reliable source of both supplies and foreign jihadists. It's also the capital of Al Anbar province and a favorite stomping ground of al Qaeda in Iraq, led by Jordanian-born terrorist Abu Musab al Zarqawi until two 500 lb. bombs blew apart his hideout last Wednesday.

To most of the media, Baghdad is where Iraq begins and ends. So naturally, they think Baghdad is the most dangerous part of the country. Wrong.

(Excerpt) Read more at fumento.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 101airborne; 506infantry; bandofbrothers; fumento; iraq; oif; ramadi
Long, but good, with lots of video and photos.

http://www.fumento.com/military/ramadi.html

1 posted on 06/17/2006 5:29:25 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4
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The Iraq war is covered mostly by reporters who hole up in Baghdad hotels and send out Iraqi stringers to collect what the reporters deem news, as an article in the April 6, 2006, New York Review of Books described in great detail. The reporters convert these accounts into prose and put them on the wire. Except for that all-powerful "Baghdad" dateline, they might just as well be writing from Podunk.
2 posted on 06/17/2006 5:43:25 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4 (http://cannoneerno4.wordpress.com/2006/06/15/why-the-left-is-a-fifth-column/)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4

Interesting post!


3 posted on 06/17/2006 6:11:56 PM PDT by The_Media_never_lie
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To: Cannoneer No. 4

Using Iraqi 'stringers' to do the legwork in the news gathering business practically guarantees that, over time, the enemy will gain control of the information being feed to us throught the Media. Not that the editors of the major news outlets give a d@mn...


4 posted on 06/18/2006 8:03:00 AM PDT by Tallguy (When it's a bet between reality and delusion, bet on reality -- Mark Steyn)
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To: Dog; Coop; Marine_Uncle

Good read at link #1 - (good video as well throughout).


5 posted on 06/18/2006 8:16:26 AM PDT by SevenMinusOne
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To: Coop; Dog; bnelson44
Abrams Down!

Ten days before I arrived, during the night of April 9, 1st Battalion suffered its worst casualties of the deployment in a mini-"Black Hawk Down" situation. An IED flipped a Humvee, killing the driver from D Company. An M-1 Abrams tank went to retrieve it.

For good reason, Corregidor has a large complement of tanks and other armored vehicles. Unfortunately, another IED made a lucky strike on the tank, cutting the fuel line and setting it ablaze. The men inside scrambled to safety, but now things got really messy.

You can't just abandon an Abrams, because it has unique equipment and armor. If the bad guys get hold of a single vital piece they could use it to determine ways of defeating these otherwise almost invincible behemoths. Further, they could sell the information to anybody with a vested interest in blowing up M-1s. You also can't just call in an airstrike on a tank, as is routinely done with downed aircraft. That's fine for destroying secret electronics, but blasting a tank just spreads out the parts.

To make things even more dicey, the Abrams carries a powerful 120mm main gun and three machine guns. The rounds for these weapons were "cooking off" in the fire, flying in all directions. They would continue to do so for the rest of the night, making retrieval too dangerous.

So the troops set up a perimeter and waited. As with the real downing of the Black Hawks in Somalia, the burning tank attracted bad guys from throughout the city. They kept pouring into the area to kill the infidels. But with their night-vision equipment and laser pointers, Americans own the night. The enemy came in droves and they died in droves. "The insurgents were so desperate to gain momentum against us that they were literally running into the streets to plant IEDs right in front of us or throwing them over walls," says Claburn. "It was purely amazing." By the time the rounds had stopped flying and the tank was recovered, 30 jihadists were confirmed dead. Disaster had been averted. But the price in blood was high. Two more soldiers from Headquarters Company had died when another IED ripped their Humvee apart. Later the engineers whose job it was to detect and remove IEDs came into Col. Clark's office, apologizing with tears in their eyes. "I told them you tried; you did your best; but you can't get all of them all the time," Clark said. Firefight at Mulaab

My first patrol was with A Company, at night. The most exciting event was finding a cow tied up in a backyard. The bad guys had learned their lesson about night attacks. But next up was a day patrol with C Company to Mulaab, an area in southeastern Ramadi pretty much just outside the gate from Corregidor.

For this patrol, we're joined by 19 Navy SEALs. There seems no reason to have special ops around; apparently they just want to stay in practice. And so they will. We start out in a convoy of Humvees and M-113 armored personnel carriers. The M-113s are given extra protection from RPGs by metal cages (the soldiers call them "cheese graters") that detonate rounds before they strike the hull. We only travel a short distance before the reporters are invited to jump out and join the Iraqi army patrols. These aren't like the ones near Fallujah, which are split about 50/50 between Iraqis and Americans. Here two Americans are attached to each patrol, but the Iraqis are in charge. These Iraqis seem far more professional than what I'd seen in the Fallujah area. They've been repeatedly bloodied, and that makes all the difference.

The full story (linked above) is worth the read -

6 posted on 06/18/2006 1:42:44 PM PDT by SevenMinusOne
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To: ASA Vet

Good read if you haven't already caught this one -


7 posted on 06/18/2006 2:16:45 PM PDT by SevenMinusOne
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To: DevSix

Thank you kind sir.


8 posted on 06/18/2006 4:00:22 PM PDT by ASA Vet (3.03)
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To: DevSix
Thanks for the ping. Pretty good details to say the least.
One can only wonder when a offensive will start in ar Ramadi to rid the city of the pukes. I just hope our ground commanders will error on the heavy side, and make it clear to the Iraqi generals that we are going to lose as few soldiers/Marines/Iraqi forces, as possible while really laying down a significant use of force. The still resistive Sunni and Saddamist must be shown that if we have to level the frigen place to clean it up, that it will happen with the blessings of the IG.
9 posted on 06/18/2006 5:25:57 PM PDT by Marine_Uncle (Honor must be earned)
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To: MikeA

A good read - Very much worth it - Click the link at #1 -


10 posted on 06/18/2006 6:13:02 PM PDT by SevenMinusOne
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
"There is no better place to observe American troops and the fledgling Iraqi army in combat. That's why I came. When military public affairs asked where I wanted to be embedded, I told them, "the redder, the better" (red means hostile). So they packed me off to Camp Corregidor in eastern Ramadi with the 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault)."

I knew I had read those words before.

The band of brothers (and their mothers)
May 11, 2006

http://www.townhall.com/opinion/column/Michael%20Fumento/2006/05/11/196981.html

This is an excellent post. Thanks. One can never get enough of the Screaming Eagles. Nuts, their tradition carries on, thankfully. ;)
11 posted on 06/18/2006 10:26:25 PM PDT by Chgogal (The US Military fights for Freedom of the Press while the NYT lies about the Military and cowers...)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4; Allegra
Orville, et al. are a pretty pathetic bunch of spoiled, whiny bores. It is a shame we are depending on them for news. I doubt very much that anyone of these losers could report on their grandmother's funeral. The hearse would probably intimidate them.

Orville, ask the dummies to count the number of trucks leaving and entering Iran, Jordan, Kuwait and Syria. While they are at it, count the number of commercial flights in and out of Iraq and track to see if the numbers are increasing. Check out the Baghdad stock market while your at it. Check if refugees are returning to Iraq? If so are they finding work? Are religious pilgrimages increasing? Orville, according to the IMF, Iraq's economy has grown by 50% and its GDP is about $90 billion dollars and Iraq has the healthiest economy in the region. The Iraqi dinar is stable and has appreciated against the Kuwait dinar and the Iranian rial. Iraq is now exporting food instead of importing it. Too bad Orville and his fellow left wing losers don't show half the ingenuity of the U.S. Military.

The closing paragraph needs to be critiqued by Allegra.

"It may well be that the besieged American press in Iraq will find that the main story is not about Americans fighting Iraqi insurgents, but Americans standing powerlessly aside in their armed compounds, Green Zone, and military bases, watching as Iraqis kill other Iraqis and the country disintegrates. It would be all too ironic if this were the result of the invasion of March 2003, which was promoted as a critical step in bringing peace to the Middle East."

Allegra, you've been in Iraq for 2.5 years, what say you about Orville's story?
12 posted on 06/18/2006 11:19:38 PM PDT by Chgogal (The US Military fights for Freedom of the Press while the NYT lies about the Military and cowers...)
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To: DevSix

Thanks! Looking forward to it.


13 posted on 06/19/2006 8:48:20 AM PDT by MikeA (Not voting in November because you're pouting is a vote for Nancy Pelosi for Speaker of the House)
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To: DevSix
Although firefights and other hostile action are routine, IEDs are the worst problem, he said. They were responsible for five of the six deaths his men have suffered since deploying in January. As of mid-May, the troops at Corregidor had suffered 380 attacks from IEDs while finding and destroying 667 more. Five deaths (and additional injuries) are tragic, but these numbers do counter the misimpression that "ingenious" insurgents are expert in making and laying bombs. In fact, they must expend a massive amount of effort and materiel to do any harm to coalition forces

This is an interesting fact I wasn't aware of. The media makes it appear that the terrorists are so competent and invincible that every IED finds its target. They fail to report most IEDs are ineffective.

An added "attraction" is the snipers who occasionally pop off a round into the camp from the minarets. They know of Americans' unwillingness to attack "religious" buildings, even when they're clearly being used for military activity. When I asked Col. Clark why Iraqi army or police couldn't be used to make sure nobody entered the mosques with weapons, he was quick to say, "We never hesitate" to fire back when fired upon. "However," he added, "our fight requires strict cultural and religious sensitivity in order to be successful and legitimize the Iraqi government and army." If, he said, "the Iraqi army and Iraqi police established check points and conducted security screens at mosques it would undoubtedly be viewed negatively by the Iraqi people whose trust is vital to our success."

I regret that we're again tying our troops' hands. I realize we can't fight a scorched earth campaign, but it seems to me if a mosque is being used as a staging area for attacks, it should be fair game. Surely the Iraqis must see that the terrorists are misusing a religious shrine to launch attacks. I'm not saying destroy the building, but if there's a sniper in a minret, take it out!

Anyway, great read! Thanks,

14 posted on 06/19/2006 10:39:06 AM PDT by MikeA (Not voting in November because you're pouting is a vote for Nancy Pelosi for Speaker of the House)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4

Isnt this the same unit that is now missing to brave soldier?


15 posted on 06/19/2006 10:40:42 AM PDT by boxerblues
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To: boxerblues; Old Sarge

You in there?


16 posted on 06/19/2006 10:43:05 AM PDT by txhurl
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To: txflake

No, Im an Army Momma, oldest son was 101st at the start of the war and is returning to the unit and Iraq in Sept


17 posted on 06/19/2006 10:44:07 AM PDT by boxerblues
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To: boxerblues

1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry


18 posted on 06/19/2006 10:57:45 AM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4 (http://cannoneerno4.wordpress.com/2006/06/15/why-the-left-is-a-fifth-column/)
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