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U.S. troops parachute into northern Iraq - CNN
Reuters | 3/26/03

Posted on 03/26/2003 2:26:36 PM PST by kattracks

U.S. troops parachute into northern Iraq - CNN

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - About 1,000 U.S. troops have parachuted into northern Iraq and seized an airfield in Kurdish-controlled territory, CNN reported on Wednesday.

The network said the troops were from the 173rd airborne brigade and seized the airfield to clear the way for armored tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles.

03/26/03 17:23 ET


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 173rdairborne; airdrop; kurds; northernfront; theherd; troopmovement; turkey
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To: freepersup
Thanks for the capacity loads.
81 posted on 03/26/2003 2:44:24 PM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: All
Several weeks ago they were off-loading heavy equipment in Turkey...taking it by convoys and rail to the north.
Whose equipmment was it?....hmmm!

I know it did not belong to the 4th.

82 posted on 03/26/2003 2:44:53 PM PST by mystery-ak (Saddam...your time is almost up..my hubby and son are on their way to kick your a$$ out of Baghdad!)
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To: brewcrew
The network said the troops were from the 173rd airborne brigade and seized the airfield to clear the way for armored tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles.

How do you clear the way for armored tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles by seizing an airfield? I'm no military expert, but this doesn't seem to make sense - unless it's for air support for said vehicles.

Wouldn't you secure an airfield in order to land planes carrying armored tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles? Then, the troops can get on the vehicles and ride to Baghdad. Remember, the Turks wouldn't let the US to use their desert to stage a Northern Front.

83 posted on 03/26/2003 2:45:11 PM PST by FLCowboy,
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To: freepersup
There are 90 C-5's and 120 C-17's in the inventory. Each can carry only one M1A2 or two Bradleys. It would take over 300 sorties to move a heavy division.
84 posted on 03/26/2003 2:45:34 PM PST by CholeraJoe (OO-OOH Can't anybody see? We've got a war to fight.)
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To: craig_eddy
hehehe...my daughter figured that one out. :o)
85 posted on 03/26/2003 2:46:07 PM PST by homeschool mama
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To: leadpenny
I thought the gold star above the jump wings was "master jumper" or something like that...100 or 300 jumps.
86 posted on 03/26/2003 2:46:13 PM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: freepersup
Would not be doctrinal to move C-5s into that area, but with no opposing TACAIR and SEAD well along....

They can bring lots of tanks!!!! Good gawd. Just thought. Move 4th ID directly there after quick unload in SA!

173 is "light" but A-10s make real good tanks!
87 posted on 03/26/2003 2:46:46 PM PST by MindBender26 (... and for more news as it happens, stay tuned to your FReeper station.)
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To: Lunatic Fringe
The 173rd ABN BDE SEP formed from the battalion of the 503rd infantry battalions. Made historic combat jump in WWII on the island of Corrigador. Reactivated in 1960 or 61 not certain, in Okinawa. May of 1965 deployed to Vietnam as the first Army ground unit in Vietnam. First into warzone D, first into C zone, first into the Iron Triangle, first into the mekong delta region. Deactivated in 1971 and the battalions of the 503rd infantry were made the 3rd bde 101st ABN division at Ft Campbell KY. The 173rd colors were moved to Vencenza Italy and the 509th Airborne became the 173rd Airborne bde seperate.

A bit sketchy, but best available from memory atm.

1SG(R)D. Bryant
173rd Airborne Brigade SEP 1965-1967
88 posted on 03/26/2003 2:47:11 PM PST by Kimlee
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To: MindBender26
Yes, I should have qualified that. There was all that small unit, special ops kind of stuff. As I remember, the 173rd involved just about everyone in the Brigade. I was a huey driver in Pleiku when they came north in late 67.
89 posted on 03/26/2003 2:47:20 PM PST by leadpenny (OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM)
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To: Lunatic Fringe
Knew them in Nam. Great unit. Surf the net, you will find plenty on the 173rd.
90 posted on 03/26/2003 2:47:23 PM PST by RetiredArmy
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To: brewcrew
Dude, the big C5's can carry light tanks, Bradleys, and the other toys that airborne likes to play with. You can also get one M1A2 Abrams tank on too. A half dozen of those in the north would be a great equalizer in a knife fight.
91 posted on 03/26/2003 2:47:55 PM PST by WilliamWallace1999
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To: Lunatic Fringe
They are stationed in Italy... I think at Camp Darby.
92 posted on 03/26/2003 2:48:07 PM PST by demlosers (resetting the record)
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To: kattracks
Found another good news article: These guys are great!

Posted on Wed, Mar. 26, 2003

Airborne jumps into northern Iraq
By KEN DILANIAN
Knight Ridder Newspapers

IN THE SKIES OVER NORTHERN IRAQ - Nearly 1,000 U.S. Army paratroops entered the war in dramatic fashion when they jumped out of low-flying jet airplanes in the dark of night and seized an airfield in Iraq's Kurdish-controlled region.

The bold, carefully planned mission by the 173rd Airborne Brigade was the 29th combat jump in U.S. history, according to brigade officers. The paratroops, many of whom are elite Army Rangers, flew directly from Aviano Air Force Base in northern Italy, which is near their base in Vicenza.

Fifteen Air Force C-17 Globemaster transport planes deposited men and equipment onto an air strip dubbed Objective Buford - near the city of Bashur, 30 miles from the Turkish border. The men and a handful of women had trained to jump at an altitude of around 500 feet and hit the ground at speeds of up to 17 miles per hour.

Once on Iraqi soil, the units were to scramble with their rifles and 100-pound backpacks to pre-determined meeting points, then set up a perimeter and traffic checkpoints around the airfield, which has a runway 6,700 feet long.

The parachute assault, assisted by U.S. Special Forces soldiers working with Kurds on the ground, was designed to establish an American combat force in a region laced with ethnic tensions, said the 173rd's commander, Col. William Mayville.

"I think our presence will act as a stabilizer," Mayville said. "Our presence changes the dynamics of the environment."

The Bashur airfield was chosen as the site because it could handle repeated landings by the 174-foot-long C-17s, Mayville said. The brigade decided to conduct an initial parachute insertion, rather then ferry troops in by plane, because an air assault ensured that a significant combat force could mass almost immediately to protect itself, officers said. On Tuesday, 173rd commanders said they were told that a Special Forces "A" Team was overrun by a force of 100 Iraqis in Irbil, about 35 miles from the drop zone.

"Nobody wants war," said Lt. Col. Dominic Caraccilo, commander of the 2nd Battalion, 503rd Airborne Infantry, one of the brigade's two infantry battalions. "But this is a paratrooper's dream."

The 173rd's operation is a major departure from the Pentagon's original plan for northern Iraq, which called for the Army's heavy 4th Infantry Division, with hundreds of tanks and sophisticated heavy weapons, to move into the north from a staging ground in Turkey. The 173rd, a light infantry unit that lacks armor, was slated to join that effort.

But the Turkish government declined to grant permission for U.S. troops to stage from its soil, so the military's Central Command changed the plan. As it stands, the relatively lightly armed paratroopers are "flapping out there," as Mayville put it last week, with rifles, mortars, machine guns and anti-tank missiles. But the colonel said he was confident that, with heavily armed AC-130 gunships providing air cover, his brigade could handle any threat that presented itself.

The drop zone, within an autonomous Kurdish enclave, was considered "permissive," meaning the soldiers didn't expect to be shot at as they descended to earth with enough gear, food and water to survive for several days.

But commanders remain deeply concerned about a potential threat from Ansar al Islam, a militant Kurdish Islamic group operating in the north. Kurdish officials say dozens of Osama bin Laden’s fugitive followers, most of them Arabs, have found refuge with Ansar. Last week, an airplane trying to land on the Bashur field with Special Forces soldiers had to turn back after it was fired upon, officials said.

"Don't underestimate what a big deal this is," Caraccilo told his troops as they rehearsed the operation last week.

This reporter, embedded with the 173rd Airborne Brigade, was present during the final mission rehearsals and was on one of the massive transport planes from which troopers jumped. After the airfield is secure, the same planes will return and land there with more soldiers and equipment. This reporter was scheduled to fly in on one of those planes and remain embedded with the unit. Other Knight Ridder reporters and photographers are operating independently of the military in Northern Iraq.

The brigade is to establish its base of operations around the airfield. Future missions could involve protecting key northern oil fields or ousting pockets of Iraqi resistance. But among the force's main roles is to keep peace among long-feuding Kurdish factions - and to separate the Kurds from any Turkish troops that may cross into Iraq.

As a result, the young soldiers will find themselves having to make careful decisions about the use of force in an area where men carrying rifles are a feature of the landscape - but not necessarily a threat to the Americans. Two civilian Kurdish interpreters are accompanying the unit, and last week, troopers practiced stopping traffic at checkpoints.

"Just because someone is carrying an AK-47, men, that doesn't mean they're the enemy," Sgt. 1st Class Jason Gueringer told his platoon on the eve of the mission, as he helped deliver the operations order to grim-faced 19- and 20-year-olds in a secure room on the Camp Ederle installation in Vicenza.

Summing up the area's geopolitical quandary in what he called "grunt-speak," Gueringer added: "The Kurds hate the Turks. The Turks don't give a s--- about the Kurds. That presents a problem, right? … The Kurds want their own state. We don't want that, and the Turks won't have that. So, there's a huge political sensitivity, you know, huge big pivotal things to look at here. This is big-level political stuff, men, and it could potentially turn into a nightmare."

If American troops hope to guard against Kurdish separatist inclinations, they are also there to dissuade Turkey from making any bold moves in Northern Iraq, commanders said.

Among Turkey's large Kurdish population is a minority of violent extremists who have pressed for an independent Kurdistan, and Turkey has sometimes used brutal methods to suppress them. Turkey has threatened to invade if the Kurds try to establish an independent state.

Turkey held up approving overflight rights for the mission until the last possible moment, said those involved in planning it.

"I think CENTCOM [U.S. Central Command] really wanted to twist a grapefruit in the Turks' face," said one officer involved in planning the mission. "It’s like, you want to [mess] around with us? Bam, here's 1,000 U.S. paratroopers."

The troops jumped in with their Alice rucksacks attached to their waists, packed to the gills with ammunition and gear - including three MRE rations, six quarts of water, a Kevlar helmet, a protective mask and chemical suit, knee pads and wind goggles. Some carried radios and machine gun parts.

When they were about 100 feet from the ground, they were supposed to release their packs on a 15-foot rope so those hit the ground first.

For the rest of their essential equipment, including their body armor and additional cold weather gear, they had to pack a separate duffle bag, known as the "A" bag, which was expected to arrive in a separate plane a few days after the jump. A third bag, called the "B" bag, is filled with non-essential items such as running shoes. The troops are convinced they will never see their "B" bags.

While many in the brigade are veterans with dozens of practice parachute jumps under their belts, some of the troops are just out of basic training, and others hadn't jumped from an airplane for years, since the five training jumps they completed in parachute school. Yet to a person, the troopers said they were proud and excited about the mission.

"It's nice to be part of it after watching it on CNN," said Brian Gaudette, 20, of Eugene, Oregon. "Our grandparents had World War II, other people had the Gulf War. This is something we can do."

Said Spc. Jonathan Bourne, 25, of Myrtle Beach, SC: "I think we're making history. Making history and changing the world."

http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/news/special_packages/iraq/5488005.htm
93 posted on 03/26/2003 2:48:12 PM PST by TheLion
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To: PLMerite
"Like I told a college history teacher when he asked (sarcastically) how many troops you could get in by taking one airfield: "

Enough
94 posted on 03/26/2003 2:48:22 PM PST by MindBender26 (... and for more news as it happens, stay tuned to your FReeper station.)
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To: CholeraJoe
There are 90 C-5's and 120 C-17's in the inventory. Each can carry only one M1A2 or two Bradleys. It would take over 300 sorties to move a heavy division.

Three days?

95 posted on 03/26/2003 2:48:33 PM PST by Carry_Okie (Because there are people in power who are truly evil.)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
That's all silver. I'm talking about a gold star right on the wings.
96 posted on 03/26/2003 2:49:01 PM PST by leadpenny (OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM)
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To: Dog
Yep. A Maalox moment for Saddam.
97 posted on 03/26/2003 2:49:08 PM PST by homeschool mama
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To: expatpat
"Iraqi forces are running around in Toyota pick-up trucks pretending that these vehicles are tanks."

Are they shouting "Tank...tank...tank...", as they go along.

Never mind....old joke.
98 posted on 03/26/2003 2:49:10 PM PST by Busywhiskers (On my command, unleash heck.)
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To: leadpenny
Were these guys known as "the hurd ?"

I think they are known as the "Herd", or "Third Herd."

99 posted on 03/26/2003 2:49:47 PM PST by IDontLikeToPayTaxes
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To: finnman69
My daughter said tanks can't fly...the big planes will bring them in. :o)
100 posted on 03/26/2003 2:50:24 PM PST by homeschool mama
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