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To: kattracks
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.

12 posted on 03/26/2003 2:30:05 PM PST by brewcrew (It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into. - Jonathan Swift)
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To: brewcrew
You would LAND THEM THERE...
15 posted on 03/26/2003 2:30:48 PM PST by craig_eddy
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To: brewcrew
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

Seize the airfield and fly the equipment in on heavy transports?

22 posted on 03/26/2003 2:31:55 PM PST by GAGOPSWEEPTOVICTORY
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To: brewcrew
They are securing the airfield presumably so that transports can fly the heavy units in. Now it gets interesting.
29 posted on 03/26/2003 2:33:25 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: brewcrew
C5A's and other cargo planes can carry the tanks and vehicles.

This is as much warning to the Turks as it is part of the upcoming Northern Invasion of Iraq.
36 posted on 03/26/2003 2:34:22 PM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: brewcrew
How do you clear the way for armored tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles by seizing an airfield?


63 posted on 03/26/2003 2:40:49 PM PST by green team 1999
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To: brewcrew
Like I told a college history teacher when he asked (sarcastically) how many troops you could get in by taking one airfield:

"All of them. Eventually."
80 posted on 03/26/2003 2:44:21 PM PST by PLMerite ("Unarmed, one can only flee from Evil. But Evil isn't overcome by fleeing from it." Jeff Cooper)
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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: 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: brewcrew; craig_eddy
>>How do you clear the way for armored tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles by seizing an airfield?<<<

Well technically your correct. You seize the airfield for the C-5's and C17's that will land with M1A2 Abrams tanks and Bradleys in their bellys.

112 posted on 03/26/2003 2:54:27 PM PST by HardStarboard
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To: brewcrew
I believe C-117's can come in with tanks on board. 35 sorties, 35 tanks. I saw them dropping them on skids once, the plane doesn't even touch the ground as the vehicle slides out on a big palate and skids to a stop. I think they can carry multiple vehicles.
164 posted on 03/26/2003 3:18:50 PM PST by RobRoy
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To: brewcrew
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.

Three Bradleys per C-17 Globemaster II aircraft load, or one M1 Abrams tank. Or, if they can get a C-5 Galaxy in there, two tanks per airplane, with about two planes landing every minute.

The question is one of whether they've landed there to move on Baghdad or discourage the Turks from siezing the northern oil fields and killing off a few Kurds. We shall see.

U.S. Paratroopers Land in Northern Iraq

33 minutes ago

By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent

Army airborne forces parachuted into northern Iraq (news - web sites) on Wednesday, seizing an airfield for a new front against Saddam Hussein (news - web sites). U.S. and British warplanes bombed an enemy convoy fleeing the besieged city of Basra in the south.

One week into the war, the possibility of a major battle loomed within 100 miles of Baghdad as a larger convoy — this one made up of elite Republican Guard forces — moved in the direction of American troops aiming for Saddam's seat of power.

Jumping from low-flying jets into the Iraqi night, an estimated 1,000 paratroopers landed near an airstrip in Kurdish-controlled territory less than 30 miles from the Turkish border.

Hundreds of miles to the south, the unchallenged bombing of Iraqi forces leaving Basra raised hopes that ground troops could soon enter the city, feared at risk for a humanitarian crisis.

The military developments unfolded as the first humanitarian delivery of supplies rolled into southern Iraq, greeted at the border by hungry children.

With American and British forces massing to the south, west and now the north of Baghdad, the Iraqi regime kept much of the news from its own people. Instead, it emphasized a claim that two American cruise missiles had killed 14 civilians in Baghdad and wounded dozens more.

"This war is far from over," President Bush (news - web sites) said in a quick trip to the Florida headquarters of U.S. Central Command, which is overseeing the war. Still, he said victory was only a matter of time, adding, "There will be a day of reckoning for the Iraqi regime, and that day is drawing near."

For the second straight day, swirling sandstorms hampered American units. The bombing campaign was crimped, as well, but Baghdad television was knocked off the air for several hours, and explosions were heard, as well, near the oil-rich city of Kirkuk in the north.

Lt. Col. Thomas Collins, spokesman for the U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, confirmed that paratroopers were on the ground, many of them elite Rangers.

"I can only tell you yes, they've gone in. They're on the ground," he said.

Other officials said tanks, other vehicles and supplies would be airlifted in behind them.

American commanders had hoped to move a large force into northern Iraq from Turkey. But the Turkish parliament refused to allow that, and the parachute drop was the beginning of an alternative plan.

Harriers and Tornado jets flying out of Kuwait attacked the Iraqi convoy leaving Basra, a city of more than 1 million people, according to a British military source. The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the column included as many as 120 tanks and other armored vehicles.

Irregular Iraqi troops have prevented British troops from entering Basra, Iraq's second-largest city and site of a reported uprising by local civilians against Saddam's defenders. International aid officials have repeatedly expressed fears of an outbreak of disease, given the interruption of power and water supplies.

Details were sketchy, as well, about Iraqi troop movements to the north. Some officials said a huge convoy of perhaps 1,000 vehicles and members of Saddam's elite Republican Guard were moving south, in the direction of Marines making their way toward the capital.

Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said a "few vehicles" were moving south toward Karbala, site of a major land battle on Tuesday. "They're being engaged as we find them," he said.

U.S. officials blame the Fedayeen units for much of the resistance that has hampered the American-led advance through Iraq, accusing them of faking surrender only to shoot Americans and enforcing discipline among regular Iraqi army troops who may be less willing to fight.

One Defense Department official said commanders were surprised by the Fedayeen's capability and military commanders were changing their tactics.

"We're going into a hunting mode right now," said Marine Lt. Col. B.T. McCoy in Iraq.

Iraqi officials said 30 civilians were injured, some badly, when two American missiles landed in a residential Baghdad neighborhood.

Associated Press Television News video showed bodies wrapped in plastic sheeting in the back of a pickup truck and streets that had flooded after water pipes ruptured. Flames rose above burning buildings, mixing with smoke from fires Iraqis have lit to try to obscure targets for American combat pilots.

American military officials issued a statement saying that civilian damage was "possible" after an aerial attack aimed at nine Iraqi surface-to-surface missiles. "The missiles and launchers were placed within a civilian residential area," it said.

The first sizable relief convoy rolled across the border toward the southern port city of Umm Qasr, laden with water, boxes of tuna, crackers, sweets and other food.

Children greeted the trucks as they rumbled into Iraq from Kuwait, including a boy of about 10 who pointed to his mouth and shouted "Eat, eat."

In the border town of Safwan, the arrival of a relief convoy from the Kuwait's Red Crescent Society triggered fighting among young Iraqis, some shoeless and dirty, over the white boxes of supplies.

Bush was greeted with enthusiasm by hundreds of members of the armed forces on his trip to MacDill Air Force Base, home of the U.S. Central Command.

He offered a bullish account of the war effort to date, saying U.S. and British forces "have taken control of hundreds of square miles of territory to prevent the launch of missiles and chemical or biological weapons."

Even so, he tempered his prepared remarks, according to one official who spoke on condition of anonymity, deleting a phrase that said the operation was "ahead of schedule.' Bush is aware, this official said, that humanitarian supplies did not flow within the 36-hour timetable he set Sunday, and that Iraqi tactics and resistance are tougher than military planners had hoped.

-30-


207 posted on 03/26/2003 5:23:01 PM PST by archy (Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
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