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  • #61
    AH,

    I think you're right that there are still dangers remaining. but it strains credability to think that the Taleban is happy leaving/losing Kabul.

    Comment


    • #62
      True - I'm sure they'd prefer to stay there although maybe not given the winter is coming and feeding one million people would be no easy task.
      Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..

      Look, I just don't anymore, okay?

      Comment


      • #63
        Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A Strategic withdrawal...

        Originally posted by MOBIUS



        I think Dan means the Highway to Hell/of Death when the US bombed the broken and routed Iraqi conscripts and civilians fleeing Kuwait city for hours on end, incinerating thousands...
        I think it was an allusion to the "Highway of Death". We are justified to fire on retreating troops. There's a difference between retreating and surrendering. Oh and I guess it's ok if we kill volunteers but bad to kill conscripts? Or what was the point of saying "conscripts"?
        Last edited by TCO; November 13, 2001, 20:51.

        Comment


        • #64
          Originally posted by Alexander's Horse
          True - I'm sure they'd prefer to stay there although maybe not given the winter is coming and feeding one million people would be no easy task.
          I doubt that's how they think. Probably are more like Somalis or Apaches who make sure the fighting men have enough to eat and see civilians as a resource first, responsibility second. (That's the way guerillas have to operate.)
          Last edited by TCO; November 13, 2001, 21:00.

          Comment


          • #65
            The opportunity to anhiliate fleeing forces as happened in the Gulf War appears not have been taken here. The Gulf War coalition got heavily criticised for that.

            Also a double game could be in play with talk of "moderate Pashtun Tal" being drawn into a coalition government. Massacres of fleeing Pashtun T forces could really stymy those efforts.

            I wouldn't be surprised if Kandahar was surrendered as well - why not let the enemy feed your people as well. Remember, in insurgency, holding ground means virtually nothing.
            Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..

            Look, I just don't anymore, okay?

            Comment


            • #66
              I disagree with your analysis AH -throughout the thread generally...(though I see where you are coming from)

              Hearing that so many thousands of Taliban soldiers were left to the tender mercies of the N.Alliance doesn't make for good promotional material for the Taliban. Executed foreign fighters with money stuffed in their mouths and the loss of so much territory, awful propaganda...

              In addition the loss of so many men and equipment -alot of their tanks- and the empowerment of the Northern Alliance, which surely will go from strength to strength bolstered by the victories and American aid will be a severe hinderance.

              Afghan on Afghan, but one of the sides has a super-power behind it...and America now has some tastey airbases inside Afghanistan it could possibly use. And major coups for the Taliban like the humanitarian crisis and American bombers hitting civilian targets in towns are going to be more a thing of the past:

              With access via Uzebekistan secured to a large section of Afghanistan and airbases secured feeding people this winter will be MUCH easier free of Taliban interference! If pro-alliance forces hold the towns, less chance the Americans will hit civilian targets...the Taliban have suffered great losses and I really wonder if the bombing did not have some part to play!


              I think for the time being we can take the recent events as a tangible victory and not the hollow one AH fear/says!

              Comment


              • #67
                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A Strategic withdrawal...

                DP
                Is it me, or is MOBIUS a horrible person?

                Comment


                • #68
                  Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A Strategic withdrawal...

                  Originally posted by GP


                  I think it was an allusion to the "Highway of Death". We are justified to fire on retreating troops. There's a difference between retreating and surrendering. Oh and I guess it's ok if we kill volunteers but bad to kill conscripts? Or what was the point of saying "conscripts"?
                  They were running away, they were broken, routed, demoralised - they had ceased to be an effective fighting force!

                  Tens of thousands were MURDERED

                  The Massacre of Withdrawing Soldiers on "The Highway of Death"

                  by Joyce Chediac

                  I want to give testimony on what are called the "highways of death." These are the two Kuwaiti roadways, littered with remains of 2,000 mangled Iraqi military vehicles, and the charred and dismembered bodies of tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers, who were withdrawing from Kuwait on February 26th and 27th 1991 in compliance with UN resolutions.

                  U.S. planes trapped the long convoys by disabling vehicles in the front, and at the rear, and then pounded the resulting traffic jams for hours. "It was like shooting fish in a barrel," said one U.S. pilot. The horror is still there to see.

                  On the inland highway to Basra is mile after mile of burned, smashed, shattered vehicles of every description - tanks, armored cars, trucks, autos, fire trucks, according to the March 18, 1991, Time magazine. On the sixty miles of coastal highway, Iraqi military units sit in gruesome repose, scorched skeletons of vehicles and men alike, black and awful under the sun, says the Los Angeles Times of March 11, 1991. While 450 people survived the inland road bombing to surrender, this was not the case with the 60 miles of the coastal road. There for 60 miles every vehicle was strafed or bombed, every windshield is shattered, every tank is burned, every truck is riddled with shell fragments. No survivors are known or likely. The cabs of trucks were bombed so much that they were pushed into the ground, and it's impossible to see if they contain drivers or not. Windshields were melted away, and huge tanks were reduced to shrapnel.

                  "Even in Vietnam I didn't see anything like this. It's pathetic," said Major Bob Nugent, an Army intelligence officer. This one-sided carnage, this racist mass murder of Arab people, occurred while White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater promised that the U.S. and its coalition partners would not attack Iraqi forces leaving Kuwait. This is surely one of the most heinous war crimes in contemporary history.

                  The Iraqi troops were not being driven out of Kuwait by U.S. troops as the Bush administration maintains. They were not retreating in order to regroup and fight again. In fact, they were withdrawing, they were going home, responding to orders issued by Baghdad, announcing that it was complying with Resolution 660 and leaving Kuwait. At 5:35 p.m. (Eastern standard Time) Baghdad radio announced that Iraq's Foreign Minister had accepted the Soviet cease-fire proposal and had issued the order for all Iraqi troops to withdraw to postions held before August 2, 1990 in compliance with UN Resolution 660. President Bush responded immediately from the White House saying (through spokesman Marlin Fitzwater) that "there was no evidence to suggest the Iraqi army is withdrawing. In fact, Iraqi units are continuing to fight. . . We continue to prosecute the war." On the next day, February 26, 1991, Saddam Hussein announced on Baghdad radio that Iraqi troops had, indeed, begun to withdraw from Kuwait and that the withdrawal would be complete that day. Again, Bush reacted, calling Hussein's announcement "an outrage" and "a cruel hoax."

                  Eyewitness Kuwaitis attest that the withdrawal began the afternoon of February 26, 1991 and Baghdad radio announced at 2:00 AM (local time) that morning that the government had ordered all troops to withdraw.

                  The massacre of withdrawing Iraqi soldiers violates the Geneva Conventions of 1949, Common Article III, which outlaws the killing of soldiers who are out of combat. The point of contention involves the Bush administration's claim that the Iraqi troops were retreating to regroup and fight again. Such a claim is the only way that the massacre which occurred could be considered legal under international law. But in fact the claim is false and obviously so. The troops were withdrawing and removing themselves from combat under direct orders from Baghdad that the war was over and that Iraq had quit and would fully comply with UN resolutions. To attack the soldiers returning home under these circumstances is a war crime.

                  Iraq accepted UN Resolution 660 and offered to withdraw from Kuwait through Soviet mediation on February 21, 1991. A statement made by George Bush on February 27, 1991, that no quarter would be given to remaining Iraqi soldiers violates even the U.S. Field Manual of 1956. The 1907 Hague Convention governing land warfare also makes it illegal to declare that no quarter will be given to withdrawing soldiers. On February 26,199 I, the following dispatch was filed from the deck of the U.S.S. Ranger, under the byline of Randall Richard of the Providence Journal:

                  Air strikes against Iraqi troops retreating from Kuwait were being launched so feverishly from this carrier today that pilots said they took whatever bombs happened to be closest to the flight deck. The crews, working to the strains of the Lone Ranger theme, often passed up the projectile of choice . . . because it took too long to load.

                  New York Times reporter Maureen Dowd wrote, "With the Iraqi leader facing military defeat, Mr. Bush decided that he would rather gamble on a violent and potentially unpopular ground war than risk the alternative: an imperfect settlement hammered out by the Soviets and Iraqis that world opinion might accept as tolerable." In short, rather than accept the offer of Iraq to surrender and leave the field of battle, Bush and the U.S. military strategists decided simply to kill as many Iraqis as they possibly could while the chance lasted. A Newsweek article on Norman Schwarzkopt, titled "A Soldier of Conscience" (March 11,1991), remarked that before the ground war the general was only worried about "How long the world would stand by and watch the United States pound the living hell out of Iraq without saying, 'Wait a minute - enough is enough.' He [Schwarzkopf] itched to send ground troops to finish the job." The pretext for massive extermination of Iraqi soldiers was the desire of the U.S. to destroy Iraqi equipment. But in reality the plan was to prevent Iraqi soldiers from retreating at all. Powell remarked even before the start of the war that Iraqi soldiers knew that they had been sent to Kuwait to die. Rick Atkinson of the Washington Post reasoned that "the noose has been tightened" around Iraqi forces so effectively that "escape is impossible" (February 27, 1991). What all of this amounts to is not a war but a massacre.
                  There are also indications that some of those bombed during the withdrawl were Palestinians and Iraqi civilians. According to Time magazine of March 18, 1991, not just military vehicles, but cars, buses and trucks were also hit. In many cases, cars were loaded with Palestinian families and all their possessions. U.S. press accounts tried to make the discovery of burned and bombed household goods appear as if Iraqi troops were even at this late moment looting Kuwait. Attacks on civilians are specifically prohibited by the Geneva Accords and the 1977 Conventions.

                  How did it really happen? On February 26, 1991 Iraq had announced it was complying with the Soviet proposal, and its troops would withdraw from Kuwait. According to Kuwaiti eyewitnesses, quoted in the March 11, 1991 Washington Post, the withdrawal began on the two highways, and was in full swing by evening. Near midnight, the first U.S. bombing started. Hundreds of Iraqis jumped from their cars and their trucks, looking for shelter. U.S. pilots took whatever bombs happened to be close to the flight deck, from cluster bombs to 500 pound bombs. Can you imagine that on a car or truck? U.S. forces continued to drop bombs on the convoys until all humans were killed. So many jets swarmed over the inland road that it created an aerial traffic jam, and combat air controllers feared midair collisions.

                  The victims were not offering resistance. They weren't being driven back in fierce battle, or trying to regroup to join another battle. They were just sitting ducks, according to Commander Frank Swiggert, the Ranger Bomb Squadron leader. According to an article in the March 11, 1991 Washington Post, headlined "U.S. Scrambles to Shape View of Highway of Death," the U.S. government then conspired and in fact did all it could to hide this war crime from the people of this country and the world. What the U.S. government did became the focus of the public relations campaign managed by the U.S. Central Command in Riyad, according to that same issue of the Washington Post. The typical line has been that the convoys were engaged in "classic tank battles," as if to suggest that Iraqi troops tried to fight back or even had a chance of fighting back. The truth is that it was simply a one-sided massacre of tens of thousands of people who had no ability to fight back or defend themselves.

                  The Washington Post says that senior officers with the U.S. Central Command in Riyad became worried that what they saw was a growing public perception that Iraqi forces were leaving Kuwait voluntarily, and that the U.S. pilots were bombing them mercilessly, which was the truth. So the U.S. government, says the Post, played down the evidence that Iraqi troops were actually leaving Kuwait.

                  U.S. field commanders gave the media a carefully drawn and inaccurate picture of the fast-changing events. The idea was to portray Iraq's claimed withdrawal as a fighting retreat made necessary by heavy allied military pressure. Remember when Bush came to the Rose Garden and said that he would not accept Saddam Hussein's withdrawal? That was part of it, too, and Bush was involved in this cover up. Bush's statement was followed quickly by a televised military briefing from Saudi Arabia to explain that Iraqi forces were not withdrawing but were being pushed from the battlefield. In fact, tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers around Kuwait had begun to pull away more than thirty-six hours before allied forces reached the capital, Kuwait City. They did not move under any immediate pressure from allied tanks and infantry, which were still miles from Kuwait City.

                  This deliberate campaign of disinformation regarding this military action and the war crime that it really was, this manipulation of press briefings to deceive the public and keep the massacre from the world is also a violation of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the right of the people to know.
                  Apparently GP thinks it's OK to be a murderous bastard!

                  War Crimes like these are the reason the US refuses to sign the international War Criminals agreement - if they did, half the US airforce and people right up the chain of command to the President would be indicted!

                  As for the conscripts comment, well the overwhelming majority of the conscripts were Shi'ites and therefore potential enemies of Saddam (that's why they were always used as cannon fodder!), so ironically all the US was really doing was helping Saddam retain power...

                  Personally I think the only reason the Taliban weren't hit as they fled is that they took those 8 hostages with them, two of which being Americans...

                  BTW, here's a pic of the aftermath of the Highway of Death - please could someone point out to me just one military vehicle in that mass of charred remains...
                  Attached Files
                  Is it me, or is MOBIUS a horrible person?

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    One thing that always puzzled me about the Highway of death was why would the Iraqi's stay with their vehicles? Surely most of em escaped on foot? If you followed the road by walking parallel at about 500 metres you should be okay.
                    Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..

                    Look, I just don't anymore, okay?

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Slaughtering enemy combat forces while they flee is both lawful under the law of warfare and expected when the oportunity is presented. If military forces do not wish to be sudjected to this, their legal option is to surrender, rather than flee.
                      Gaius Mucius Scaevola Sinistra
                      Japher: "crap, did I just post in this thread?"
                      "Bloody hell, Lefty.....number one in my list of persons I have no intention of annoying, ever." Bugs ****ing Bunny
                      From a 6th grader who readily adpated to internet culture: "Pay attention now, because your opinions suck"

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        Mobius,

                        That article is complete rubbish.

                        This one line pretty much shows how much bullsh1t it's throwing out there:

                        this racist mass murder of Arab people
                        Also:

                        the U.S. government then conspired and in fact did all it could to hide this war crime from the people of this country and the world.
                        yeah right. The whole f ucking deal was on the news here constantly. Reporters were even there on site. They told us everything that happened. They showed the convoy being destroyed and the aftermath and the bodies.

                        There was no "hiding" going on here.

                        Also----> The most benevolent Sadaam Hussein withdrew these forces to stop fighting? Bullsh1t. Nobody knew at that time whether the coalition was going all the way to Baghdad or not. This was CLEARLY a strategic withdrawal.

                        By the way, if they were really so "peaceful," why did they take their tanks with them?

                        Holy f ucking sh1t, you and chegitz would have us believe Sadaam Hussein is the next Mother Theresa.

                        Also, let's not forget the story about one raid on the highway, where several dozen Apaches descended on the convoy. The battle group actually hovered above the convoy and gave the guys time to get out of their vehicles and clear the area before opening fire.

                        Horrible article, has lots of sources, but they are taken out of context and skewed.
                        We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution. - Abraham Lincoln

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          Originally posted by Alexander's Horse
                          One thing that always puzzled me about the Highway of death was why would the Iraqi's stay with their vehicles? Surely most of em escaped on foot? If you followed the road by walking parallel at about 500 metres you should be okay.
                          Why wouldn't Iraqis abandon their vehicles? Because they carried their loot inside.

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            Trascend, think about it.
                            Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..

                            Look, I just don't anymore, okay?

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              Sorry dude. Kicking the crap out of a retreating army is not a 'war crime'.

                              They were running away, they were broken, routed, demoralised - they had ceased to be an effective fighting force!
                              Had they surrendered, they would be alive.

                              Just wait until winter. Freezing Taliban hiding in the mountains, afraid to light up a furnace... hello Mr Heatseeker.
                              Obsessed with reality... and what she can DO for me.

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                I always find the American faith in technology touching - but if you want to spend hundreds of millions of dollars doing stuff like taking out one tank or radio shack with high tech missile, be my guest - its your taxes after all.
                                Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..

                                Look, I just don't anymore, okay?

                                Comment

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