Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
The fact that you compare deliberate murder of clearly unarmed civilians in a secured village in daylight by a large ground force to a possibly unauthorized or else mistakenly authorized air attack at night on misidentified friendlies reveals either incredible ignorance, or desperation for troll material. Which is it?
The fact that you compare deliberate murder of clearly unarmed civilians in a secured village in daylight by a large ground force to a possibly unauthorized or else mistakenly authorized air attack at night on misidentified friendlies reveals either incredible ignorance, or desperation for troll material. Which is it?
Justice must be seen to be done, so airplanes stop snipping cable car cables, submarines stop surfacing under large objects containing school children and airliners aren't shot down in mid air!
Have all of these been quietly swept under the carpet, or have these men been made accountable for their mistakes???
Maybe your indignation would be better received if you could show me that these men had actually received suitable punishments for the deaths of innocents/allied soldiers?
'Cos all I'm seeing here is an Army guy 'closing ranks'...
Piss off, you're not qualified to judge. Yes, you can have whatever ignorant opinion you want, but don't pretend it's more than that.
All I see is an ill-disciplined rabble with more guns and ammo than sense and a carte blanche to keep plugging away at friend or foe alike cos all they're likely to get is a slapped wrist!!!
Over 99% of close air support missions are on the target area, and an extremely high percentage are effective on the target (suppression, driving the enemy out of a position, damaging the enemy or destroying him) There were thousands of close are support sorties in the Gulf war, accounting for hundreds of Iraqi AFVs, resupply points, etc. being destroyed. The enemy to friendly casualty ratio was probably 500 to 1 - IIRC, there were about 40 killed and wounded attributable to fratricidal air support missions, compared to elimination of some 10% of total Iraqi line combat strength and destruction of resupply and rally points, command posts, communications posts, and artillery. Would you rather have all that back in action, to get back your nine fratricidal KIAs?
Despite the small percentage of ****ed up missions, close air support shortens wars and saves lives on the ground. <-- Period. End of story. It will never be a perfect process.
So what happened to the killers of the British soldiers then?
Then you don't have any competence to make judgments.
The question is would you **** your pants under fire. Maybe even miscall coordinates for artillery or close air support. Maybe even misidentify friendly forces. Maybe move past assigned phase lines, or outside your assigned sector and into the security zone or operational zone of another friendly unit?
My "logic" is that because the Iraqi forces you fought were effectively demoralized, suppressed, shot up (somewhere around 50-60% combat effective), and were aware that their rally points, resupply, and HQ's (all behind them) were under heavy attack from US air assets (army aviation elements from 1st ID, 1st and 3rd Armored Divs. plus USAF A-10s), they weren't in position to do much fighting back against your ground troops. About ten percent of that front line damage and ALL of the rally/resupply/HQ/coms/ damage, plus whatever was left of Iraqi DivArty for those front line divisions was taken out by close air support.
A "routed" army doesn't retreat with it's heavy equipment.
Hundreds of vehicles were incinerated in an extended attack by jets, B-52s etc in a 'Turkey Shoot' as boasted by the pilots themselves - I wouldn't be surprised if their weren't a few kitchen sinks full of napalm thrown in for good measure!!! The apologists say not that many thousands of bodies claimed were found - but then the ordnance used practically disintergrated the vehicles, so it's little surprise there were few bodies...
This armada of highly dangerous school buses was in full rout taking the quickest route home [i]and not wanting to be captured in Kuwait, fearing reprisals from vengeful Kuwaitis - they were conscripts running in fear of their lives practically on the eve of the ceasefire!!!
What I was to know is if the US was so keen on blowing up school buses - why the hell did they allow surrendered Republican Guards to return to their lines with their T-72's???
You may think this subject has been dealt with, most likely because you want it swept under the carpet - but it's not going away! It will stick to the US just as surely as the Napalm B used on the Highway of Death sticks to human flesh!
Let's see you fly a military aircraft 200 feet off the ground at 400 knots in the first place. Then once you can do that, let's see if you can identify a pink Cadillac from a green Mustang convertible on a parking lot.
Besides, frankly I'm horrified that you'd send your pilots in a combat zone with a 50/50 chance of hitting the wrong target - that is what you're implying, isn't it?
Now that you're real good, try doing it under fire, in conditions of smoke, haze, and try to spot, let alone identify, camoflaged AFV's. Now you have about 5-10 seconds (10 is pretty lucky, if you've got good visibility), to acquire, identify, line up your aircraft, target and fire on that AFV. Now let's see you do it with 100% accuracy every ****ing time. That's what you're whining about in the gulf war.
I considered it such an ignorant claim it wasn't worth responding to. Would you really like to see what the US can do if we went "trigger happy?"
Actually, I already saw the US in "trigger happy" - it was called the Highway of Death... (Amongst others!)
Hopefully you're not this obtuse in other areas? Reread the first word in "close air support." See if you get the concept. You can't effectively target or engage enemy ground forces from miles away. You have to get right up their asses, both on the ground and in the air.
I don't remember, weren't you one of the ones *****ing that it was going to be another Vietnam, and that the big bad tough Afghans were going to turn the place into a bloodbath, and we'd have a flood of body bags coming home? The same type of horse**** that was said about the big, bad, tough, veteran Iraqi army that was going to dust our asses?
What you don't get is that despite the low level (yes, I said LOW level) of fratricidal casualties, integrated close air support is a key part of combined arms doctrine, and that is what puts the *******s down so effectively that they don't inflict much higher casualties on our forces.
Ask any front line troops if they'd prefer combat with close air support and the level of risk of fratricidal casualties, or combat with no close air support at all. When the poll results come back in, let me know.
Ask any front line troops if they'd prefer combat with close air support and the level of risk of fratricidal casualties, or combat with no close air support at all. When the poll results come back in, let me know.
(a) Close doesn't count. This isn't horseshoes or dancing.
(b) I'm sure we would have found another lackey in the country somewhere.
(c) Ask him if he'd rather be where he is, or still watching while the NA ineffectively fought against the Taleban.
(b) I'm sure we would have found another lackey in the country somewhere.
(c) Ask him if he'd rather be where he is, or still watching while the NA ineffectively fought against the Taleban.
b) Just as long as we all know that Afghanistan is just another in a long line of de facto US ruled countries...
c) He's a politician - what do you think???
Casualty numbers for civilians in Afghanistan are uncertain and unreliable. Such reporting as was done was inconsistent, and generally relied on either second or third hand reportage, or reportage made under Taleban "supervision."
Somalia? Sod off. What was your solution, Einstein? And what "civilians" are you referring to?
Panama? A joke, except for Noriega's "Dignity Brigade" retreating into the barrios and fighting in civilian clothes.
Iraq? There was this little thing called a war, and the Iraqis used civilians, reporters (the sub-basement of the al-Rashid hotel where foreign journalists were required to stay was a corps level command center for Baghdad defense forces, and also a major C&C center for central Iraqi air defense) as human shields/dummy targets. That and their hundreds of thousands of rounds of indiscriminate AAA fire, yada yada. Cry me a river.
Serbia - I ignored that one. We should have left it to you Euros. Would you have given the Sudetenland to Slobo then come back and proclaimed "peace for our time?"
Actually, the Sudetenland is a bit far away - now Greece OTOH?
Was that smart-arsed enough for you?
Look, basically you're not admitting your armed forces have a serious problem vis a vis friendly fire and general incompetence resulting in civilian casualties...
A old Washington Post article
"Accounting for more than 23 percent of the Americans killed in action and 15 percent of the wounded, friendly fire now appears to have caused about 10 times as high a percentage of U.S. battle casualties in the gulf as in any other 20th-century war.Though the military has not gathered official statistics before on such cases, a widely cited 1986 Army study by Lt. Col. Charles R. Shrader suggested that friendly fire caused "a statistically insignificant portion of total casualties" from World War I to Vietnam, "perhaps less than 2 percent."
In Afghanistan, at one point we were looking at 50% casualties...
There just seems to be an inherent lack of fire discipline in the US military - and I don't have to be in the military to see that...
PICTURE: Highway of Death, AKA OMG where did the tanks go?
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