Archive for April, 2010

How to send a letter to a soldier in Iraq?

Lindsay S asked:


I work for the State of Michigan and need to send a birth certificate application to a soldier in Iraq. He gave me his address, including an APO AE number and the camp he’s located at. But does mail to Iraq require any sort of postal code or anything?

First Aid Cpr Training
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US Navy Seal Operations in Iraq

James Kara Murat asked:


In the recent past the US Navy SEALs has been in the news for its operations in Iraq. It all began in the year 2003 when President George Bush ordered the Navy SEALs to invade Iraq. This Navy SEALs operation was called ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’.

Why it started

It was generally believed at the time in 2003 that Iraq possessed and was also developing on an active basis, weapons of mass destruction or WMD. This was strictly in violation of the 1991 agreement between the US and Iraq that stated these WMDs needed to be given up unconditionally. Bush’s aim was to get rid of Saddam Hussein’s support of terrorism and eventually free the citizens of Iraq. This is how the Navy SEALs mission began. While this mission was led by the US it also had the backing of Britain, Poland as well as Australia.

The fated day

On March 20th in the year 2003 at around 2:30 UTC, a series of explosions were heard from Baghdad. It has only recently been found that these explosions were a result of the group of special forces such as British SAS, US Delta Force, US Navy SEALs, Australian 4RAR as well as SASR etc. It has recently been proven that these troops headed straight for Baghdad even before the air war had started.

The Shock and Awe technique

In military parlance this term is commonly used to refer to the use of overwhelming force, dominant maneuvers and power displays to cripple the enemy’s power to fight. In order to accomplish victory as soon as possible the US strategy in Iraq involved the simultaneous usage of ground and air attacks to immobilize the Iraqi forces. Thus while the US army was attacking, the US Navy SEALs were also assaulting the forces in Iraq. Many Iraqi military units were bypassed successfully as part of the Navy SEALs operation.

Crippling the center

The idea behind the strategy of attack in Iraq was to immobilize the center of the Iraqi command as soon as possible while also ensuring that civilian deaths and loss of infrastructure were kept to a bare minimum. It was also estimated that once the leadership of Saddam Hussein was weakened it would automatically entail crippling of the Iraqi forces. The US Navy SEALs also hoped that in this context the Iraqi native people would be open to the US instead of Saddam’s terrorist rule.

The closing

During the closing hours of March 20th there were several amphibious attacks, as well as assaults carried out simultaneously by the British 3 Commando Brigade, the Royal Marines as well as US Navy SEALs to secure oil fields in Iraq. However in the course of this Navy SEALs mission close to 44 oil wells were destroyed and exploded by accident or by explosives launched by the Iraqi forces.



How To Install Vinyl Siding
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Satellite Broadband Internet For Us Troops In Afghanistan And Iraq

Ts2 Satellite Technologies asked:


“We were among the first telecommunications operators in the satellite technology in the territory of Iraq and Afghanistan and as such we have enjoyed a successful cooperation with the US Army for several years now” - says Marcin Frackiewicz, CEO of the TS2 Satellite Technologies.

TS2 Satellite Technologies offer two-way high-speed internet access with no phone lines, no cable, no dial-up modem. It’s always on, available virtually anywhere, and affordable. The laptop, or WLAN network, can receive internet signal through a special satellite VSAT modem which is usually set up in a building or tent when deployed.

To the soldiers stationed in the war-torn countries, one VSAT access point provides broadband access to the internet; telephone connections including voice over internet protocol (VoIP), IP phone and video-conference connections. In addition, soldiers can also transfer data to many other users simultaneously and share connections with others stationed in the same base. TS2 additionally equips its customers with Thuraya, Iridium and Inmarsat satellite telephones, which are often the only means of communication in this region of the world.

TS2’s satellite military networks are located in Al Taqaddum Air Base, Bahgram AF, Balad Base, Baquba Airfield, Brassfield-Mora, Cob Adder, Cob Speicher, Camp Al Asad Airbase, Camp Bucca Basra City, Camp Buehring, Camp Charlie Basra, Camp Eggers, Camp Fallujah, Camp Grizzly, Camp Korean Village, Camp Liberty, Camp Mejid, Camp Ramadi, Camp Slayer, Camp Stryker, Camp Taji, Camp Victory, Fob Bagram, Fob Brassfield Mora, Fob Delta Al Kut, Fob Diamondback, Fob Falcon, Fob Garryowen, Fob Gardez, Fob Ghazni, Fob Kalagush, Fob Kandahar, Fob Lagman, Fob Mchenry, Fob Marez, Fob Normandy, Fob Rustamiyah, Fob Summerall, Fob Sykes, Fob Salerno, Fob Torkham, Fob Warhorse, Fob Warrior, Herat RTC, Jallahabad Air Base, Kabul Airport, Kabul Camp Eggers, Kandahar Air Base, Lsa Anaconda Balad, Q-West Base Complex and Tallil Ab Lsa Adder.

TS2 delivers satellite equipment specially for U.S. Military Personnel, Contracting Officers and DoD Contractors to many military addresses in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Middle East within a maximum of 5-7 days .

http://www.ts2.pl/en/Internet-in-Iraq-for-US-Army-Soldiers

http://www.ts2.pl/en/Internet-in-Afghanistan-for-US-Army-Soldiers



Collectable Kitchen Plates
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What is it about democrats and complete reversals of policy on the invasion of Iraq?

Liberal AssKicker asked:


Do you remember when democrats, led by Clinton, called for regime change in Iraq in the late 90s?

Do you remember how most democrats campaigned for the invasion and voted in favor of it in 2002-2003?

(This is where liberal memories begin:)

Do you remember the 5 years of liberals absolutely trashing America for the invasion and calling for war crimes tribunals against Bush and co.?

And since Obama was elected, where are the protestors? Did the Iraq war suddenly become “cool” again?

Hands On CPR

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Deadline: A Crucial Date for Iraq Approaches

Randy L. Garsee asked:


     The ready smile was gone from Iraqi Army Corporal Gassem Mohammed’s freckled face, replaced with an intensity of purpose.  Three of his fellow soldiers lined up behind him against the wall.  A voice bellowed from the catwalk above and the four men moved in unison inside a small room and squeezed the triggers of their Kalishnikov rifles.  Gunfire echoed from the room only to be drowned by the gusting winds whipping over the Iraqi desert.  Mounted on the walls, two cardboard silhouettes are dotted with bullet holes.

     An American with a greying goatee and dark sunglasses walked briskly into the room.  Special Operations Advisor Rober Wise wore a camouflage shirt with the words “Army” over his right breast pocket and “Contractor” over his left.  A native of Alabama, Wise has 20 years of Special Forces experience and he’s using it as a civilian instructor to mold these young Iraqi soldiers.  He looked at Mohammed and said in an even tone,   “You don’t stop there.  You make your way further into the room.”

     The stern look evaporated from Mohammed’s face, replaced by the face of an attentive student wanting to please his teacher.  It’s time to do the exercise again.

     The clock is ticking.  Not just on America and it’s allies, but on the Iraqi military as well.  Late last year the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) was signed by Iraq and the U.S. and earlier this year the words were echoed by President Barack Obama.  The U.S. military will leave Iraq by the end of 2011.

     However, there is another major deadline looming.  U.S. and Coalition forces must be out of Iraq’s major urban centers by June 30, 2009.  In a matter of days, the Iraqi military must be ready to hold fast if a renewed insurgency and/or Al Qaeda attempts to take advantage of the military drawdown.

     The U.S. will not leave Iraq’s soldiers unprepared.  Aboard Al Asad Air Base in Iraq’s Al Anbar Province, Marines, often with the help of contractors like Wise, are training segments of the Iraqi Army to stand on its own and protect its citizens.

     Recently members of the 1st Company, Commando Battalion of the 7th Iraqi Army Division found themselves face-to-face with U.S. Marines and following their every lead.  The American military uses teams for their training.  A Military Transition Team is known by it’s acronym MiTT.  Iraqi police are also trained by Police Transition Teams, or PTTs.  Iraqi border guards are trained by BTTs, Border Transition Teams.  There are even POETTs, Port-of-Entry Training Teams.

     Corporal Muhammed and his team were almost ready to repeat the room-clearing technique.  His commando battalion is training to capture or kill insurgents, room by room, at their new Close Quarters Battle Course just outside Al Asad.  It’s also known as a “shoot house.”  The course is a metal house without a roof.  Where a roof would be is a steel catwalk where Iraqi officers stare down at their men or bark orders.  Gradually, Robert Wise speaks less and less to the Iraqi soldiers.  He wants the Iraqi officers to pick up the instruction and lead their own men.  It’s all part of the process of leaving Iraq.  Hand over authority, hand over towns, hand over training, hand over cities, day by day, to the Iraqis.  The nation’s sovereignty is written on paper and respected by the U.S. military, but sovereignty also means the Iraqis must assume every facet of their country’s security.

     Close Quarters fighting can be intimidating to learn, much less perform. Marine Lt. Col. John Van Messel, team leader of MiTT 7, stood on the catwalk next to the Iraqi officers and watched.  “I’ll tell you it’s no different than young Marines going into a shoot house in the United States,” Van Messel explained.  “The first time they do live fire in close quarters there’s a bit of trepidation.”

     This is where Mohammed had to be corrected by the instructor.  He listened intently, nodding as the interpretor, or the “terp” as they’re called here, translated the instructor’s words from English to Arabic.

     Next, they lined up outside and ran into the room again.  This time, each of the four are in the proper formation: two men against one wall, two on another.  Bullets slam through the cardboard silhouettes and the wood behind them.  The shoot house’s thick, steel, exterior walls forbid the rounds from leaving the building.

     Wise and his interpretor tell the four they did a good job.  Mohammed and his men leave, quickly replaced by four more Iraqi commandos ready to fire their first bullets into a small room.

     On the catwalk, the Iraqi commanding officer, 1st Lt. Amir Mwafic, is satisfied with what he’s observed.  “This training improves the abilities of our soldiers,” he  said.  “We, as officers, are more confident with our soldiers after the training.”

     Outside the shoot house, Corporal Gassem Mohammed is more relaxed and his comfortable smile has returned.  “The Marines have increased our experience.” he said with a nod, “and we are becoming faster than before.”

     At the end of the day, the battalion of Iraqi Commandos march away from the shoot house, climb into the back of several waiting pickups, and drive off to their camp on the opposite side of the Al Asad Air Base.

     Tomorrow is another day of training and tomorrow doesn’t wait.  The June 30th deadline for these Iraqis to be on their own, without the U.S. military watching over their collective shoulders, also will not wait.  Ready or not, the date is fast approaching. 

 



Braided Fishing Line
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How do we know that Iraq supported the people who attacked us?

Avatar here asked:


I’ve heard that it was faulty intelligence. Some people are saying straight out that the reason for this war was because Iraq was harboring terrorists or that the source of the attack was from terrorists in Iraq.

However, this neglects what is known about Bush’s reasons. Which was WMD and bring down evil man.

So what do you believe?

Steps To Performing Cpr

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The Role of US Navy Seals in Iraq

James Kara Murat asked:


US Navy SEALs are well known for being elite. US Nay SEALs have long being known for having to pass training requirements which would be considered literally impossible for any normal human being. Having to swim 50 meters under water is among many of the requirements that the US Nay SEALs ask of their soldiers. The peak physical of conditions of soldiers is not all they have going for them; they also have a unique loyalty to each other which can be best described by a recent event in Iraq. A grenade was thrown into a building with 3 soldiers, one of those soldiers, knowing he would not have enough time to remove the grenade from the building, jumped upon the grenade resulting in his own death in an attempt to save the other soldiers in the same building. Such admirable behavior and their success in small people, large impact missions help to create the ethos which surrounds the US Navy SEALs and make them worthy of so much respect.

One of the US Navy SEALs core competencies is being particularly skilled in close combat situations, which makes their input in Iraq particularly import when covert attacks with close by civilians form a large part of the duties which are needed. As a result of that US Navy SEALs have also been training other parts of the military in Iraq, making their role very important indeed.

The much controversial move by the US military to stop the flow of oil from Iraq was done thanks to the US Navy SEALs who completed the task with the precision and skill that we have come to except. Although people may raise claims of ulterior motives on behalf of the government, one cannot say that a task like this does not have significant benefits in the form of depleting infrastructure and therefore decreasing the morale and economic capabilities of the resistance. Such tasks are naturally assumed to be undertaken by the military when they invade a country, and it is often a task that falls on the US Navy SEALs, with past examples of destroying travel links in the forms of bridges and tunnels to make covert movement harder for those that wish to stand in the way of the US military.

Their role in Iraq, as expected, has been immense. So much so that they are used in the most mission critical strategic operations because of the skills, commitment and ability to perform that has earned them the respect of everyone in the field. More Navy SEALs have recently been called to Iraq because their being there is so important, and even ex Navy SEALs are in Iraq working for private security consultants that are sub-contracted by the military to help in situations which require highly skilled ex military personnel. Whether in Iraq, Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world; when you need a military operation done correctly you can always count on the US Navy SEALs to get the job done right.



Instant Hot Water Heater
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Why do so many care about the American casualties in Iraq, but nobody cares about Iraqi casualties?

Brad asked:


I’ve noticed this hypocrisy of most of the supposed “anti-war” groups. Nobody ever mentions that the War on Iraq has led to the death of over 1 million Iraqis, but the respectable “anti-war” groups have constantly mentioned how many Americans have been killed.

Why does nobody seem to care at all about Iraqis who have been maimed or killed in this War?

Goodman Heat Pumps

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