Saturday, October 17, 2009

Pentagon Identifies Army Casualties (OEF)

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17, 2009 -- The following news release made available Saturday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement identifying casualties:
The Department of Defense announced today the death of two soldiers who were supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. They died Oct. 16 in Wardak province, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their vehicle with an improvised explosive device. The soldiers were assigned to the 143rd Infantry Detachment, Austin, Texas.

Killed were:
  • Staff Sgt. Chris N. Staats, 32, of Fredericksburg, Texas.

  • Spc. Anthony G. Green, 28, of Matthews, N.C.

(Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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Pentagon Identifies Army Casualty (OEF)

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17, 2009 -- The following news release made available Saturday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement identifying a casualty:
The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

Sgt. Christopher M. Rudzinski, 28, of Rantoul, Ill., died Oct. 16 near Kandahar, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device. He was assigned to 293rd Military Police Company, 385th Military Police Battalion, 16th Military Police Brigade (Airborne), Fort Stewart, Ga.
(Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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Friday, October 16, 2009

Pentagon: Army Says Body Armor Safe, Despite GAO Report

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News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- Despite testing anomalies cited in a Government Accountability Office report on body armor released today, the program executive officer for the organization that fields new equipment to soldiers said the armor plates in question are safe.

At a Pentagon news conference just hours after release of the GAO report, Army said Brig. Gen. Peter Fuller said the 85,000 "X Small Arms Protective Inserts" of interest in the report have not been fielded to soldiers and are in storage, and that the plates now in use are safe.

"We have the best body armor by far," Fuller said. "And we appreciate the oversight we get from organizations such as GAO, because what they do is ensure we provide the very best to our soldiers."

Fuller said the Army has worked closely with GAO and other organizations to improve testing and evaluation in the acquisition process, and that the Army has, in fact, made improvements. The GAO report, he said, points out pains the Army has had with improvements in its evaluation and testing processes.

"The challenge we are having with this GAO audit report is they are challenging our processes, and I think what we are really identifying is we have had an evolution of processes and we need to better articulate what we are doing there," he said.

The 85,000 inserts in question are ceramic plates that fit into tactical vests for wear by soldiers to provide protection against projectiles and fragmentation. The GAO report questions the Army's adherence to some testing protocols when evaluating the plates.

"Overall reliability and repeatability of the test results are uncertain," the report said.

Fuller said the Army is conducting additional testing on the plates to document their safety in compliance with standards. Phase II testing, he said, already has been conducted, and Phase III testing will start in November.

"We told GAO [and] we told the Hill yesterday, we are interested in taking all this data, the Phase II testing, Phase III testing, the additional surveillance testing -- wrap it all up in one report and provide it back to the Hill," Fuller said.

Fuller said he hopes to articulate to both GAO and Congress that although Army testing protocols have experienced challenges, the armor is, in fact, safe. Phase II testing on both plate designs in question have shown a "very high statistical confidence interval," the general said.

"They are fantastic plates," he added.

(Report by C. Todd Lopez, Army News Service.)

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Wire: Turkey Nabs 50 Suspected al-Qaida-Linked Militants

Off the Wire

Off the Wire:

Group planned attacks against U.S. targets -- may have trained in Afghanistan.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- Newswire services today reported that Turkish police have detained at least 50 suspected al-Qaida-linked militants in raids across nine provinces.

Local media say the militants, thought to be members of a group (the Islamic Jihad League) tied to al-Qaida, were planning attacks against U.S., Israeli and NATO targets in Turkey.

VOA News noted that local media reports say the suspects may have had contact with al-Qaida's second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahri, and may have been trained in Afghanistan.

Turkey's Hurriyet daily says police Thursday seized an unlicensed gun, documents, compact discs and laptops during a search of homes and offices of suspected al-Qaida members in the eastern province of Van.

(Report from newswire sources.)

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Pentagon: Missing F-16 Pilot’s Crash Debris Found in Ocean

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News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- Coast Guard searchers today found crash debris believed to belong to a missing Air Force pilot’s F-16 jet that collided yesterday with another F-16 near the South Carolina coast during a night-training exercise, an Air Force spokesman said today.

“The Coast Guard has found some debris in the ocean that is apparently from our missing F-16,” Robert Sexton, chief of public affairs at Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter, S.C., said during a telephone interview with American Forces Press Service. Shaw Air Force Base is the home of the 20th Fighter Wing, to which the jets belong.

The two F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft collided about 40 miles east of Folly Beach, S.C., over the Atlantic Ocean around 8:30 p.m. yesterday, according to an Air Force news release. The pilot of one plane, Capt. Lee Bryant, was able to safely land his damaged jet at Charleston Air Force Base, S.C.

The other pilot, Capt. Nicholas Giglio, is missing.

“They have not yet found any sign of the pilot and the search continues,” Sexton said. No one, he said, witnessed what happened to Giglio after the collision.

The incident, he said, occurred during a routine night-training mission.

Foul weather, including rain and fog, has hindered the Coast Guard’s search for Giglio, Sexton said.

“The Coast Guard is doing an absolutely incredible job of running the search and rescue mission,” he said. “We’re just tremendously grateful for the assistance of the Coast Guard, the Navy, Charleston Air Force Base [and] all of the other agencies that are participating in the search and rescue.”

Shaw Air Force Base is about 90 miles west of Charleston Air Force Base along the South Carolina coast.

The F-16s are “CJ” models optimized for suppression of enemy air defenses, Sexton said.

A board of officers will investigate the incident and details will be released as they become available, he said.

(Report by Gerry J. Gilmore, American Forces Press Service.)

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Pentagon: Ballistic Missile Defense Review Fact Sheet Available

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- The Pentagon today announced that the Ballistic Missile Defense Review (BMDR) terms of reference fact sheet is available for download.

The BMDR addresses the central aspects of the Department of Defense's Ballistic Missile Defense program including policy and strategy; plans and budgets; acquisition processes, roles and responsibilities; test programs; and international cooperation for the next five years. The BMDR terms of reference were approved by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

The BMDR is congressionally-mandated under the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009, Sec. 234 (Public Law 110-417). The BMDR will be provided to Congress in January 2010.

The fact sheet is available for download in pdf format at the link/URL below:

http://www.defense.gov/news/BMDRFactSheet.pdf

(Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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Pentagon Says Closely Monitoring Situation in Pakistan

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News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- The Defense Department is closely monitoring the situation in Pakistan, following a series of terrorist attacks there that have killed or injured scores of innocent people, a senior Pentagon spokesman said here today.

The latest attack occurred today when a suicide car bomber attacked a police station in the Pakistani city of Peshawar, according to news reports. The explosion reportedly killed 13 people, including three police, a woman and a child, and injured 10 other people.

Responding to a reporter’s query, Bryan Whitman said he could not provide an analysis of the attacks in Pakistan at this time. However, he said, senior U.S. officials are alert to the recent violence in Pakistan and “are watching the situation closely.”

Such terrorist violence is troublesome and tragic, he said, because innocent civilians are dying.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s government remains resolved to fight and defeat the terrorists, Whitman said, adding that Pentagon officials are “encouraged by their efforts.”

Yesterday, militants attacked three Pakistani security agency buildings, including the Federal Investigation Agency headquarters and two police training centers, in Lahore. A suicide car bomber also struck in the northwestern city of Kohat, and there was a reported bombing in Quetta in the southwest of the country. News reports cited at least 30 Pakistani police and civilian deaths as a result of yesterday’s attacks.

The Pakistani Taliban reportedly took responsibility for yesterday’s attacks on the Federal Investigation Agency and police training centers in Lahore.

The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad strongly condemned yesterday’s terrorist attacks in Pakistan, vowing continued U.S. support to help Pakistan combat violence.

The embassy issued the condemnation of the attacks as President Barack Obama signed a law that provides $7.5 billion in nonmilitary aid to Pakistan over the next five years. The funds are part of a comprehensive plan that recognizes the importance of confronting the root causes of extremism as well as extremists themselves.

The new law will provide $1.5 billion each year from 2010 to 2014 for schools, hospitals, roads, agricultural aid, roadwork and other development projects.

“This act formalizes that partnership, based on a shared commitment to improving the living conditions of the people of Pakistan through sustainable economic development, strengthening democracy and the rule of law, and combating the extremism that threatens Pakistan and the United States,” White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said yesterday.

On Oct. 12, at least 41 people were reportedly killed and 45 were wounded in a blast at a security checkpoint in northwest Pakistan’s Swat Valley region.

An Oct. 11 attack on Pakistan's army headquarters in Rawalpindi outside Islamabad reportedly killed 11 Pakistani troops and three civilians. Nine terrorists were reportedly killed.

Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called Pakistan Army chief Gen. Ashfaq Kayani following the Rawalpindi attack to express personal condolences for those killed, while emphasizing continued U.S. support.

Mullen has made numerous trips to Pakistan during the past 18 months, and talks regularly with his Pakistani counterparts about their stepped-up counteroffensive against extremists.

U.S. embassy officials in Pakistan expressed outrage yesterday over the latest string of attacks.

“The horrific injuries and loss of life witnessed in Lahore, Peshawar and Kohat today, along with those lost in the attack on the Pakistan Army General Headquarters, are another stark reminder of the amoral nature of those who commit such acts,” according to a statement released yesterday. “These attacks will not deter the people of Pakistan from continuing in their commitment to a free and democratic society.

“The United States will continue to support the people and government of Pakistan in combating all forms of violence,” the statement continued. “We mourn the senseless loss of life and extend our condolences to the victims' families, friends and community.”

(Report by Gerry J. Gilmore, American Forces Press Service.)

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US Air Force: F-16s Collide, One Pilot, Aircraft Missing

CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE
Two F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft, like the one shown here, from Shaw Air Force Base, S.C., collided during night training exercises Oct. 15 over the Atlantic Ocean about 40 miles east of Folly Beach, S.C. One aircraft landed safely. The second aircraft and the pilot, Capt. Nicholas Giglio, are missing and a search is underway. (U.S. Air Force photo.)

News in Balance:

SHAW AIR FORCE BASE, S.C., Oct. 16, 2009 -- Two F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft collided during night training exercises Oct. 15 over the Atlantic Ocean about 40 miles east of Folly Beach, S.C.

Captain Nicholas Giglio, from the 20th Fighter Wing here, and his aircraft are missing and a search is underway.

The second F-16, piloted by Capt. Lee Bryant, was able to land safely at Charleston AFB, S.C. Captain Bryant was unharmed.

Aircraft and surface vessels of the U.S. Coast Guard are combing the ocean east of Charleston.

A board of officers will investigate the accident. As additional details become available, they will be released.

(Report from a U.S. Air Force news release.)

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Pentagon Discuses Guard's Response in 'Balloon Boy' Incident

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News in Balance:

ARLINGTON, Va., Oct. 16, 2009 -- The Colorado Army National Guard joined rescue efforts for a 6-year-old boy believed adrift in a homemade hot air balloon yesterday.

Colorado citizen-soldiers used UH-60 Black Hawk and OH-58 Kiowa helicopters to provide military assistance to civilian authorities who believed Falcon Heene was inside a silver Mylar balloon adrift over the northern Colorado plains, National Guard Bureau officials said.

The Federal Aviation Administration and sheriff's deputies were told that the experimental helium hot air balloon broke free from its tethers at the Heenes' home in Fort Collins with the boy inside.

The Colorado National Guard's Joint Operations Center responded to an Air Force Rescue Coordination Center request for assistance to the Larimer County Sheriff's Office, Colorado National Guard officials said.

The Black Hawk, which had rescue capabilities in the event that an airborne rescue was required, carried observers and medical personnel, 1st Air Force officials reported.

The Colorado National Guard stood down from the mission after local authorities determined that the boy was safe in his home.

Located under 1st Air Force at Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida, the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center is the agency responsible for coordinating on-land federal search and rescue activities in the 48 contiguous United States, Mexico and Canada. It directly ties to the FAA's alerting system.

(Report by Army Staff Sgt. Jim Greenhill, National Guard Bureau public affairs.)

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OEF Summary, Oct. 16, 2009: Forces in Afghanistan Kill, Detain Militants

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

KABUL, Oct. 16, 2009 -- Afghan and international forces killed militants today in a clash in which a woman and child died in the crossfire, killed several more enemy fighters in a separate operation, and arrested more than a dozen militants yesterday who had set up an illegal checkpoint, military officials reported.

Militants attacked Afghan National Police and an international security force working to interdict suspected militants believed responsible for attacks in Afghanistan’s Ghazni province today. The combined force returned fire, killing two of the attackers, officials said, and found a woman and school-aged girl who apparently were accidentally killed in the crossfire when they entered the building.

“Afghanistan continues to be a dangerous place, and we are genuinely sorry when any Afghan civilians are killed,” said Army Col. Wayne Shanks, a spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force. “Our operational planning tries to prevent any casualties, but our enemy continues to engage our forces without regard for any Afghan civilians in the area. However, I believe our partnership with the Afghan forces conducting patrols such as this will bring more security to this area and prevent more innocent Afghans from being killed or injured.”

In a separate operation today, an Afghan and international security force killed enemy militants and detained several suspected militants during a search in Wardak province for a Taliban commander and his element responsible for recent attacks in the region. The combined force received rocket-propelled grenade fire and returned fire, killing the militants.

In another operation in Paktika province today, several suspected militants were detained after a search of buildings known to be used by a Haqqani terrorist network facilitator and his element. The suspects are believed responsible for financing and supplying weapons and ammunition to other militant groups in the region.

In other news, Afghan and international forces detained more than a dozen suspected militants staging an illegal checkpoint yesterday on a highway in the Urgun district of Paktika province.

Delivery truck drivers informed the combined force that the militants were making them pay taxes.

The detained militants had assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, a body-armor vest and six ammunition belts. The combined force confiscated those items and two vehicles and turned them over to the Afghan National Police.

(From a NATO International Security Assistance Force news release.)

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OIF Summary, Oct.16, 2009: Iraqi Forces Hunt al-Qaida, Nab 6 Terrorism Suspects

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- Iraqi security forces, working with U.S. advisors, arrested six terrorism suspects today and yesterday in four operations in Iraq, military officials reported.

During a security operation in Kirkuk today, an Iraqi emergency services unit arrested two suspects while searching for a vehicle-bomb network member with ties to al-Qaida in Iraq. The security team questioned two suspects during a building search and arrested them after determining they posed a threat to the community.

Near Muqdaadiyah, northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi police arrested two suspects today during another security operation. The security team encountered and questioned the suspects while searching for a man known to have close ties to leaders of both al-Qaida in Iraq and the Islamic State of Iraq terrorist group.

In Baghdad yesterday, Iraqi police arrested a suspected Baghdad-based al-Qaida in Iraq leader believed to have transported large quantities of explosives into Iraq to facilitate large-scale attacks in urban areas. Intelligence reports indicate he also helped to bring foreign fighters into Iraq to stage attacks against civilians and security forces. The suspect also allegedly is involved in kidnapping, document forgery and other criminal activity, officials said.

In a separate operation yesterday, Iraqi soldiers searched two buildings in western Mosul for a suspected al-Qaida in Iraq cell leader operating in the area. Based on evidence found during the search, they arrested a man identified as a criminal accomplice suspected of smuggling Syrian foreign fighters into Iraq to carry out attacks against Iraqi and U.S. forces.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq news releases.)

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Wire: 4 US Troops Die in Afghanistan Bomb Attack

Off the Wire
October 13, 2009: President Barack Obama was called up to show off his dance moves with Mexican pop singer Thalia at Tuesday's Fiesta Latina event at the White House. (Whitehouse.gov Video on YouTube.) The White House has said a decision on Afghan strategy will be made in "the coming weeks."

Off the Wire:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16, 2009 -- Newswire services this morning reported that four more American troops died in a bombing in southern Afghanistan, the U.S. military said Friday.

The Associated Press reported that two of the U.S. servicemembers were killed instantly in the Thursday blast and two others died of their wounds, the U.S. said in a statement. No further details were released.

The deaths bring to 25 the number of American servicemembers killed in Afghanistan this month, according to an AP count.
Elsewhere, four Afghans, including at least two civilians, died during a firefight Friday between militants and a joint international-Afghan force in Ghazni province. There were conflicting accounts of the gunbattle.

The NATO-led coalition said two militants fired from a two-story building and troops returned fire, killing a pair of gunmen. "When the joint force entered the building, they discovered two civilians who subsequently died from their wounds," the coalition said in a statement. "It is unclear if the enemy militants or the joint force are responsible for the deaths."

Ghazni police chief Gen. Khail Buz Sherzai said the dead were all civilians from the same family. A native of Mangor village, Mohammad Sarwar, said the operation began late Thursday when U.S. and Afghan forces raided several houses overnight, blowing apart doors and window with explosives. He also said four civilians were killed in the operation and several were beaten.
Insurgent violence has increased across Afghanistan this year, coinciding with the implementation of President Barack Obama's military strategy. Obama has been considering whether to commit still more American troops to the about 65,000 already here. The White House has said a decision on Afghan strategy will be made in "the coming weeks."

(Report from newswire sources.)

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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Combat Camera Video: 2/8 Marines Move to New Patrol Base, Firefight, Helmand Province, Afghanistan


NOTE: News readers click here to watch the video.

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 15, 2009 -- Embedded above is a b-roll video of U.S. Marines with Afghan National Army soldiers moving through fields in order to establish a patrol base in Garmsir District Helmand province, Afghanistan. Scenes include Marines and ANA soldiers moving through fields and holding Patrol Base Barcha during an attack from enemy forces. (Produced by Lance Cpl. Paul Miller, Regimental Combat Team 3. Length: 00:05:26)

COMBAT CAMERA More Combat Camera Imagery on THE TENSION

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US Air Force Reports First Death from H1N1 (Swine Flu) Complications

News in Balance
News from the U.S. Air Force.

News in Balance:

LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz., Oct. 15, 2009 -- A Luke Air Force Base NCO died Oct. 4 from complications with the H1N1 virus at his off-base residence in Glendale, Ariz.

Staff Sgt. Shawn J. Rankin, 25, died at approximately 4 a.m. and was unresponsive to emergency responders at his residence and then transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Sergeant Rankin's death resulted from complications with the H1N1 virus, according to preliminary autopsy results from the Maricopa County Medical Examiner's Office.

"Our thoughts and prayers go out to Sergeant Rankin's family, co-workers, and friends," said Brig. Gen. Kurt F. Neubauer, the 56th Fighter Wing commander. "He was a valuable member of Team Luke, and he will be greatly missed."

Sergeant Rankin of Anchorage, Alaska, was assigned to the 56th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron and served as an F-16 Fighting Falcon crew chief at Luke AFB since February 2008. Sergeant Rankin joined the Air Force in October 2003.

He is the first Airmen to die of complications related to H1N1.

(Report from a U.S. Air Force news release.)

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Pentagon: Global Commitments Stretch Army

News in Balance

News in Balance:
EDITOR'S NOTE: Newswire service this morning reported that the Pentagon hopes to avoid cutting back the time U.S. servicemembers spend at home between combat tours but it remains an option depending on the demands of the Afghan mission, according to press secretary Geoff Morrell. The Defense Department early this afternoon released the following article.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 15, 2009 -- With more than 1.1 million active and reserve-component soldiers in the U.S. Army, some may wonder how the service could be stressed, as is commonly discussed and reported.

The answer lies in the number of deployments soldiers have around the world -- known as operations tempo -- and the “dwell time” needed for them to spend at home between deployments, officials say.

The following is a look at where soldiers are based as of Oct. 6.

The Army has 552,400 active-component soldiers, who are called upon most for operations and exercises. Of the Army’s 207,400 reservists, 21,700 are mobilized. The Army National Guard has 362,000 soldiers, with 58,100 activated. Once Guard and Army Reserve soldiers come on active duty, there is no difference between them and active-component soldiers. Reservists can be called up for one-year tours, including training.

According to Army statistics, 102,400 active-component soldiers are based overseas, and 450,000 are in the continental United States. About 21,200 soldiers are in Hawaii, and 13,200 are in Alaska. Soldiers deploy to contingencies around the world. Some 38,200 soldiers are based with U.S. Army Europe, and 17,300 serve with U.S. Forces Korea.

The two largest contingencies for the Army are Iraq and Afghanistan, with 98,025 soldiers operating in Iraq and 43,800 in Afghanistan. Another 12,700 soldiers based in Kuwait provide assistance to both theaters in U.S. Central Command, and 1,050 soldiers work in Qatar.

But those aren’t the only areas of operations. NATO’s Kosovo Force in the Balkans has 1,525 U.S. soldiers – most from the Army National Guard. Ten soldiers based in Bosnia work with the European Union effort in that country.

Another 700 soldiers are part of the Multinational Force and Observers in the Sinai desert. Since 1981, a battalion of American soldiers has been in the area to ensure peace between Israel and Egypt.

Some 1,200 soldiers are based with Joint Task Force Horn of Africa. They’re based mainly in Djibouti, but also work in Ethiopia and other areas of the region.

Another 600 soldiers are part of Joint Task Force Guantanamo, helping to run the detention center at the Guantanamo Naval Base, Cuba, and in Honduras, 325 soldiers are part of Joint Task Force Bravo, which works at improving military-to-military ties with Central American countries. In place since the mid-1980s, the command has used civil-military operations to connect with the people of the region.

There are 225 soldiers in the Philippines, working to develop the capabilities of the Philippine armed forces, and another 3,440 soldiers are deployed around the world in “other operations and exercises,” officials said.

Added to these numbers are soldiers going through various levels of training, sick or injured, on recruiting duty or involved in other aspects of maintaining the base.

The bottom line is that there are more than 266,000 soldiers deployed or forward stationed in almost 80 countries around the world.

(Report by Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service.)

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OIF Summary, Oct.15, 2009: Iraqis Nab 15 in Multiple Operations

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 15, 2009 -- Iraqi security forces arrested 15 suspects in a variety of operations in recent days, military officials reported.

Iraqi soldiers, with U.S. advisors, arrested a man identified as an Islamic State of Iraq associate in Mosul today during a search targeting the leader of the terrorist group’s extortion ring in the area.

Evidence found at the scene indicated the suspect is a member of a network that charges construction contractors a fee based on the cost of projects. Those who do not comply with the group’s demands are threatened or attacked, officials said. Further information gathered indicates the arrested man has ties to the 49 suspected Mosul extortion network members arrested earlier this week, which included the arrest of two local extortion ringleaders suspected of funding attacks against local civilians and Iraqi security forces.

Also today, Iraqi security forces arrested three suspected terrorists during separate operations in the Baghdad and Salahuddin regions.

Iraqi forces, with U.S. advisors, arrested a man while searching for the suspected leader of an al-Qaida in Iraq cell believed to be responsible for bombing attacks in Baghdad.

In a separate security operation, police in Iraq’s Salahuddin province, with U.S. advisors, searched two buildings near Kawri, north of Baghdad, for an Islamic State of Iraq member suspected of staging suicide-vest attacks in the Duluiyah area. Based on information gathered at the scene, they arrested two suspected criminals.

In three separate operations yesterday, Iraqi forces searched for and arrested four suspects near Kirkuk, Baghdad and Mosul. An emergency services unit arrested two suspects while searching for the leader of an Islamic State of Iraq vehicle-bomb cell leader near Tuz Khurmatu, southwest of Kirkuk. One was arrested based on a warrant, and the other was taken into custody based on evidence gathered at the scene.

During a separate operation, Iraqi security forces searched a building near Kawri, north of Baghdad, and arrested a man suspected of coordinating suicide-vest attacks in the Duluiyah area.

In western Mosul, federal police arrested a bombing network member suspected to be involved in assassination attempts against Iraqi security forces officials in Mosul.

In the Radwaniyah area south of Baghdad on Oct. 13, Multinational Division Baghdad soldiers, along with Iraqi security forces, detained a man wanted on a terrorism warrant. U.S. troops worked with Iraqi police to serve the warrant on the suspect, who is believed to be a key figure in a roadside-bomb cell operating southern Baghdad.

In operations Oct. 11 and 12, Iraqi security forces arrested six suspects suspected of staging attacks against security forces and civilians.

Iraqi soldiers, with U.S. forces advisors, conducted an Oct. 11 security operation in northwestern Baghdad that netted two arrests. The subject of the search was a suspected Jaysh al-Mahdi terrorist group member accused of planning and conducting roadside-bomb attacks. During the search, the security team apprehended and arrested two other people suspected to be associates of the network.

During Oct. 12 operations in Baghdad, Kirkuk and Mosul, Iraqi forces, with U.S. forces advisors, arrested four men suspected of conducting attacks against security forces.

In Baghdad, the security team searched for a suspected Kataib Hizballah terrorist group member and arrested one man without incident.

Southeast of Kirkuk, Iraqi police, with U.S. advisors, searched for a suspect believed to have direct links to al-Qaida in Iraq and Islamic State of Iraq members. They arrested two suspects during the search of several buildings when information gathered during the search appeared to link them to criminal activity.

Also, federal police, with U.S. forces advisors, apprehended and questioned a man in eastern Mosul during a search for an Islamic State of Iraq member suspected of involvement with an oil extortion network and extortion-related assassinations within the city.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq and Multinational Corps Iraq news releases.)

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OEF Summary, Oct. 15, 2009: Forces in Afghanistan Kill, Detain Militants

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 15, 2009 -- Afghan and international forces killed and detained multiple suspected militants in operations to interdict Taliban activity in Afghanistan’s Zabul and Wardak provinces in recent days, military officials reported.

A combined force was fired upon during a search today in the Bahar district of Zabul province in pursuit of a Taliban commander and his element believed to be responsible for attacks in the region. They returned fire, killing the militants, one of whom was found to be wearing a suicide vest. The combined force found and destroyed assault rifles, ammunition belts and communications gear found at the scene.

In another operation today, combined security forces killed several enemy militants who fired on them and posed hostile threats in the Chak district of Wardak province after searching compounds known to be used by a Taliban commander and his element. The militants are believed to be responsible for numerous attacks and for supplying weapons and fighters into the region.

The forces continued their search, detained several suspected militants, and found and destroyed bomb-making materials, machine guns, assault rifles, fragmentation grenades, ammunition belts and a small cache of ammunition.

On Oct. 13, an Afghan and international security force killed a Taliban commander in Zabul province. He and his element are believed to be responsible for several attacks in the region.

When the Taliban commander’s vehicle was stopped west of Qalat City, he did not comply with the force’s commands, posed a hostile threat by moving against the force, and was killed.

(Compiled from NATO International Security Force news releases.)

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

OEF Update, Oct. 14, 2009: Afghan-International Security Force Kills Militant; Emergency Aircraft Landing

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

KABUL, Afghanistan, Oct. 14, 2009 -- An Afghan and International security force killed an enemy militant Oct. 13, in Zabul province during an operation to pursue a Taliban commander and his element responsible for several attacks in the region.

The joint security force searched a vehicle approximately five kilometers west of Qalat City. When the force stopped the vehicle, the suspected militant did not comply with the force's commands, posed a hostile threat moving against the force and was killed.

The joint force searched the vehicle and identified the dead enemy militant as the Taliban commander the search was launched to pursue.

No Afghan civilians were harmed during this operation.

Emergency Aircraft Landing

A coalition helicopter conducted an emergency landing Oct. 13 in southern Afghanistan. No one was injured. Enemy engagement has been ruled out as the cause of the landing, and further details of the incident are under investigation.

ISAF Casualties

No International Security Assistance Force service members were killed during the past 24 hours.

(Compiled from NATO International Security Assistance Force news releases.)

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Pentagon Discuses Press Reports About Afghan Troop Levels

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2009 -- Defense Department officials have been straightforward about the number of U.S. troops flowing into Afghanistan, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said here today.

As deliberations on the way forward in Afghanistan continue at the White House, Morrell addressed media reports that implied the department was sending an extra 13,000 servicemembers to Afghanistan as enablers for added combat forces.

“There was no effort under way by the president, by the secretary, by anybody in this department to try to, in any way, mislead people about the forces that had been approved and were flowing into country,” Morrell said. “We’ve been absolutely candid about that from the get-go. It’s been 21,700 that were approved, and that’s what is flowing into country.”

That number includes enablers, Morrell said before going over the timeline for the personnel plus-up.

President Barack Obama on Feb. 17 signed off on sending 17,700 additional forces to Afghanistan. At the time, 38,089 Americans were in the country. Another 6,059 servicemembers – approved by President George W. Bush – also were flowing into Afghanistan at the time. “That brings us to roughly 44,000 forces,” Morrell said.

On March 27, Obama increased the number of forces going to Afghanistan, adding a brigade to train the Afghan security forces bringing the number of troops he had approved to 21,000.

About 66,000 American servicemembers are now in Afghanistan, and the number will reach 68,000 at the end of the year. “There are no additional forces that have been surreptitiously deployed to Afghanistan in support of the mission there,” Morrell said.

The British government announced today that they will add 500 more forces to Afghanistan. This will bring their contribution to the effort in the country to 9,500, the second-most after the United States. “We welcome that contribution, as we do all contributions from our alliance partners,” Morrell said.

Morrell stressed that Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates expects to be able to maintain current “dwell time” intervals at home stations between deployments for servicemembers deploying to Afghanistan. “The secretary is the one who had to make the extraordinarily difficult decision of extending tour lengths when the situation was particularly bad in Iraq and required a surge of forces,” he said. “He bit the bullet and made the decision to extend tour lengths in Iraq to 15 months.”

In August, the last soldiers affected by this extension came home. Now, no unit in U.S. Central Command is deploying for longer than 12 months, the press secretary said.

“That is something [Gates] very much wants to hold to if at all possible,” Morrell said. “I see no indication at this point that that would have to be adjusted. But I think we always reserve the right to make adjustments if that's what national security dictates.”

The secretary has said he wants to maintain predictability for servicemembers and their families.

(Report by Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service.)

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Wire: Obama to Allow Russian Visits to US Nuclear Sites

Off the Wire

Off the Wire:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2009 -- Newswire services this afternoon reported that Russia and the United States have tentatively agreed to a weapons inspection program that would allow Russians to visit nuclear sites in America to count missiles and warheads.

The plan, which Fox News has learned was agreed to in principle during negotiations, would constitute the most intrusive weapons inspection program the U.S. has ever accepted.
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who met with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, said publicly Tuesday that the two nations have made "considerable" progress toward reaching agreement on a new strategic arms treaty.

The 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START, expires in December and negotiators have been racing to reach agreement on a successor.

Clinton said the U.S. would be as transparent as possible.

"We want to ensure that every question that the Russian military or Russian government asks is answered," she said, calling missile defense "another area for deep cooperation between our countries."
See link below for additional details.

(Report from newswire sources.)

Source: Tentative Inspection Program Would Allow Russia to Visit U.S. Nuclear Sites

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OIF Summary, Oct.14, 2009: Iraqis Nab Bribery Suspect, Extortionist's Associate

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2009 -- Iraqi security forces, working with U.S. advisors, apprehended a bribery suspect and an associate of an alleged extortionist yesterday in Mosul, Iraq, military officials reported.

Acting on a warrant, Iraqi forces searched several buildings for extortion ring members operating in the area. During the search, the team apprehended a man who identified himself as a lawyer who represents members of the Islamic State of Iraq terrorist group in the area. While questioning the lawyer, the Iraqi forces determined he was wanted on a warrant for having suspected ties to the terrorist group's extortion ring in Mosul.

The lawyer allegedly has used money stolen from local companies and private citizens to pay government officials to release jailed criminals, and also is believed to have stolen money from construction companies, factories and private citizens to fund terrorist attacks and criminal activity. He is believed to represent numerous terrorists and have ties to senior terrorist group leaders, officials said.

Also in Mosul yesterday, federal police arrested an associate of an extortion ringleader suspected of stealing from local residents and businesses.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq news releases.)

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Pentagon Discusses National Defense Authorization Bill for Fiscal 2010

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2009 -- Congress has reached agreement on a $680.2 billion National Defense Authorization Bill for fiscal 2010.

The bill authorizes a 3.4 percent military pay increase and full funding for the Defense Health Program, and it caps F-22 Raptor production at 187 aircraft. For civilian workers, it ends the National Security Personnel System. It includes a base budget of $550.2 billion and $130 billion for overseas contingency operations.

Congress released the conference report Oct. 7. The full Senate and House must pass the conference report before the bill goes to President Barack Obama for his signature.

The bill includes $560 million to continue development and initial procurement of the alternate F136 engine for the F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates recommended that the funding be struck, arguing development of the F135 engine – the main engine for the F-35 – is proceeding well and that any money spent of the F136 would be wasteful. House and Senate conferees still included the engine in the fiscal 2010 budget authorization. White House officials said it is up to the president whether to veto the legislation over the inclusion.

The bill authorizes payment of hostile fire pay, imminent danger pay, hazardous duty pay, assignment pay and skill incentive pay to be prorated to reflect actual qualifying service performed during the month.

The authorization bill is one of two bills needed for the Defense Department to spend money – the other being the appropriations bill, which is still in a Senate-House committee to resolve differences between the two chambers’ versions.

The authorization bill includes end strengths of 562,000 for the Army,; 202,100 for the Marine Corps, 331,700 for the Air Force, and 328,000 for the Navy. The legislation authorizes an increase in active-duty Army end-strength of 30,000 in fiscal 2011 and 2012.

The bill authorizes $6.7 billion for all-terrain mine-resistant, ambushed protected vehicles, known as M-ATVs. The first of these vehicles have arrived in Afghanistan, with thousands more to be delivered under the new budget.

The authorization bill conference report has full funding for the Navy’s Carrier Replacement Program, a Virginia-class submarine, a littoral combat ship, a DDG-1000 destroyer and the DDG-51 program. The bill includes $512 million for 18 more F/A-18E/F Super Hornet aircraft and approves the full request for 22 EA-18G aircraft – an advanced electronic warfare plane named the Growler.

The bill authorizes $7.5 billion to train and equip the Afghan National Army and Afghan National Police, and provides oversight of the $700 million dedicated to building Pakistan’s military, police and frontier corps, which guards Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan. The authorization also allows for the transfer of defense property in Iraq to Iraqi security forces or Afghan security forces.

The bill kills the Multiple Kill Vehicle program and the second Airborne Laser platform. It applies savings from terminations in the Army’s Future Combat System to other promising technologies and ensures these will spin out to Army brigades quickly.

The conference report repeals the authority for the National Security Personnel System and requires that affected employees transition to previously existing personnel systems. The authorization will provide new personnel flexibilities that include hiring, firing, assigning personnel and appraisals. The authorization also allows the secretary to propose other personnel flexibilities.

(Report by Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service.)

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Photo Essay: Future USS New York Transits Mississippi River

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NEW ORLEANS (Oct. 13, 2009) Members of the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans honor guard render honors to the amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21) as the ship transits the Mississippi River after departing Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in Avondale, La. New York has 7.5 tons of steel from the World Trade Center in her bow, and is scheduled to be commissioned Nov. 7 in New York. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John P. Curtis.)

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NEW ORLEANS (Oct. 13, 2009) The amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21) maneuvers under the New Orleans Crescent City Connection bridge on the Mississippi River after departing Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in Avondale, La. New York has 7.5 tons of steel from the World Trade Center in her bow, and is scheduled to be commissioned Nov. 7 in New York. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John P. Curtis.)

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NEW ORLEANS (Oct. 13, 2009) The amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21) maneuvers under the New Orleans Crescent City Connection bridge on the Mississippi River after departing Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in Avondale, La. New York has 7.5 tons of steel from the World Trade Center in her bow, and is scheduled to be commissioned Nov. 7 in New York. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John P. Curtis.)

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NEW ORLEANS (Oct. 13, 2009) The amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21) transits the Mississippi River after departing Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in Avondale, La. New York has 7.5 tons of steel from the World Trade Center in her bow, and is scheduled to be commissioned Nov. 7 in New York. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Shawn D. Graham.)

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NEW ORLEANS (Oct. 13, 2009) The amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21) transits the Mississippi River after departing Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in Avondale, La. New York has 7.5 tons of steel from the World Trade Center in her bow, and is scheduled to be commissioned Nov. 7 in New York. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Shawn D. Graham.)

Related: Thousands Line New Orleans Levees, Salute Future USS New York

COMBAT CAMERA More Military Imagery on THE TENSION

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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

US Navy: USS Freedom to Deploy Early

News in Balance
News from the U.S. Navy.

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- The following news release made available Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement published by the Navy regarding the deployment of USS Freedom:

The Navy announced today the decision to deploy the USS Freedom (LCS 1) in early 2010 to the Southern Command and Pacific Command areas ahead of her originally scheduled 2012 maiden deployment. According to Navy leaders, Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) are needed now to close urgent warfighting gaps.

"Deploying LCS now is a big step forward in getting this ship where it needs to be operating in the increasingly important littoral regions," said Adm. Gary Roughead, chief of naval operations. "We must deliver this critical capability to the warfighter now."

The USS Freedom will have an immediate impact on fleet readiness and global reach as an asset with unique combat capabilities and the ability to meet littoral tasking not previously seen in the modern cruiser or destroyer fleet.

"The Navy plans to build a considerable number of littoral combat ships which will form the backbone of our future fleet," said Adm J. C. Harvey, Jr., commander, U.S. Fleet Forces, charged with executing the early deployment. "The sooner we integrate them into our fleet, the sooner we can incorporate them in the order of battle. This deployment offers a golden opportunity to learn by doing. Employing the USS Freedom in theater two years ahead of a normal timeline allows us to incorporate lessons that can only be learned in a deployment setting more quickly and effectively in the LCS fleet integration process."

In evaluating options for deploying the USS Freedom earlier than originally scheduled, the Navy took into consideration several key factors including combat systems testing, shakedown of the ship systems, and overseas sustainment with a new concept of operations and crew training. To facilitate the early deployment, the Navy adjusted the USS Freedom testing schedule, prioritized testing events needed for deployment and deferred others not required for the missions envisioned during this deployment. The USS Freedom recently completed Industrial Post Delivery Availability 2, which also supported an early deployment.
(Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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Thousands Line New Orleans Levees, Salute Future USS New York

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AVONDALE, La. -- In this June 2009 file photo, the amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21) transits along the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico to conduct builder's trials. The amphibious transport dock New York is built with 7.5 tons of World Trade center Steel in her bow, and is scheduled to be commissioned in November. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Corey Lewis.)

Focus on Defense:

NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 13, 2009 -- Thousands of residents from around the New Orleans area began lining up along the banks of the Mississippi River before daybreak to bid the Pre-Commissioning Unit New York farewell as it departed from the Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding in Avondale, La., Oct. 13.

Lola Lass, president of The Greater New Orleans Executives Association (GNOEA), said her group suggested the send-off celebration to allow the community one final opportunity to salute the ship, its crew and the men and women who spent more than five years building it.

"The "Line the Levees" event showcased the hard work, love and dedication that went into building this ship," said Lass. "It allows citizens of New Orleans to pay homage to the victims, families and first responders of 9/11."

The 684-foot amphibious transport dock ship contains about 7.5 tons of steel from the World Trade Center, felled during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. It received two 21-gun salutes, as it passed Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans (NAS JRB) and Naval Support Activity New Orleans (NSA).

The ship's motto is "Strength forged through sacrifice. Never Forget."

Capt. Bill Snyder, Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans (NAS JRB) commanding officer, said that the ship's transit was symbolic.

"I'm thrilled to have witnessed history," said Snyder. "There has been overwhelming support for the US Navy in this area. I'm thrilled that so many people took time out of their days to participate in this event."

Snyder also thanked parish leaders and volunteers who participated in the event, citing the long hours spent preparing for the ship's transit down the river.

"Plaquemines Parish officials have been dynamic in their support," said Snyder. "Granting us access to the site and the security support from their sheriff's department was key in preparing for such a large event."

Master-at-Arms 1st Class (SW) Derrick Tyler, assigned to NAS JRB's security department, said he was impressed by the immense turnout and support throughout the area.

"When you see hundreds of every day citizens waving flags and holding up signs, it can be very powerful," said Tyler. "You are used to that seeing ships return or go on a deployment, but when I saw this one leaving it felt different. America wants to this ship to do amazing things."

New York will be commissioned Nov. 7 in New York. The New York is the fifth amphibious transport dock of the San Antonio class. The ship was named New York after the state and her motto is "Strength Forged through Sacrifice. Never Forget."

(Report by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class (AW/SW) Shawn D. Graham, Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans Public Affairs.)

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OIF Summary, Oct.13, 2009: Iraqis Arrest Numerous Terrorism Suspects

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- Iraqi security forces, with U.S. advisors, have made numerous arrests of suspected terrorists in recent days, military officials reported.

On Oct. 11, Iraqi forces arrested 18 suspects during a highly coordinated search for members of an extortion network known as the Islamic State of Iraq and related to al-Qaida in Iraq based in the northern city of Mosul.

Iraqi soldiers and police, with U.S. advisors, searched several buildings throughout Mosul with arrest warrants for extortion-network members. The suspects are believed to be part of an Islamic State of Iraq-led terrorist group that extorts money from innocent people by threatening violence against them. People typically targeted by the extortion network include those who own or work at construction sites and local businesses, although people have been victims at their homes as well. Extortionists then use the stolen money to fund terrorist attacks against Iraqi civilians and security forces, officials said.

In other operations:
  • Elements of the Ramadi and Habbaniyah special weapons and tactics teams, with U.S. special operations advisors, on Oct. 9 arrested a man suspected of being involved in multiple sniper shootings throughout Iraq’s Anbar province near Ramadi.

    A court issued a warrant for the arrest of Abd al-Qadir Afan Qafe after his alleged involvement in the fatal shooting of an Iraqi soldier in 2006 and the shooting of a U.S. soldier near the Ramadi library Sept. 30. Most of the recent shootings took place during reconstruction projects for the people of Ramadi. Qafe is believed to be funded by Syrians and allegedly is involved with the terrorist organizations.

  • Iraqi and U.S. forces on Oct. 9 detained five suspects in southern Baghdad after soldiers of the 252nd Combined Arms Battalion, 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team, were attacked with anti-armor grenades. The suspects fled the scene on foot. U.S. troops called for the assistance of local Iraqi security forces in searching for the suspects. After a brief search, Iraqi federal police, along with Iraqi soldiers, reported the arrest of the five suspects No U.S. soldiers were injured, and only minor damage to one Humvee was reported.

  • Iraqi police and U.S. and Iraqi soldiers on Oct. 7 arrested a senior member of al-Qaida in Iraq and discovered a nearby cache of bomb-making materials near Daquq in Kirkuk province Daquq police led the operation, supported by Iraqi and U.S. soldiers. The detainee, known as Yasser Gafour, is wanted in connection with kidnapping and intimidation of security forces and people throughout southern Kirkuk. The cache consisted of circuit boards, soldering guns, transistors and one pound of explosive material -- all associated with the construction of roadside bombs.

  • Iraqi soldiers arrested five suspected terrorists in northern Iraq’s Salahuddin province Oct. 4. Those arrested allegedly are contributors behind a central terrorist cell responsible for spreading terrorist propaganda throughout northern Iraq.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq and Multinational Corps Iraq news releases.)

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OEF Summary, Oct. 13, 2009: Forces Disrupt Terrorist, Drug Havens in Afghanistan

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 – Afghan and international security forces have disrupted several terrorist networks in Afghanistan, including a major drug operation, in recent days, military officials reported.

In operations today and yesterday:
  • A security force killed more than a dozen insurgents and detained a suspect after searching a mountainside compound in Kunar province known to be used by an al-Qaida commander and his element believed to be responsible for trafficking foreign fighters and conducting numerous attacks in Pech Valley. During the search of the compound northeast of Jalalabad, the force twice received and returned enemy fire, killing the militants. The force also found rocket-propelled grenades, machine guns, and assault rifles.

  • In the Ziruk district of Paktika province, a force detained several insurgents after searching a compound known to be used by a Haqqani terrorist organization leader and his element, believed to be responsible for financing and supplying weapons to other militants in the region. The force also found and destroyed several grenades and a cache of small-arms ammunition.

  • Security forces killed and detained several enemy militants during a search in Zabul province’s Shahjoy district in pursuit of a Taliban commander and his element believed to be responsible for attacks in the region. During the search, forces stopped a vehicle reportedly associated with militant activity. The suspects did not comply with commands the joint force issued, moved with hostile intent against the force and were killed. Subsequently, forces found the vehicle was carrying an improvised explosive device, IED components, rifles, hand grenades and ammunition belts with multiple magazines. All material found was destroyed in place. Forces searched another vehicle and detained several suspected militants.

  • In Kandahar province, forces detained several suspected militants after searching a series of buildings known to be used by a Taliban leader and his element believed to be responsible for financing and supplying weapons and fighters to other Taliban elements in the region.

  • In Wardak province, forces detained several militants after searching a compound known to be used by a Taliban commander and a group believed to be responsible for numerous small-arms and IED attacks across the region.

  • Joint forces detained several suspected militants in Logar province’s Pul-e Alam district during an operation to disrupt a militant cell believed to be responsible for making IEDs.

On Oct. 11 and 12, a security force killed and detained several suspected militants in three operations:
  • In Helmand province, forces detained a suspected militant commander and several suspected militants linked to the narcotics industry in Nahri Sarraj district. Haji Khan Mohammed is considered a senior power broker in the district, and officials believe his drug operations provided financial support to enemy fighters throughout southern Afghanistan. During the operation, forces received machine-gun fire from militants shooting from multiple compounds. The forces moved the fighting away from the compounds and detained the militants. A weapons cache consisting of 40 rocket-propelled grenades, several thousand machine-gun rounds, several five-gallon jugs used in constructing homemade explosives for roadside bombs, three assault rifles and 20 mortar rounds was destroyed on site by controlled detonation.

  • Security forces killed several militants during an operation in Qalat district of Zabul province, in an effort to disrupt a Taliban element believed responsible for several attacks in the region. Forces found and destroyed an RPG, an assault rifle with ammunition, a pistol, a grenade, an ammunition belt and communications gear.

  • In Kandahar province, forces detained a suspected militant in a compound known to be used by a Taliban leader and his element responsible for supplying IEDs, weapons and ammunition to other militant groups in the region.

In other news from Afghanistan, one of the largest drug and weapons discoveries this year netted 220 pounds of heroin, 3,970 pounds of opium and nearly 55 tons of opium seeds at a morphine-processing lab during an Oct. 6 search in the Kajaki district of Helmand province.

    Forces killed multiple enemy fighters and detained several suspected militants in the raid. The Afghanistan Narcotics Interdiction Unit, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and the FBI assisted the military force, which also found a large cache of weapons and explosives. All drugs were destroyed on site, and weapons were either positioned for safe disposal or destroyed on location.

      (Compiled from NATO International Security Assistance Force news releases.)

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      Pentagon: Military Records Banner Recruiting Year in Fiscal 2009

      News in Balance

      News in Balance:

      WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- The military services' active and reserve components notched record recruiting numbers and signed up the highest-quality recruits ever in fiscal 2009, senior defense officials said today.

      It is the first time that all active services and reserve components met or exceeded their numerical recruiting goals and exceeded their recruit-quality benchmarks since the start of the all-volunteer force in 1973, Bill Carr, deputy undersecretary of defense for military personnel policy, told Pentagon reporters.

      While Carr acknowledged that the current economic downturn probably is having a positive effect on recruiting, he also pointed to the sterling efforts of military recruiters for the superb results and noted the military deployed a robust bonus program in which 40 percent of recruits received an average bonus of $14,000.

      The recruiting success achieved in fiscal 2009 is even more impressive, Carr said, considering that 70 percent of today's high school graduates -- the military's target recruiting pool -- go on to college upon graduation. In the 1980s, he noted, only about half of American high school students went on to college.

      A rising propensity for young people age 17 to 24 to be obese, Carr said, also complicates the military's recruiting mission.

      "If we look back to the 1980s, one in 20 young people were obese," Carr said, as compared to today's ratio of 1 in 4 young people being categorized as obese. "And, that creates a tighter constraint as you seek to find fully qualified recruits," he added.

      However, he said, the number of waivers issued to recruits with medical or conduct issues is trending downward.

      Here are the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force recruiting results for fiscal 2009:
      • The Army had 70,045 accessions, making 108 percent of its 65,000 goal.

      • The Navy had 35,527 accessions, making 100 percent of its 35,500 goal.

      • The Marine Corps had 31,413 accessions, making 100 percent of its 31,400 goal.

      • The Air Force had 31,983 accessions, making 100 percent of its 31,980 goal.

      Reserve-component recruiting results for fiscal 2009:
      • The Army National Guard had 56,071 accessions, making 100 percent of its 56,000 goal.

      • The Army Reserve had 36,189 accessions, making 105 percent of its 34,598 goal.

      • The Navy Reserve had 7,793 accessions, making 101 percent of its 7,743 goal.

      • The Marine Corps Reserve had 8,805 accessions, making 122 percent of its 7,194 goal.

      • The Air National Guard had 10,075 accessions, making 106 percent of its 9,500 goal.

      • The Air Force Reserve had 8,604 accessions, making 109 percent of its 7,863 goal.

      Attrition losses in all reserve components are among the best in recent years, officials said.

      Carr also attributed current recruiting success to the "Millennial" demographic of young people that includes those born between 1978 and 1996. Generational studies show, he said, that these young people – who've lived during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States – are more inclined to perform public service.

      Additionally, Carr said, Congress continues to provide the Defense Department with sufficient funding to sustain the all-volunteer force.

      Studies also show that young people can make a good living in the military, Carr said, as compared to their civilian peers with equitable workplace experience and education qualifications. Generous pay raises provided to junior officers and mid-level noncommissioned officers in recent years, he noted, have boosted those servicemembers' earning capacity.

      "It has been a banner year for recruiting," Curtis L. Gilroy, director of accession policy, told American Forces Press Service and Pentagon Channel reporters during an Oct. 9 interview at the Pentagon.

      Gilroy, too, saluted the "outstanding" performance of the services' military recruiters. His directorate is a component of the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

      Fiscal 2009's crop of recruits also represents the best quality ever, Gilroy said, noting 96 percent of active-duty recruits and 95 percent of reserve-component recruits possessed a high school diploma. The Defense Department benchmark for recruits with high school diplomas is 90 percent. Studies show, he added, that 80 percent of servicemembers with high school diplomas complete their initial term of service.

      Gilroy said 73 percent of active recruits and 72 percent of reserve-component recruits scored average or above average on the Armed Forces Qualification Test. The AFQT measures an individual's math and verbal ability, which indicates aptitude for military service. The department sets a benchmark of 60 percent of all recruits scoring at or above the 50th percentile on the AFQT.

      "As you can see from these numbers," Gilroy said, "the services have far exceeded those benchmarks" in fiscal 2009 for signing up recruits with high school diplomas and those with average or better AFQT scores. Increased capabilities demonstrated by the majority of the nearly 300,000 active and reserve component recruits signed up in fiscal 2009, he added, will result in higher performance in the field and will enhance readiness.

      (Report by Gerry J. Gilmore, American Forces Press Service.)

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      Wire: Delaying Action in Afghanistan, Obama Says Decision in "Coming Weeks"

      Off the Wire

      Off the Wire:

      WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- Newswire services today reported that President Barack Obama says he will make his decision on new troops for Afghanistan in "the coming weeks."

      Obama told reporters Tuesday that decisions on the military front are important, but just one aspect of the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. He said an important element is building up civilian capacity, to help improve Afghanistan's governance, agriculture, rule of law.

      The president took reporters' questions after meeting in the Oval Office with Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.

      (Report from newswire sources.)

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      Pentagon Identifies Marine Casualty (OEF)

      News in Balance

      News in Balance:

      WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- The following news release made available Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement identifying a casualty:
      The Department of Defense announced today the death of a Marine who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

      Staff Sgt. Aaron J. Taylor, 27, of Bovey, Minn., died Oct. 9 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to Marine Wing Support Squadron 372, Marine Wing Support Group 37, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.
      (Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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      Pentagon: VA to Shortcut Some Agent Orange Rulings

      News in Balance

      News in Balance:

      WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- A new Department of Veterans Affairs ruling will soon relieve Vietnam veterans suffering from three specific illnesses from the burden of proving their ailments are linked to Agent Orange exposure to receive VA health care and disability payments.

      Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki's decision, announced today, establishes a service connection for Vietnam vets stricken with hairy-cell leukemia and other B-cell leukemias, Parkinson's disease and ischemic heart disease, VA chief of staff John Gingrich told American Forces Press Service.

      Shinseki made the decision based on a recent report by the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine. The report cited new scientific studies pointing to a strong connection between the illnesses and Agent Orange exposure.

      Shinseki determined that evidence was compelling enough to establish a presumption that affected veterans' illnesses are service-related, Gingrich said.

      This determination will short-cut the process for them to receive services through what Shinseki called "a world-class health care system," as well as monthly disability payments.

      But before the ruling takes effect, it must be published in the Federal Register and opened for final comment, Gingrich explained. He predicted that the process would be completed early next year.

      It's unclear exactly how many of the 2.1 million Vietnam veterans the ruling will affect, Gingrich said. If 10 percent have the presumed illnesses, that could result in some 200,000 new VA claims.

      Agent Orange, named for the orange-colored barrels in which it was stored, was sprayed widely during the Vietnam War to defoliate trees and remove concealment for the enemy. Veterans have long blamed the herbicide for causing a variety of illnesses, but until now, there's been no official recognition of a link. That put the burden on veterans to prove an association - a process Shinseki conceded too often has created an adversarial relationship between the VA and veterans.

      Shinseki, a retired Army general and a Vietnam veteran himself, lamented this situation this summer at a medical symposium in San Antonio.

      "I have asked why, 40 years after Agent Orange was last used in Vietnam, this secretary is still adjudicating claims for presumption of service-connected disabilities tied to its toxic effects," he told attendees at the Association of the U.S. Army's Institute of Land Warfare Army Medical Symposium.

      Shinseki also questioned why the debilitating effects of Gulf War illnesses still are being debated 20 years after Operation Desert Storm.

      "Why weren't conclusive studies conducted by [the Department of Defense] and VA to render presumption of service-connected disability resulting from exposure to toxic environments associated with these operations?" Shinseki asked. "Such findings would have facilitated VA's settling of service-connected disability claims in far less time. The scientific method, and the failure to advocate for the veteran, got in the way of our processes."

      Veterans deserve better, he said.

      "We must do better reviews of illnesses that may be connected to service, and we will," he said. "Veterans who endure health problems deserve timely decisions based on solid evidence."

      Shinseki's decision brings to 15 the number of presumed illnesses VA recognizes. Others are:
      • Acute and subacute transient peripheral neuropathy;

      • AL amyloidosis;

      • Chloracne;

      • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia;

      • Diabetes Mellitus (Type 2);

      • Hodgkin's disease;

      • Multiple myeloma;

      • Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma;

      • Porphyria cutanea tarda;

      • Prostate cancer;

      • Respiratory cancers; and

      • Soft-tissue sarcoma other than osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, Kaposi's sarcoma or mesothelioma.

      (Report by Donna Miles, American Forces Press Service.)

      Related Web Site: Department of Veterans Affairs

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      Pentagon Identifies Marine Casualty (OEF)

      News in Balance

      News in Balance:

      WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- The following news release made available Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Defense is the text of a statement identifying a casualty:
      The Department of Defense announced today the death of a Marine who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

      Lance Cpl. Alfonso Ochoa Jr., 20, of Armona, Calif., died Oct. 10 while supporting combat operations in Farah province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Kaneohe Bay.
      (Report from a U.S. Defense Department news release.)

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      Wire: Obama Quietly Deploying 13,000 More US Troops to Afghanistan

      Off the Wire

      Off the Wire:

      WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2009 -- Newswire services this morning reported that President Barack Obama is quietly deploying an extra 13,000 troops to Afghanistan, an unannounced move that is separate from a request by the U.S. commander in the country for even more reinforcements.

      The UK's Guardian reported today that the extra 13,000 is part of a gradual shift in priority since Obama became president away from Iraq to Afghanistan.
      The White House and the Pentagon both announced earlier this year that the number of US troops in Afghanistan was to be raised by 21,000, bringing the total at present to 62,000, with the aim of 68,000 by the end of the year.

      But the Washington Post, based on conversations with Pentagon officials, said that on top of those an extra 13,000 "enablers" are also being deployed. They are mainly engineers, medical staff, intelligence officers and military police. About 3,000 of them are specialists in explosives, being sent to try to combat the growing fatality rate from roadside bombs.

      The deployment of such non-combat troops is in line with the professed aim of the new US commander, General Stanley McChrystal, to try to win the hearts and minds of the Afghanistan population.

      In addition to the deployments under way, McChrystal has also requested an extra 40,000 troops he says are necessary to prevent the country falling into the hands of the Taliban. That request has provoked an intense debate within Washington, with some political advisers in the White House opposed to any further escalation of a war that is already proving unpopular at home.

      The Afghanistan president Hamid Karzai, today expressed support for McChrystal's request. "I'm fully behind him for what he's seeking in this report," Karzai told ABC's Good Morning America.
      See link below for additional details.

      (Report from newswire sources.)

      Source: Obama quietly deploying 13,000 more US troops to Afghanistan

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      OEF Update, Oct. 13, 2009: Afghan-International Security Forces Kill, Detain Militants

      Dispatches from the Front

      Dispatches from the Front:

      KABUL, Afghanistan, Oct. 13, 2009 -- Afghan and International security forces killed and detained several suspected militants in three operations in southern and eastern Afghanistan, Oct. 12 and today.

      A joint security force killed and detained several enemy militants during a search in Zabul province near the village of Sorkhagan in Shahjoy district, in pursuit of a Taliban commander and his element responsible for a number of attacks in the region on Oct. 12.

      During the search the joint security force stopped a vehicle reportedly associated with militant activity. The suspected militants in the vehicle did not comply with commands the joint force issued, moved with hostile intent against the force and were killed. Subsequently, forces found they were carrying an improvised explosive device, IED components, rifles, hand grenades and ammunition belts with multiple magazines. All material found was destroyed in place.

      The joint force searched another vehicle and detained several suspected militants.

      In a separate operation in Kandahar province, a joint force detained several suspected militants today after searching a series of buildings known to be used by a Taliban facilitator and his element responsible for financing and supplying weapons and fighters to other Taliban elements in the region.

      The joint force conducted the search of buildings on the east side of Kandahar City without incident.

      In a third operation a joint security force detained several militants today after searching a compound in Wardak province, near Kharyan village known to be used by a Taliban commander and a group believed responsible for numerous small arms and IED attacks across the region. The search was conducted without incident.

      No Afghan civilians were harmed during these operations.

      No International Security Assistance Force service members were killed during the past 24 hours.

      (Compiled from NATO International Security Assistance Force news releases.)

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      Combat Camera: 1/5 Marines Light It Up as Sun Sets on Insurgents in Helmand Province, Afghanistan

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      Marines with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, run for cover during a fire fight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

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      Marines with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, run for cover during a firefight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. The Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

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      Lance Cpl. Roy Aeschilmann with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, returns fire during a fire fight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Aeschilmann is a 24-year-old rifleman from Tucker, Ga. The Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

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      Sgt. Matthew Duquette with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, checks his squad to see if anyone is injured during a firefight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Duquette is a 23-year-old squad leader from Warrenville, Ill. The Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

      CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE
      Marines with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, take cover in a trench after receiving indirect fire during a patrol in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for almost two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

      CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE
      Marines with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, run for cover during a fire fight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

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      Pfc. Travis Preciado with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, runs for cover during a firefight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Preciado is a 21-year-old rifleman from Oregon City, Ore. The Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

      CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE
      Pfc. Travis Preciado with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, returns fire during a fire fight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Preciado is a 21-year-old rifleman from Oregon City, Ore. The Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

      CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE
      Lance Cpl. Roy Aeschilmann with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, returns fire during a fire fight in Nawa district, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Aeschilmann is a 24-year-old rifleman from Tucker, Ga. The Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

      CLICK TO ENLARGE IMAGE
      Marines with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, run for cover during a fire fight in Nawa District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 2. Marines were attacked while conducting a security patrol in the area. They suffered no casualties after exchanging fire with enemy insurgents for nearly two hours. (Photo by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

      Dispatches from the Front:

      NAWA DISTRICT, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 13, 2009 -- "I could hear the bullets flying over my head," said Lance Cpl. Michael Estrada, 20, a team leader from Los Angeles. "They were impacting right in front of us."

      Marines with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, were engaged in a firefight, Oct. 2.

      Marines conducting a security patrol were attacked by enemy insurgents hiding on the outskirts of a nearby village.

      "We were patrolling through an area that is known to be used by the enemy," said Sgt. Matthew Duquette, 23, a squad leader from Warrenville, Ill. "We were moving across this small field on our way back [to the patrol base], and we started taking fire."

      Caught in an open field, Marines rushed for what little cover they could find, attained positive identification of the enemy, and began returning fire.

      "They were firing at us from a few different positions; most of it was coming out of a small village directly in front us," Duquette explained. "Once we identified their positions, we returned fire. We knew where they were so we had no reason to leave."

      "You could see a few guys poking their heads out along with the muzzles of their rifles," Estrada recalled.

      With the sun beginning to set, the enemy continued to harass the Marines from various positions. The insurgents put themselves between the bright sun and the Marines in a failed attempt to stifle them.

      "They try to use the sun to their advantage," Estrada explained. "The enemy will attack a lot when the sun sets or when it rises since it is hard to see anything with the sun in your eyes."

      After nearly 90 minutes, Marines radioed for an air strike to take out the remaining enemy fighters.

      "The shots kept coming so air support was called in for us," Duquette said. "I'm glad the plane came when it did because it seemed like the enemy's shots started getting a lot more accurate as the fight went on. Once we had support from the air, the enemy retreated and stopped firing."

      The gunfire ceased after two aircraft made their gun runs, laying down fire on the insurgent positions.

      After the fight, the Marines found hundreds of enemy bullet casings in many different buildings in the area. Fortunately, the Marines had suffered no casualties during the fight.

      (Report by Lance Cpl. John McCall, Regimental Combat Team 3.)

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