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| Daily Insurgent Attacks Persist In Iraq, but Numbers Declining |
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| By Rudi Williams / American Forces Press Service |
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WASHINGTON, Dec. 27, 2003 — Though the number of attacks by insurgents in Iraq continues the decline it has shown since mid-September, the coalition isn't ready to say the trend will continue.
At a Baghdad press conference today, Army Brig.
Gen. Mark T. Kimmitt, deputy director of operations for Combined Joint Task Force
7, pointed out that in mid-September, there were as many as 50 attacks on coalition
forces per day. More |
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Operation Avalanche in Afghanistan
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| Task Force 1-501st E Company paratroopers board a Ch-47 Helicopter at dawn earlier this month after providing security during Operation Avalanche at Salerno Forward Operating Base, Afghanistan. The operation was designed to impede the enemies of Afghanistan from moving weapons and supplies across the border to stage them for a spring offensive. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Gul A. Alisan |
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Ensuring A Silent
Night For Those We Love
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| By
U.S. Air Force Col. D. Lee Hall |
The
commander of the 455th Expeditionary Operations
Group
addresses his troops after a midnight rocket
attack on their air base. |
| BAGRAM,
Afghanistan — When the Russians pulled
out of Afghanistan in February 1989, they left
in their wake a country in ruins. Over the
next 12 years, Afghanistan became a lawless,
dark place and the perfect hideout for thugs
like the Taliban and misguided zealots like
Osama bin Laden. After the brutal Sept. 11.
attacks on the freedoms we hold so precious,
America sent her best, brightest and bravest
sons and daughters here to clean house, and
to shine a light of justice into the Afghan
darkness. More |
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| Mosul Firefights Leave Four
Enemy Dead, Two Iraqi Police Wounded |
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MOSUL,
Iraq, Dec. 28, 2003 — Firefights in Mosul Dec. 26 and 27left
four terrorists dead and two Iraqi Police officers wounded.
According to Combined Joint Task Force 7 officials, four people
in a silver car fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a U.S. patrol
in the city just before 8 a.m. Dec. 27. Soldiers in the 101st Airborne
Division’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team returned fire and destroyed
the vehicle, killing the four assailants inside.
A search of the wreckage revealed two AK-47 rifles, an RPG ready
to fire, mortar rounds and a sniper rifle with rounds, officials
said.
The afternoon of Dec. 26, the Mosul police chief’s convoy
came under fire when and unknown number of people launched two
RPGs at it, wounding two police officers. The police officers were
treated for minor wounds at a local hospital and released.
There were no U.S. casualties in these incidents. |
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Festivities Mark Openings
At Bab Muadham Campus
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BAGHDAD, Iraq, Dec. 26, 2003 – Soldiers and Baghdad University staff, faculty and students mingled earlier this month at the university’s Bab Muadham campus, all apparently realizing, happily, that this was a historic day for the university. The Iraq Museum of Natural History was reopened, a new Internet café was opened and a refurbished child care center for staff and faculty was opened during the ceremonies.
The three projects were a cooperative effort of the Coalition Provisional Authority, the Ministry of Higher Education, the University of Baghdad and the U.S. Army. More |
101st Airborne Division
Celebrates Youth Center Opening |
TALLAFAR, Iraq, Dec. 28, 2003 - Leaders from the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) participated in the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Tallafar Youth Center today in northern Iraq.
In attendance at the ceremony was Col. Michael Linnington, commander, 3rd Brigade, 187th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), the Mayor and Chief of Police of Tallafar, and Maj. Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the 101st. More |
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| Gamble's
Deployment Journal |
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Army Staff Sgt. Zeno Gamble, a Gulf War veteran, is one of the thousands of reservists who have been called to active duty during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. Gamble left his civilian job at the Pentagon Dec. 7. Gamble plans to share some of his deployment journal entries with DefendAmerica.mil.
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Dec. 22, 2003 - I made a mistake. I missed the warning on the package that said "take medication with food." That is why at noon on Wednesday, I pulled over at a weigh station on I-95 to get rid of the malaria pill in a very painful fashion. It took a few hours for the pain to subside, and I wanted to double-check with the medics.
I stopped to see Larry Skummer at the Flight Medicine
Clinic at the Pentagon for my third anthrax shot. He chuckled at me when I told
him about the malaria pill. He told me I should not take it on an empty stomach.
That, however, was not my only medical worry. More |
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| Global War on Terrorism |
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| On Iraq |
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| Military News |
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| Profile |
| U.S. Navy Lt. Michael Orr |
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NAVAL AIR STATION WHIDBEY ISLAND, Wash. — While the B-2 bomber has already seen many milestones in its first 10 years, the 394th Combat Training Squadron is currently training the program's first Navy pilot, who will fly his first B-2 sortie here next month.
U.S. Navy Lt. Michael Orr, a California native who has been flying the EA-6B Prowler for the Navy since 1998, began his B-2 training with the 394th Combat Training Squadron in April. More |
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President George W. Bush |
“Separation from loved ones is always difficult, especially at this time of year. All our men and women serving abroad can know that their families miss them, millions are praying for them, and their nation is proud of them.” |
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Remarks during weekly radio address,
Dec. 27, 2003 |
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National Guard Medics Develop
Emergency Response Program |
BAGHDAD, Iraq — A bomb explodes in Baghdad. People are injured and need medical treatment quickly. But before help can arrive, a security team is needed for the military medical emergency response team to travel outside the “Green Zone” in the city. How long can the injured wait while the two teams – security and medical – scramble together?
Colorado National Guard medics are developing a pilot program in coordinated military medical emergency response. The Rapid Advance Medical Team, or RAM-T, concept was developed following the U.N. bombing in Baghdad Aug. 17. More |
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Neighborhood Survey
Sheds Light on Samarra |
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