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 | | From: | Willcox | | Subject: | Re: ~ BUSH'S NAZI ASS GETTING REAMED IN QUAGMIRE ~ | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 20:54:08 -0700 |
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 | Can you believe it? Two countries totaling FIFTY THREE MILLION people liberated and we've only lost 1,200 men. Nobody could have predicted such a lopp-sided victory for the US!!
~ THE MOSUL MARAUDERS ~ wrote:
> Posted on Fri, Jan. 21, 2005 > > Analysis: Iraqi insurgency growing larger, more effective > > By Tom Lasseter and Jonathan S. Landay > Knight Ridder Newspapers > > BAGHDAD, Iraq - The United States is steadily losing ground to the > Iraqi insurgency, according to every key military yardstick. > > A Knight Ridder analysis of U.S. government statistics shows that > through all the major turning points that raised hopes of peace in > Iraq, including the arrest of Saddam Hussein and the handover of > sovereignty at the end of June, the insurgency, led mainly by Sunni > Muslims, has become deadlier and more effective. > > The analysis suggests that unless something dramatic changes - such as > a newfound will by Iraqis to reject the insurgency or a large > escalation of U.S. troop strength - the United States won't win the > war. It's axiomatic among military thinkers that insurgencies are > especially hard to defeat because the insurgents' goal isn't to win in > a conventional sense but merely to survive until the will of the > occupying power is sapped. Recent polls already suggest an erosion of > support among Americans for the war. > > The unfavorable trends of the war are clear: > > - U.S. military fatalities from hostile acts have risen from an average > of about 17 per month just after President Bush declared an end to > major combat operations on May 1, 2003, to an average of 71 per month. > > - The average number of U.S. soldiers wounded by hostile acts per month > has spiraled from 142 to 708 during the same period. Iraqi civilians > have suffered even more deaths and injuries, although reliable > statistics aren't available. > > - Attacks on the U.S.-led coalition since November 2003, when > statistics were first available, have risen from 735 a month to 2,400 > in October. Air Force Brig. Gen. Erv Lessel, the multinational forces' > deputy operations director, told Knight Ridder on Friday that attacks > were currently running at 75 a day, about 2,300 a month, well below a > spike in November during the assault on Fallujah, but nearly as high as > October's total. > > -The average number of mass-casualty bombings has grown from zero in > the first four months of the American occupation to an average of 13.3 > per month. > > - Electricity production has been below pre-war levels since October, > largely because of sabotage by insurgents, with just 6.7 hours of power > daily in Baghdad in early January, according to the State Department. > > - Iraq is pumping about 500,000 barrels a day fewer than its pre-war > peak of 2.5 million barrels per day as a result of attacks, according > to the State Department. > > "All the trend lines we can identify are all in the wrong direction," > said Michael O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution, a Washington policy > research organization. "We are not winning, and the security trend > lines could almost lead you to believe that we are losing." > > Most worrisome, the insurgency is getting larger. > > "Many Iraqis respect these gunmen because they are fighting the > invaders," said Nabil Mohammed, a Baghdad University political science > professor. > > The insurgents "are getting smarter all the time. We've seen a lot of > changes in their tactics that say, one, they're getting help from > outside, and two, they're learning," said Sgt. 1st Class Glenn Aldrich, > 35, of Houston, a 16-year Army veteran, after spending an hour recently > greeting Iraqis on a foot patrol through a Baghdad neighborhood. > > The resistance has grown despite suffering huge casualties to > overwhelming U.S. firepower. Exact statistics aren't available. > > Insurgent attacks have shifted from small groups of men shooting at > tanks with AK-47s to powerful car bombs and roadside explosives, and > well-planned assaults, kidnappings and assassinations. > > "The insurgency will grow larger," said Ghazi Bada al Faisal, an > employee of the Iraqi Ministry of Industry and a Fallujah resident. > "The child whose brother and father were killed in the fighting will > now seek revenge." > - cont. - > http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/10703534.htm
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