EuropeanBastard
02-07-2007, 06:15 AM
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - The U.S. military said it was checking reports that a helicopter, possibly a Chinook transport aircraft, had either crashed or made an emergency landing near Baghdad on Wednesday.
An Iraqi policeman who had been to the area northwest of Baghdad told Reuters he had seen wreckage on the ground. One witness who said he saw the helicopter come down also said he had seen wreckage.
U.S. soldiers had moved in to secure the area, witnesses said.
"We have heard about this ... but I cannot confirm anything at this stage," said Lieutenant-Colonel Christopher Garver, a U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad.
The U.S. military said on Sunday it was adjusting its tactics in Iraq after four helicopters were shot down over a two-week period.
Those helicopters were shot down in four separate incidents in which 21 U.S. servicemen and private security contractors were killed. Dozens of U.S. helicopters have come down, some hit by missiles or gunfire, in four years of fighting in Iraq.
But the high number lost in such a short time had raised questions about whether militants had changed tactics or were using more sophisticated weapons.
At least two witnesses said they saw the helicopter, which they described as a twin-rotor Chinook, come down on Wednesday amid gunfire from the ground. Some witnesses said they saw smoke before the helicopter went down, while others said they had not seen any.
The Chinook has two crew and can carry up to 55 passengers. They are used widely to transport troops and cargo around Iraq.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070207/us_nm/iraq_helicopter_dc_2;_ylt=ArzDg2WeIcVOIeM.Sbl7bJtX6GMA
SS_Charlemagne
02-07-2007, 08:48 AM
U.S. military says copter down in Iraq
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A Sea Knight helicopter went down northwest of Baghdad on Wednesday, the military said, the fifth helicopter lost in Iraq in just over two weeks. Meanwhile, a U.S. military spokesman said the Baghdad security operation is in progress.
The CH-46 helicopter went down about 20 miles northwest of the capital, U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said, but he declined to comment on casualties.
"A quick reaction force is on site and the investigation is going on as we speak," he said. "It would probably be inappropriate for me to talk about whether or not there are or are not casualties."
Witnesses said the helicopter had been shot down in a field in the Sheik Amir area northwest of Baghdad, sending smoke rising from the scene, in a Sunni-dominated area between the Taji air base, 12 miles north of Baghdad, and Garma, 20 miles west of the capital. and Garma, 20 miles to the west of the capital. The long-awaited Baghdad security operation has begun, the top U.S. military spokesman in Iraq said Wednesday.
"The helicopter was flying and passed over us, then we heard the firing of a missile," said Mohammad al-Janabi, a farmer who was speaking less than a half-mile from the wreckage. "The helicopter, then, turned into a ball of fire. It flew in a circle twice, then it went down."
An Iraqi general is leading the anticipated security drive, and took over the operation headquarters on Monday. There had been no announcement until Wednesday that the sweep, the third attempt to crush violence in nine months, was under way.
"It is ongoing as we speak," U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell said. "The implementation of the prime minister's plan has already begun and will be fully implemented at a later date, having all the parts and pieces that he wants.
"But portions are already being put in place, and we'll continue to put more into place as the forces arrive and the assets become available."
The reports about the helicopter came five days after a U.S. Army helicopter crashed in a hail of gunfire north of Baghdad, police and witnesses said. The U.S. command said two crew members were killed in that crash, and the al-Qaida-affiliated group the Islamic State of Iraq claimed responsibility.
Three other helicopters also have gone down since Jan. 20 killing a total of 19 Americans — 14 troops and five civilian security contractors.
The spate of helicopter crashes underscores the dangers facing U.S. troops as they step up their presence in the Baghdad area in preparation for a long-awaited security sweep to quell the spiraling sectarian violence.
More American troops were killed in combat in Iraq over the past four months — at least 334 through Jan. 31 — than in any comparable stretch since the war began, according to an Associated Press analysis of casualty records, as U.S. soldiers and Marines find themselves fighting more battles in the streets of Baghdad, as well as other cities.
The Iraqi government also has faced increased pressure over delays in starting the operation as hundreds of Iraqis have been killed in a spate of bombings and other violence in recent weeks.
At least 15 people were killed in attacks nationwide on Wednesday, including two employees of the government-funded Iraqi Media Network in Baghdad and a female government official who was shot to death while she was riding to work with her husband in the northern city of Mosul.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki acknowledged Tuesday that the long-awaited Baghdad security operation was off to a slow start and warned that insurgents were taking advantage of the delay to kill as many people as possible. But he also reassured Iraqis that security forces will live up to their responsibilities.
The statement came as new checkpoints were erected and increased vehicle inspections and foot patrols were reported in some neighborhoods — providing the main evidence so far that U.S. and Iraqi forces were gearing up for a major neighborhood-to-neighborhood sweep to quell sectarian violence in the city of 6 million.
"The operations will unite us and we will take action soon, God willing, even though I believe we've been very late and this delay has started to give a negative message," al-Maliki said in a meeting with military commanders shown on state TV. "I hope that more efforts will be exerted and more speed exerted in carrying out and achieving all the preparations to start the operations."
Al-Maliki urged his commanders to step up efforts to complete the preparations for the security plan, saying the delays had allowed insurgents to step up attacks that have killed hundreds in recent weeks.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the increase in U.S. forces in Iraq is "not the last chance" to succeed and conceded he was considering what steps to take if the buildup fails.
"I would be irresponsible if I weren't thinking about what the alternatives might be," he told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Gates said the operation was to have started Monday. "It's probably going to slip a few days, and it's probably going to be a rolling implementation," he said.
Al-Maliki, who has seen sectarian violence rise since taking office on May 20, 2006, despite two previous efforts to secure the capital, declared that Iraqi forces will live up to their responsibilities and told his commanders they must not disappoint those "who stand beside us."
"As far as the security issue is concerned, we should be determined and committed. We should carry out the operation on time and should not delay because the delay will be used against us by our enemies," he added.
Al-Maliki also accused other countries in the region of supporting militants to destabilize Iraq and prevent democracy from spreading — an apparent reference to U.S. rivals Iran and Syria.
"We have many times talked about this interference and said that we will not sit endlessly silent about those who interfere in our affairs and support terrorism," he said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070207/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq;_ylt=AgEerM5Kw5P09QWdMD3hAhRvaA8F
jimbodogg
02-09-2007, 12:45 PM
Surface to Air missiles?
You can't buy these at walmart, I wonder where they get them?
KingoftheHill
02-09-2007, 01:59 PM
Can we have this locked, I check this and thought this was a new attack.
Cheers
kabiri
02-09-2007, 09:18 PM
They are really shaking up Iraq To bad they will Eventually loose
Mohmar 'Deathstrike'
02-11-2007, 12:23 PM
It was a Sea Knight, not a Chinook.
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