Feral Jundi

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

History: The Logistics Nightmare of the Soviets in Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,History — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 2:06 PM

Soviets Helicopter in Afghanistan

“The war was a contest by both sides to control the other’s logistics. The Soviet lines of communication (LOC) were a double lane highway network which wound through the Hindu Kush Mountains – some of the most inhospitable terrain on earth. The Soviet presence depended on its ability to keep the roads open. Much of the Soviet combat in Afghanistan was a fight for control of the road network. The resistance destroyed over 11,000 Soviet trucks. The DRA truck losses were reportedly higher. The Mujahideen ability to interdict the LOC was a constant concern to the Soviet and prevented them from maintaining a larger occupation force in Afghanistan.”

 

PDF File Here for Report on Soviet Lessons in Afghanistan

 

 

Legal News: Pentagon Letter Undercuts DOJ in Blackwater

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:47 PM

   Interesting news, and this is a prime example of using a large force to destroy itself.  The more this is panning out, the more you can see that DoJ doesn’t have that great of a case.  From the radio logs, DoS witnesses, and now this Pentagon letter, this will be an interesting legal battle to watch. –Matt

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Pentagon Letter Undercuts DOJ in Blackwater

FEB 3, 2009

By MATT APUZZO – Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon wrote in 2007 that Blackwater Worldwide contractors in Iraq are not subject to U.S. civilian criminal laws. That position undercuts the Justice Department’s effort to prosecute five Blackwater security guards for manslaughter.

The letter highlights the uncertainty prosecutors face in bringing charges against contractors involved in a 2006 shooting that left 17 Iraqis dead in a Baghdad intersection. Iraqis are closely watching how the U.S. responds to the shooting, which inflamed anti-American sentiment abroad.

(more…)

Legal News: Don Ayala Pleads Guilty, Sentencing Set for May

Filed under: Afghanistan,Legal News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:15 PM

    Let’s hope the judge recognizes Ayala’s service to country during the sentencing hearing.  He has admitted guilt to voluntary manslaughter, but that does not mean that the rest of his contribution to this country should not be recognized.  Tough deal all the way around.  –Matt

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Afghanistan Contractor Pleads Guilty to Killing Man Who Burned Co-Worker

By Martin Weil

Washington Post Staff Writer

Wednesday, February 4, 2009; A06

A civilian contractor pleaded guilty yesterday to voluntary manslaughter in the killing in Afghanistan of a man who set the contractor’s co-worker on fire, prosecutors said.

(more…)

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Music: The Band Acrassicauda Moves Its Metal Out of Iraq

Filed under: Iraq,Music,New Jersey — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 12:04 PM

   Talk about some exposure for a band?  Getting a guitar from James Hetfield of Metallica is quite the thing, and I wish these guys all the best in New Jersey. –Matt

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Acrassicauda 

One Band Moves Its Metal Out of Iraq

By BEN SISARIO

February 3, 2009 

It was a heavy metal miracle.

Acrassicauda had been through hell as a rock band in wartime Baghdad. Its practice space was bombed. Its members were branded Satan worshipers and received death threats for making Western-style music. Then they suffered through two purgatorial years as refugees in Syria and Turkey, killing time and dreaming of rocking out in the land of the free.

And on Sunday night, two days after the last of the band’s four members was resettled in the United States, they enjoyed what any metal fan would have to call heaven: bearhugs and “Wow, dude” heart-to-hearts backstage with Metallica at the Prudential Center in Newark. It probably wasn’t necessary for James Hetfield, Metallica’s lead singer, to surprise them after the show by handing over one of his guitars, a black ESP, and signing it “Welcome to America”; their minds were already blown.

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Afghanistan: Militants Sever U.S., NATO Supply Line

Filed under: Afghanistan — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 10:44 AM

   Boy, isn’t this warfare 101, where you must protect your supply chain if you want to press forward in the fight?  Obviously the militants recognized the value of taking out this bridge, and I am just curious why there wasn’t a Pakistani or private force guarding the thing?   And if we don’t trust these forces, and we can’t send troops over there to do it ourselves, then at least use our surveillance capability (like Task Force ODIN maybe?) to watch the bridge and give the appropriate forces a heads up?  If we are getting 75% of our supplies and fuel from Pakistan, and that stuff is only going through a few routes, then hey, we need to ramp up the security on this stuff.  And with thousands of more troops expected to come into the country by summer, logistics protection must get squared away now.  Thanks to Doug for finding this article.  –Matt 

 Edit:  And check out this news which I attached below this story.  The timing of both of these incidents are interesting.

 “Kyrgyzstan is ending U.S. use of a key airbase that supports military operations in Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan’s president was quoted as saying Tuesday.” Read the rest below.

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Militants sever U.S., NATO supply line

NATO spokesman says alliance in no danger of running out of food, fuel

The Associated Press

updated 8:14 a.m. PT, Tues., Feb. 3, 2009

PESHAWAR, Pakistan – Islamist militants blew up a bridge in northwestern Pakistan on Tuesday, cutting a major supply line for Western troops in Afghanistan in the latest in a series of attacks on the Khyber Pass by insurgents seeking to hamper the U.S.-led mission against the Taliban.

(more…)

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