July 28, 2008 • Vol. 13, No. 43 Download Now! (pdf)

 

COVER
The Future of Iraq
by Kimberly Kagan

EDITORIAL
'Stunningly Shameful'
by Stephen F. Hayes

Over to You, Speaker Pelosi
by Matthew Continetti

SCRAPBOOK
Obamaweek, unsafe Idol, etc.

ARTICLES
We Can't Handle the Truth
by Andrew Ferguson

From Newsroom to White House
by Terry Eastland

Obama, Democrats, and the Surge
by Peter Wehner

Into Africa
by Roger Kaplan

FEATURES
The Fannie and Freddie Follies
by Lawrence B. Lindsey

BOOKS & ARTS
Getting and Spending
by Irwin M. Stelzer

Ladies, Please
by Jennifer A. Marshall

Things Fall Apart
by Diane Scharper

Chinese Lesson
by Ellen Bork

Up in the Sky
by John Podhoretz

Daddies Dearest
by Myrna Blyth

Indispensable Nation
by Gary Schmitt

CASUAL
Got Smart
by Philip Terzian

CORRESPONDENCE
Mudcat, al-Dura, and more

PARODY
The New Yorker repents


« Howard Dean Makes Another Contribution to the War Effort, How Many Democrats Will Follow? | Main | Clinton Associate Attorney General: President Bush had Legal Authority to OK Taps »

AP: "U.S. Army Digs Up Weapons Cache in Iraq"

Weekly Standard contributor Tom Joscelyn points to this interesting piece from the Associated Press on his new blog (http://thomasjoscelyn.blogspot.com).


December 20, 2005 Tuesday 7:55 PM Eastern Time

U.S. Army Digs Up Weapons Cache in Iraq

BYLINE: RYAN LENZ; Associated Press Writer

DATELINE: ZUWAD KHALAF, Iraq

BODY:
U.S. soldiers in the northern Iraqi desert dug up more than 1,000 aging rockets and missiles wrapped in plastic, some of which were buried as recently as two weeks ago, Army officials said Tuesday.

Commanders in the 101st Airborne Division said an Iraqi tipped them off to the buried weapons, perhaps an indication that residents in this largely Sunni Arab region about 150 miles north of Baghdad are beginning to warm up to coalition forces.

"The tide is turning," said 2nd Lt. Patrick Vardaro, 23, of Norwood, Mass., a platoon leader in the division's 187th Infantry Regiment. "It's better to work with Americans than against us."

As the sun set, soldiers from the 101st continued to uncover more, following zigzagging tire tracks across the desert floor and using metal detectors to locate weapons including mines, mortars and machine gun rounds.

"This is the mother load, right here," Sgt. Jeremy Galusha, 25, of Dallas, Ore., said, leaning on a shovel after finding more than 20 Soviet missiles.

The weapons are of primary concern for soldiers in Iraq, where bombs made with loose ordinance by insurgents are the preferred method to target coalition forces.

"In our eyes, every one of these rockets represents one less" bomb, Vardaro said.

Vardaro would not comment on whether there were signs the caches had been used recently to make bombs. But service records accompanying the missiles dated to 1984, suggesting they were buried by the Iraqi military under Saddam Hussein.

Still, the plastic around some of the rockets - of Soviet, German and French origins - appeared to be fresh and had not deteriorated as it had on some of the older munitions.

A U.S. Air Force explosive ordinance team planned to begin destroying them as early as Wednesday morning.

Email the article AP: "U.S. Army Digs Up Weapons Cache in Iraq" to a friend:

Send this article to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):


 
Contributors
Editor:
Michael Goldfarb

Contributors:
Dean Barnett
Jennifer Chou
Brian Faughnan
Ulf Gartzke
Reuben F. Johnson
Thomas Joscelyn
Stuart Koehl
John Noonan
Bill Roggio
Samantha Sault
Search
Archives
Contact
wws@weeklystandard.com
Categories
Feeds: Atom | RSS
[What is this?]
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2