August 25, 2008 • Vol. 13, No. 46 Download Now! (pdf)

 

COVER
History's Back
by Robert Kagan

EDITORIAL
What Is To Be Done?
by Frederick W. Kagan

Blaming the Victim
by Matthew Continetti

SCRAPBOOK
Peter W. Rodman, 1943-2008

ARTICLES
To Drill, or Not to Drill
by Stephen F. Hayes

European Disunion
by Kenneth R. Weinstein

China Looks Across the Strait
by Dan Blumenthal & Christopher Griffin

Iraq's Oil Progress
by Michael Makovsky

FEATURES
Destination Malabo
by Mark Hemingway

BOOKS & ARTS
Track Record
by Franklin Freeman

Man of Courage
by Harvey Mansfield

One Hit Wonder
by Barton Swaim

Machine Politics
by Fred Barnes

National Treasures
by Mary Katherine Ascik

Who Are You?
by Jeremy Rabkin

Petit's Gift
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
Jon From Alexandria
by Jonathan V. Last

CORRESPONDENCE
Colorado, whiners, and more

PARODY
John Edwards's House: The Complete Makeover


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"They Started It"

One of Her Majesty's Finest vs. 150 Taliban. Good odds, it appears.

A BRITISH soldier who almost single-handedly took on 150 Taliban after he and his 50-man convoy were ambushed in Afghanistan has been awarded the Military Cross.

Fusilier Damien Hields used his grenade machinegun to destroy seven Taliban positions before his ambushers realised he was their main threat. After peppering his vehicle with bullets, they hit the 24-year-old soldier. He had to be dragged off for treatment by his driver after he tried to continue fighting. They were on their way back to Kandahar on June 3, driving south in a valley, when the Taliban attacked. One of the Land Rovers hit a landmine and was flipped upside down by the blast. “There were Taliban dug in all around and they started hitting us with AK47s and mortars. We could not see where they were at first.”

Hields followed the trail of RPG-7 rocket-propelled grenades coming towards him and started firing grenades one at a time, trying to home in. “Then I switched to automatic fire,” he said. A grenade machine gun has a box with 32 grenade rounds. “I emptied a box onto that position and you could see all the dust and smoke flying about where they hit. “After that no fire came back from that position and I moved on to the next one. One or two rounds until I got onto the target, and switch to automatic and empty the box.” Realising that Hields was the main threat to them, the remaining Taliban fighters homed in on him with their RPG7s, Dushka heavy machineguns and Kalash-nikov rifles. Hields was undaunted and continued firing.

“I got through six boxes in about 15 minutes and we were winning the fight,” he said. “They started it. We were going to finish it.”

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