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Iraq
How to handle your weapon 101: standing up an Iraqi Army
2006-04-04
The two bloodied, wincing Iraqi soldiers - bandages wrapped around their legs - hobbled onto the waiting ambulance, wounded during a house-to-house search near this farming town. The culprit was a common one: Not insurgents, but gunfire from fellow soldiers. U.S. trainers who mentor Iraqi troops say a lack of gun safety, or what they call ''muzzle discipline,'' has led to many injuries and deaths across the country. And while the Americans say it is slowly getting better, it remains a major problem for a U.S. military trying to train more than 200,000 Iraqis to defeat the insurgency.

''When we first got here, it was a little scary,'' said Army Capt. Steven Fischer, a trainer from Washington, Pa. ''We have to correct it.'' In the Bidimnah case in late January, insurgents first fired on Iraqi and U.S. troops patrolling the rural area about 50 miles west of Baghdad. That prompted more than a minute of wild, continuous gunfire from the Iraqi troops. The two Iraqi soldiers were wounded while the militants escaped unharmed.

Other examples are rife and often startling to the Associated Press:
*In December in the town of Adhaim north of Baghdad, an Iraqi soldier stepped out of a vehicle with his safety lever turned off and accidentally shot himself point-blank in the chest. Minutes later, as a U.S. helicopter carried the dying man away, an Associated Press reporter saw a frustrated American soldier storm up and lecture another Iraqi soldier, who also did not have his safety on.

*During a large-scale operation last summer in Baghdad, an antsy Iraqi soldier took aim at what he thought was an insurgent, prompting several other Iraqi soldiers to drill hundreds of rounds into an empty home. No one was hurt.

*Iraq had a million-man army under Saddam Hussein, but soldiers who served in the old army said they were given only a few bullets a year - apparently a way to prevent coups. That practice left Iraqi troops untrained in the most basic of soldiering skills.

*Iraq now has tens of thousands of rookie soldiers who only recently learned how to use a weapon. And misfires have led to dozens of military deaths.
This reporter is tiptoeing along the slippery edge of Quagmire Ravine. YES, training gun safety to Arabs is hard. And YES, people are getting hurt and killed by arrogance, superstition, and ignorance. But YES, the work must be done, and our citizen soldiers are making it happen.
Posted by:Seafarious

#3  Actually, I think that these flicks simply abetted mindsets that are (to be frank) STILL there.
Posted by: Edward Yee   2006-04-04 16:35  

#2  One of the great benefits HOllywood has done for the war effort was decades of movies showing hipshots and other unsafe gun practices. These action movies were huge hits overseas and I've seen lots of pictures of militia hardboys doing Rambo poses (usually in West Africa but I'm sure its semi-universal).

Now the good folks in Hollywood would quake to know they have helped along the death of America's enemies(1) but facts are facts.

(1) Along a similar line Jimmy Carter helped end the cold war by being so pathetic that in 1979 the Soviet Union expanded their influence far beyond their abilities (Afghanistan, Nicaragua, Mozambique, Angola, Vietnam, etc) just in time for Reagan to bash them. I'm sure Jimmy would wake up in a cold sweat were he to hear that.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2006-04-04 15:53  

#1  This one's not in the ravine though, since less accusatory sources have noted this problem as well; it's pretty dangnabit ugly, although hopefully they've fixed the "bullet goes where Allah wills it" problem. I've heard about the 'few bullets' issuance before, hence extreme differences in marksmanship.
Posted by: Edward Yee   2006-04-04 13:14  

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