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Little Pugsley appointed PPP chairman, Gomez regent
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Page 4: Opinion
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Page 1: WoT Operations
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Page 2: WoT Background
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Killer Chicks
H/T In From the Cold. Stories of female pilots. This one, I liked!

Angel of Death

Her gunship cruised low and loud over northeastern Afghanistan, a mix of milkshake-brown flatlands, grassy valleys and boulder-strewn mountain slopes. On Capt. Allison Black’s monitor aboard an AC-130H Spectre, the region below was a flickering sea of night-vision green.

It was mid-November 2001. As an evaluator-navigator with the Air Force’s 1st Special Operations Group, Black was plotting routes, communicating with ground forces and identifying targets in the darkness below. Just days before, the Afghan capital of Kabul had fallen to light-and-lean Special Forces teams relying on Air Force fighter jet and gunship strikes. They were aided with intelligence from the Northern Alliance — Afghans with their own vendetta against the Taliban.

Now the target was a smallish province along the northern border. Bearded American soldiers, relying on the Northern Alliance’s knowledge of local terrain and Taliban habits, were moving covertly through the surrounding hills on horseback.

For weeks, the Army detachment had lived with Northern Alliance Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum, a hulking and prickly haired war veteran thrilled to watch American air power cripple his Taliban foes.

Just 16 hours after Black landed at Karshi-Kanabad Air Base in neighboring Uzbekistan, she had been shuttled to her first-ever combat mission. It was off to a choppy start. Although the crew had successfully destroyed a bank of rocket launchers and several Taliban trucks, they were forced to evade anti-aircraft fire that pelted the Spectre’s steel belly.

“All they needed was a high-caliber [anti-aircraft] system to present a problem,” Black said. “We were definitely on edge.”

Dented but intact, the gunship flew on. Operational Detachment Alpha 595, from the Army’s 5th Special Forces Group, lit up Black’s radio as her plane neared its encampment. With Dostum’s help, the troops had learned of a nearby safe house packed with more than 200 Taliban and al-Qaida fighters.

Black began to chart the course. When her voice crackled over the soldiers’ field radios, Dostum was delightedly incredulous. A woman? Sent to kill the Taliban? “He couldn’t believe it,” Black said. “He thought it was the funniest thing.”

The Spectre neared and its cannons erupted. Unaccustomed to the Gatling gun’s mechanized snarl, the fighters confused the airstrike with a ground assault. Militants scattered into the fields, seeking cover in ditches and vehicles, although Black could see their heat-signature silhouettes from her console by the cockpit.

Dostum, hidden with the Army detachment several miles away, said the Taliban also believed a high-powered laser pointer used by Spectre operators to identify ground targets — a “sparkle,” in Air Force spec ops speak — was a death ray that turned everything it touched to flames.

As the hailstorm of munitions continued, Dostum grabbed his walkie-talkie, switched to the Taliban’s unsecured frequency and relayed to them the sound of Black’s chatter coming through Army radio.

He used the female pilot’s voice to taunt them as they bled.

“He said, ‘America is so determined, they bring their women to kill the Taliban. You’re so pathetic,’” Black said. “‘It’s the angel of death raining fire upon you.’” After circling the safe house environs many times — striking militants after they’d regroup in threes and fours — the Spectre had just enough fuel to return to Uzbekistan. The crew had expended all of its ammunition: 400 rounds of 40mm cannon shot and 100 rounds of 105mm Howitzer rounds. Black contacted an incoming gunship sent to finish off the remaining militants with a fresh load of ammo.

In those few hours, Black had become the first female AC-130H navigator to shoot in combat. Six years later, she’s a combat-medal-wearing mother to two sons, ages 6 months and 2 years, and she expects to return to Afghanistan in early 2008. She estimates the total number of human targets eliminated on that first tour at more than 250 enemies.

“I’m so proud to represent women, and proud to represent the gunship community, but it’s very humbling,” she said. “Here I am, Captain Black, getting all this attention for something myself and 12 other folks did.”

Although her gender was used to rile the Taliban, Black said it’s never proven a liability with her crew. “I never have to worry about it,” she said. “Everybody I care about knows who I am. They know what Allison Black is about.”

More stories our "Killer Chicks" at site.
Posted by: Sherry || 12/31/2007 12:35 || Comments || Link || [11 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I swear I put this in local!! Sorry, my bad.
Posted by: Sherry || 12/31/2007 12:42 Comments || Top||

#2  Where were girls like this when I was young and single?
Posted by: Mike || 12/31/2007 13:41 Comments || Top||

#3  Probably in pre-school, Mike
Posted by: Zenobia Snavith4145 || 12/31/2007 15:12 Comments || Top||

#4  They existed, Mike. They just weren't allowed to be Air Force pilots. I've a dear friend who now flies chartered jets, chauffeuring businessmen. She used to instruct Air Force pilots, but she wasn't allowed to do that in an Air Force uniform.
Posted by: trailing wife || 12/31/2007 15:56 Comments || Top||

#5  Top 10 Women Who Inspired In 2007
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 12/31/2007 20:50 Comments || Top||

#6  WTH? Not a Brittany, nor Lindsey, nor Paris in the bunch?
Posted by: Frank G || 12/31/2007 21:01 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
In Pakistan, the Prime Minister has no control over the military budget (opinion on Bhutto)
Commentator responding to criticism of Bhutto as a feudal lord and her alleged collaboration with Islamists:
It is simply poor understanding to imply that anyone who the "feudal lords" put up is going to win. Many landowners flocked to Bhutto's party precisely because Bhutto was popular with the rural masses. Her many opponents were also large landowners, often more powerful than the landlords who supported her.

This claim of "feudal lord" is simply a canard continually repeated by the urban elite. More critically, often represents a racist attitude of the Muhajirs and Punjabis towards Sindhis. It is similar to the Chinese condemned Tibetan leadership as feudal. The reality is that, like in the rest of the third world, the urban population claims the lion's share of the resources while the majority lives in rural areas. Moreover, the cities in Pakistan have higher percentage of militants because of the ethnic divisions -- most Sindhis are predominantly sufi in outlook.

It should not be surprising that many rural politicians are landowners, after all the peasants are often illiterate and have few resources to run for office. However, the landowners belong to many different parties, and the peasants are not dumb -- they do know who to support from among the landlords. Ms. Bhutto's support had nothing to do with the fact that she belonged to a landowning family, so did many of her relatives who were not as popular.

The idea that Ms. Bhutto had anything to do with the murder of her brother is plain libel. The forces which conspired to kill his brother also wished to discredit Ms. Bhutto in the process. The reality is that the Pakistani intelligence agencies, such as the ISI, are not controlled by the office of the Prime Minister (Ms. Bhutto could not even exercise any control over the military budget). Her niece, watching her aunt killed as her father was, seems to be finally realizing as much -- as her most recent statement shows. Sindhis generally believe that Pakistani military agencies were responsible for the death of Ms. Bhutto and her siblings.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 12/31/2007 11:21 || Comments || Link || [11 views] Top|| File under:


The Best-Laid Five-Minute Plans of Bill Richardson.
By Mark Steyn

It’s tempting to rerun my column on Pakistan from a month ago. Not because I predicted the assassination of Benazir Bhutto or offered any other great insight, but rather for the opposite reason: “Everyone’s an expert on Pakistan, a faraway country of which we know everything: General Musharraf should do this, he shouldn’t have done that, the State Department should lean on him to do the other… Well, I dunno. It seems to me a certain humility is appropriate when offering advice to Islamabad.”

Oh, well. In the stampede of instant experts unveiling their Pakistani solutions-in-a-box, some contributions are worthy of special attention. Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico, who is apparently running for the Democratic presidential nomination, was in no doubt about what needs to happen in the next, oh, 48 hours:

“President Bush should press Musharraf to step aside, and a broad-based coalition government, consisting of all the democratic parties, should be formed immediately... It is in the interests of the U.S. that there be a democratic Pakistan that relentlessly hunts down terrorists.”

Wow. Who knew it was that easy?

Continued on Page 49
Posted by: john frum || 12/31/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The big problem is, the unified view on the left is that Pak is just a bigger, dirtier version of New Jersey...
Posted by: M. Murcek || 12/31/2007 7:28 Comments || Top||

#2  Given that Richardson is opposed to a broad-based coalition of democratic parties in the United States united to oppose terrorism in, for example, Iraq and Iran, it is hilarious he should imagine Pakistan could pull it off in 48 hours. Though given the obstructionism and stupidity of the Democratic party I have more hope Pakistan will unite against terrorism before blue state Americans do.
Posted by: Excalibur || 12/31/2007 8:41 Comments || Top||

#3  Bill's at his Peter Principle position, as the good governor of a state rated 47th in per capita income and home to NIMBY projects unloved elsewhere. Outside of being an effective Senator like John 'Genghis Khan' Kerry or VP like Dan Quayle, any other higher office would be beyond his capacity.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 12/31/2007 9:03 Comments || Top||

#4  The hell with the Waziris. Seal them off and let them rot in the 7th century if they can't act civilized. We'll try again in a couple of generations.
Posted by: mojo || 12/31/2007 12:58 Comments || Top||

#5  No patchwork scheme—and all our present recent schemes…are mere patchwork—will settle the Waziristan problem. Not until the military steam-roller has passed over the country from end to end, will there be peace. But I do not want to be the person to start that machine.

- Lord Curzon, Viceroy of India, 1900
Posted by: john frum || 12/31/2007 14:11 Comments || Top||

#6  Procopius, when you referred to John Kerry as an "effective Senatr," I think you forgot the HTML irony tags.
Posted by: Mike || 12/31/2007 14:14 Comments || Top||


Olde Tyme Religion
Maimonides and the “Meshugga” Prophet
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 12/31/2007 09:17 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Since tha article mentions the Almohads and how they forced Jews to choose between conversion or exile (notice that unlike the order of expulsion by the Catholic Kings in 1492 this got no publicity by our intelligentsia) let me recall the events preceding the battle of Navas de Tolosa between Spanish Christains and Muslim forces (both Almohades and Muslims of Spain).

This was a battle the Chritins could not afford to lose after the disaster of Alarcos, thse was a battle where the Christians expected to be heavily outnumbered and this was a battle where due to the losses at Alarcos they had a crirtical shortage of trained men and had been forced to swell their ranks with communal militias of dubious value. And still they dismissed a large contingent (it is believed they could have been 30,000) of Northern Europpean crusaders (mostly French), because of their nasty behaviour agsint Jews. More importanly these were not militia quality but trained men, an are where the Christains were critically short. While the motivation of the Christian kings was probably more related to feudal honor and duties (ie protecting vassals and subjects) that by love of the Jews it is in contrast with treatment of Jews by the almohads, almoravids (preceding wave of jihadis) and the supposedly tolerant and enlightened first invaders (eg the pogrom at Granada in 1055)

Aftermath: Christians were outnumbered 70,000 to 125,000 ie five to nine. Notice that the the presence of the Crusaders would have brought the Christians to near parity. Like at Alarcos, Muslims set a screen of light infantry who dispersed in front of initial Chrisian attak only to close at the their backs, once these had engaged the main body maa but this time Christains had a reserve. The first reserve was repulsed but then the second reserve with the Kings and the best troops pierced through the light infantry and joined with the main body just in time as the communal militias were starting to disintegrate. At this point the battle turned into a slaughter of Muslim troops (90,000 dead ie 75% losses). So even if the outcome was a decisive victory for the Christians (the Muslims would never be able to mount another credible threat of invasion against the Christian kingdoms) it was won by a hairbreadth and this highlights still more the courage and sense of honor of the Castillan King deciding to protect his Jewish subjects against the troublesome Crusaders.
Posted by: JFM || 12/31/2007 10:21 Comments || Top||

#2  Great comment as usual, Jeff!
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 12/31/2007 11:20 Comments || Top||

#3  btw,

the muslims who persecuted Maimonides in Spain and Morrocco were Sunnis. the muslims who persecuted the Jews of yemen were Shia
Posted by: mhw || 12/31/2007 21:30 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Man of the Year: General David Petraeus
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 12/31/2007 12:43 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Petraeus and Pretorius.... Both Dutch and quite similar in spelling. Believe it or not, there's actually a physical likeness as well. Makes one wonder.

On 16 December 1838, Commandant-general Andries Wilhelmus Jacovus Pretorius' force of some 500 men was attacked by over 10,000 Zulus, who were beaten off with an estimated loss of 3,000 men in what became known as the Battle of Blood River. The day was remembered as Dingane's Day by Afrikaners until 1910, when it was renamed Day of the Vow and recognised as a public holiday by the first South African government.
Posted by: Besoeker || 12/31/2007 14:06 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
34[untagged]
8Govt of Pakistan
6Taliban
3al-Qaeda in North Africa
3al-Qaeda
3Global Jihad
2al-Qaeda in Iraq
2al-Aqsa Martyrs
2Hamas
1Islamic Courts
1Jemaah Islamiyah
1Takfir wal-Hijra
1Thai Insurgency
1al-Qaeda in Europe
1al-Qaeda in Turkey
1Govt of Iran
1Govt of Sudan
1Govt of Syria
1Hezbollah
1Iraqi Insurgency
1IRGC

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Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
3dc
Skidmark

Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2007-12-31
  Little Pugsley appointed PPP chairman, Gomez regent
Sun 2007-12-30
  Bin Laden vows jihad to liberate Palestinian land
Sat 2007-12-29
  Sindh Rangers given shoot-at-sight orders
Fri 2007-12-28
  Bhutto's assassination triggers riots
Thu 2007-12-27
  Benazir Bhutto killed by suicide bomber
Wed 2007-12-26
  15-year-old bomber stopped at Bhutto rally
Tue 2007-12-25
  Government amends Lebanon constitution for presidential election
Mon 2007-12-24
  Hindu nationalists win Indian election
Sun 2007-12-23
  Somalia Islamic movement appoints new leadership
Sat 2007-12-22
  Paks raid madrassah after mosque boom
Fri 2007-12-21
  France Detains Five Men In Connection With Algeria Bombing
Thu 2007-12-20
  Hamas leader appeals for truce with Israel
Wed 2007-12-19
  Turkey's military confirms ground incursion; claims heavy PKK losses
Tue 2007-12-18
  Turkish Army Sends Soldiers Into Iraq
Mon 2007-12-17
  Paks form team to rearrest Rashid Rauf


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