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Iraq
Hospital attack update - Bill Roggio's Long War Journal
2008-05-03

GMLRS strike knocks out Special Groups command center in Sadr City

By Bill RoggioMay 3, 2008 1:25 PM

US and Iraqi forces continue to target the Mahdi Army as an Iraqi delegation visited Iran to confront the country over its support of Shia militias battling the government. The US military conducted a guided rocket attack on a Special Groups headquarters adjacent to a hospital in Sadr City, while 14 Mahdi Army fighters have been killed during clashes over the past 24 hours.

The US army targeted and destroyed a Special Groups command and control center with Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System in Sadr City at 10 a.m. Saturday morning, Multinational Forces Iraq reported. "There were six GMLRS rocket strikes on these Special Groups criminal command and control nodes," Lieutenant Colonel Steven Stover, the chief Public Affairs Officer for Multinational Division Baghdad, told The Long War Journal while refuting claims that the US used aircraft to attack. "We conducted a precision strike, hopefully got a few leaders, and sent a very strong message."

The Special Groups have been using the location near the hospital for an extended period of time and US intelligence has followed the activities at this site. "We had been tracking it for some time," Stover said. "Operations made the call to hit it. There may have been damages to the hospital - broken glass. There was likely ambulances damaged; however, it was the Special Groups criminal leadership that purposely put their command and control node there."

The Special Groups are a subset of the Mahdi Army that receives backing from Iran's Qods Force, its foreign clandestine operations wing that has supported Shia terror groups in Iraq. The Mahdi Army and the Special Groups have intentionally fought amongst the civilian population and use civilians as human shields in an attempt to inflate civilian casualties and create a media backlash against Iraqi and US operations.

The Rusafa health department media director claimed 28 Iraqi were wounded in the strike, and nine ambulances and 40 civilian vehicles were damaged. The Sadrist bloc ran the Health Ministry prior to withdrawing from the government in 2007, and the hospitals in Sadr City are known to be infiltrated with Mahdi Army and Sadrist bloc members. The Mahdi Army used hospitals as staging areas for sectarian attacks and weapons storage depots.

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Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#4  The paleos like to say "suicide bombers are our F-16s." I guess the hospital is the quds assholes' aircraft carrier. Fair Game. Bang...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2008-05-03 18:54  

#3  the Iraqi national gov't is ultimately Islamic/Kurd too. My point being, the international community, msm, and WE should start inciting the war crimes standards again, not just for rationalization of attacks, but as reminder at every point that the enemy doesn't play by the rules we are held to. We do our part because of who we are, the other side needs to be painted in broad accurate colors of who they really are. It's not just PR, it's strategic in setting the battlefield for support, domestic and foreign. It DOES matter. If there's one thing teh Bush team has fallen down on, it's teh messaging on who/what/why/how we are fighting. It should be accurate, repeated, and relentless in the exposure of the AQI/Al Quds/Sadr-Mahdi war crimes
Posted by: Frank G   2008-05-03 17:56  

#2  The Sadrist bloc ran the Health Ministry prior to withdrawing from the government in 2007, and the hospitals in Sadr City are known to be infiltrated with Mahdi Army and Sadrist bloc members. The Mahdi Army used hospitals as staging areas for sectarian attacks and weapons storage depots.

they obviously aren't "hospitals" in our way of thinking (I asked at my Kaiser Permanente where the weapons storage area and C-in-C area was and all I got was a referral to mental health). This activity is a war crime, but nobody calls them or Hezbollah, or Hamas, or...hmmm, what do these groups all have in common? Islam
Posted by: Frank G   2008-05-03 17:46  

#1  While I certainly understand the need to take out these guys it might not have been the right time or technique. I KNOW an important target located next to (or even in) a hospital is 'fair game', but I am not sure the 'message' sent is worth the bad PR in Sadr City - 'hearts and minds' and all that really IS important in this kind of fight. I suspect it was a tough call, and I know our guys have a lot more knowledge and information than I, but it does concern me.
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-05-03 17:41  

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