Discreet Dolls

SAS - Elite British Force in Iraq playing by "British Rules"

james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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SAS kills hundreds of terrorists in 'secret war' against al-Qaeda in Iraq
Hundreds of terrorists have been killed by the SAS waging a "secret war" against al-Qaeda in Iraq, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose.

By Sean Rayment, Defence Correspondent
Last Updated: 6:07PM BST 31 Aug 2008

The SAS had played a key part in defeating a network of car bombers in Baghdad that had brought devastation to the capital. More than 3,500 insurgents have been "taken off the streets of Baghdad" by the elite British force in a series of audacious "Black Ops" over the past two years.

It is understood that while the majority of the terrorists were captured, several hundred, who were mainly members of the organisation known as "al-Qa'eda in Iraq" have been killed by the SAS.

The SAS is part of a highly secretive unit called "Task Force Black" which also includes Delta Force, the US equivalent of the SAS.

The prime targets have been those intent on joining the wave of suicide car bombers that claimed around 3,000 lives a month in Baghdad at the height of the terrorist campaign in 2006.

Using intelligence gleaned from spies and informers, Task Force Black has nearly broken the back of the terrorist network and reduced bombings in Baghdad from about 150 a month to just two.

But the success of the covert mission came at a price – six members of the SAS were killed and more than 30 were injured. Delta Force has suffered in the region of 20 per cent casualties.

A senior British officer told The Sunday Telegraph: "We took over 3,500 terrorists off the streets of Baghdad in around 18 months.

"You could say it was a very successful period. But the butcher's bill was high. The attrition rate is equivalent to that experienced by the SAS during the Malayan insurgency 50 years ago.

“The relationship between the SAS and Delta Force is very close,” he added. “If anything, the attrition rate in Delta Force is higher. Two years ago the SAS made a donation to Delta Force’s 'widows and orphans’ fund of £10,000.”

Senior sources denied that the SAS was taking part in “extra-judicial killings” and added that any incident which appeared to be in breach of the British Army’s rules of engagement would be investigated internally by the unit and by the Royal Military Police if any wrongdoing was suspected.

The source said: “There is no shoot-to-kill policy in Iraq, but there are only a few ways of stopping a suicide bomber. A British lawyer is present during the planning stages of every operation and our troops operate under British rules, not American rules.”

The SAS began to concentrate almost exclusively on reducing the car bomb threat in Iraq at the same time that the US military launched its so-called “surge”, which saw an additional 30,000 American troops move into the most dangerous areas of Baghdad, in early 2007.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/new...s-in-secret-war-against-al-Qaeda-in-Iraq.html
 

james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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I'd love to know what these "British Rules" are as opposed to American Rules.

Never the less, don't get in their way.
 

alexmst

New member
Dec 27, 2004
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Since the enemy is not 'in uniform' and representing a government, what else can be done with them?

I mean, one can capture them and send them to camps like the U.S. does in Cuba, but one has to keep them there forever without trial. So one can either engage them and kill them in battle (preferred option on all sides), or lock them away forever and throw away the key (which nobody likes).

So it doesn't surprise me that Delta Force and the SAS are killing them in battle or in ambush.
 

Dewalt

Banned
Feb 8, 2005
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I say good. Wage the war on the terrorists as it was being done to them. We have all seen through history that the English aren't braver than any other country - they are just braver longer.
 

blackdog

&#@%$!!!
Sep 17, 2002
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The JTF2 are working with the SAS as we speak.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts