parihaka said:No offence Sig but you read far to much populist press.
Anything more to say? How am i to reply to that?
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parihaka said:No offence Sig but you read far to much populist press.
parihaka said:No offence Sig but you read far to much populist press.
sigatoka said:1. I didnt claim that i know more than you, partly because I dont know what I dont know, and I dont know what you know unless you elucidate what you do know.
sigatoka said:2. In gulf war the Iraqi's had already lost before the first ground battle was fought. Hundreds of their tanks, artillery pieces and thousands of their troops were dead before ground forces reached them. The remaining troops were shell shocked and half starved.
sigatoka said:Al Khafji occured before the U.S. airforce had ample to work the Iraqis well. It was merely an attempt to get the U.S. ground forces to attack before they were prepared.
sigatoka said:3. Exactly, brigade level action to depose the Taliban backed by tens of thousands of troops and Al-Qaeda's hundreds.
sigatoka said:4. In the face of the overwhelming airpower, most Iraqi troops didnt even fight, they couldnt wait to throw away their uniform and boots and run home. Only the Fedayeen and some of the regular iraqi troops fought (numbering at most a few thousand out of an army of a nominal strength of few hundred thousand).
sigatoka said:5. That seems to be an extreme definition. Wouldnt most people say that when airpower has been the decisive factor, that it has won the war?
I remember you talking about planning a ground war without Wesley Clark's permission. Do you think Milosevic got wind of this, or did he simply not have the bottle?Officer of Engineers said:Even in the Kosovo War where the decisive factor was Milosevic chickening out. The 3JA was certainly more than ready for a fight.
Alas, as I know all too well, the failing of university students everywhereOfficer of Engineers said:Parihaka, you want to see just how he can't admit he knows crap all?
parihaka said:I remember you talking about planning a ground war without Wesley Clark's permission. Do you think Milosevic got wind of this, or did he simply not have the bottle?
Officer of Engineers said:1. 10s of 1000s of troops? *** rolling my eyes ***. You want to name them? The Khandahar Area of Operations was the responsibility of the 187th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault). At the time of Tora Bora, the 187BCT consisted of the 187th Infantry Regiment, re-enforced by the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia Canadian Light Infantry Battle Group. After Tora Bora, the 187BCT was further re-enforced by the British 4th Commando Group. Now, if you can add, that's a total of less than 9000 troops.
2. Most of those who walked away were not even thought of by the USAF and I will guarrantee you that most of them never even seen an explosion. They ran away because they chickened out, NOT because anything the USAF did.