BAQOUBA, Iraq – Soldiers assigned to 5th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, assigned to 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, discovered four weapons caches in Qubbah and Mukeisha villages, in the Diyala River Valley, Iraq, during Operation Lightning Hammer, Aug 18.
While conducting a clearance operation in the village of Qubbah, Soldiers discovered two caches consisting of small-arms ammunition and magazines, 20 sticks of dynamite, detonation cord, 78 blasting caps, one pistol, a suicide vest carrier, six DVDs of suicide bombers, land contracts to rent land to members of the Islamic State of Iraq, propaganda encouraging extremists to kill Coalition Forces and a Wahabbist handbook.
Two other caches were discovered in the village of Mukeisha, which contained 14 Katusha rockets, 10 rocket-propelled grenades, 20-60mm mortar rounds, five 60mm mortar tubes, eight sticks of dynamite, and a DSHKA anti-aircraft weapon system.
“The discovery of these caches will significantly degrade al-Qaida’s ability to conduct operations in the Diyala River Valley,” said Col. David W. Sutherland, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division commander.
“Taking away their weapons systems further allows the local and provincial government to begin rebuilding the systems that provide essential services like food, water, and electricity to the citizens in this area.”
Taking away the enemies abilty to fight is the name of the game here and it is working. Each weapon taken away from the enemy allows the locals to receive important services and eventually return to normal. When life return to normal for the locals, the battle is won, and it is being won all over the country on a daily basis.
There is a lot I'm not even going into here, for instance the relationship of the Saudi based Wahabbist sect of Islam and the insirgency, I'm sure our friends in Saudi Arabia will deny any knowledge of this. Or the DVDs obviously produced to encourage and recruit local young men to the insurgency. Or the Katusha rockets...supplied by Syria or Iran?
So much indeed.
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