U.S. Orders 4-6 Day Pause in Iraq Advance- due to supply shortage

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http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=2470050

U.S. Orders 4-6 Day Pause in Iraq Advance-Officers

Sat March 29, 2003 12:02 AM ET

CENTRAL IRAQ (Reuters) - U.S. commanders have ordered a pause of between four to six days in a northwards push toward Baghdad because of supply shortages and stiff Iraqi resistance, U.S. military officers said on Saturday.
They said the "operational pause," ordered on Friday, meant that advances would be put on hold while the military sorted out logistics problems with long supply lines from Kuwait.

The invasion force would continue to attack Iraqi forces ahead of them with heavy air strikes during the pause, softening them up ahead of any eventual attack on Baghdad, said the officers, declining to be named.

Use of gas-guzzling armored vehicles has been restricted to save fuel and food is also in short supply. In one frontline infantry unit, for instance, soldiers have had their rations cut to one meal packet a day from three.

Resistance from Iraqi militias fighting in towns along the advance lines has hampered the stretched supply convoys.
 
CENTCOM briefer just now said that there ISN'T going to be any pause in operations.

Hmmm... Operational disinformation perhaps? :scrutiny:

Works for me. Keep the Iraqis AND the media guessing.
 
<Incoming Rant>

Reuters. . . .now there's a paragon of reliable, truthful, unbiased information!

I just wish someone at CENTCOM would grow a nice brassy set and tell the media flatout,

"Hey, we are conducting a war to liberate the people of Iraq from a homicidal maniac. We are ridding said maniac of WMD. We intend to do both with the fewest number of casualties to the good guys."

"We are not conducting this war for your employment or entertainment. Bitch as you will we will not endanger the life of one, not one, member of the coalition. If we want to stop taking territory we will stop taking territory. If we want to do a little maintenance on our vehicles we will. If we want more forces in theatre we will put them in theatre. If we want more attirition of the badguys from the air we will kill them from the air."

"We are doing our job professionally. You are not. You are trying to create a story that has no bearing on reality."

And upon completion of above mentioned rant, new press rules will be imposed at all CENTCOM press conferences. For every question asked by the press corp, there will be a question from CENTCOM stalff directed at reporters. Perhaps CENTCOM staff will be able to get answers to to questions about the nature of press coverage. And no, I'm not talking about the arab press. I'm talking about the American 5th column, opps. . .press.

Someone has got to stand up to these sniveling whinners.

<Rant clear signal>
 
How would the press prosecute the war? I guess they expect the military to mindlessly advance. These guys look for any angle to make things look bad. I can't even watch CNN. I'll end up tossing my T.V..
 
It's kinda funny how all these hairspray-heads are instant Clausewitzes.

Look, honey, four years of being the Channel 17 weather girl in Dubuque does not qualify you to critique the plans drawn up by service academy graduates. Okay, Hannibal? :rolleyes:
 
Well, in the LAST Gulf War, our unit did go on "combat rations" for a few days during the heavy shoot and scoot phase, only because we weren't sure when we would get resupply. That meant two MREs per day instead of three. I thought I was going to starve do death, since every time you stop, you are digging new fighting holes and/or machine gun pits.

My point is, anyone who says they are going to operate on one MRE a day is full of horse....ah...disinformation. This ain't the Battle of the Bulge and we aren't surrounded by the Wehrmacht.
 
Perhaps someone in the Pentagon thought it might be a good idea to let the Iraqi army think that this is a good time to counterattack. Which would, of course be fine with us , since that would expose them to airpower, etc.
Might also be that they decided to wait for the 4th Div before going into Baghdad.
 
well let's see our guys and gals slow down (not stop) for 4 to 6 days resulting in:

a. our troops actually have a little time to sleep while NOT sitting on the bench seats in the back of a Bradley or in the various seats in an Abrams, or *sitting* anywhere else, for that matter

and

b. our troops get to pull full maintenance on all of their gear and get it back in good shape.

and

c. all of the scheduled reserves arrive.

and

d. The Air Force and Navy continue to pound the living :cuss: out of the iraqi C3I [that's Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence]

uh, what was the question again?
 
In one frontline infantry unit, for instance, soldiers have had their rations cut to one meal packet a day from three.

Oh, for the love of gawd, I watched that SNAFU happen.

The FOX guy with the 3ID yesterday reports that they're running on 2 MREs a day until they're all nice and resupplied.

Suzy Bubblehead, FOX correspondent at CENTCOM's press interrogation ten minutes later stands up and asks "Our correspondent in the field says they're down to one meal a day! Is this why you ordered the pause?". General Whatshisface looks at her like she's speaking Mandarin Chinese.

Now, fricken' Reuters is reporting it like it's gospel frigging fact.

I now know why Elvis shot his TV.
 
I sorta liked the analogy made last night that a good butcher spends some time sharpening his knife before he starts in cutting up the meat ...

And last time, how many WEEKS did we spend bombing before the boots hit the ground?
 
Pause....SO WHAT !!!!! I'd like the Press Corp to go out and run this war. Everybody is a critic !!!!!! :fire:

I've managed projects that were less complicated than this war...and it was still hard to meet all the deadlines.

Personally, I'm definately for giving our troops a "pause", they've worked their a*s off to get to where they are today. Let them get some good sleep, load up on ammo, load up on food and fix everything. Let the bomber guys unload a little on the Republican Guards, they really don't do much else anyway. :D

And for those people who said the sandstorm was bad ju-ju, it was a blessing in disguise. Many guys got a lot of sleep during the storm. You know they're really tired when they can sleep thru a sandstorm.....unprotected.

Dave
 
Oh, for the love of gawd, I watched that SNAFU happen.
Yep...me, too. Seems all of the reports were based on one interview with one rifle-bearer. :rolleyes:

Since we control every inch of air space in Iraq, it ain't like we couldn't drop supplies if the situation were really desperate.

Besides, they are American soldiers! Those guys get nourishment from the sand they've been eatin' for a week.

Hoo-ah!!!
 
Baghdad assault 'delayed for up to 40 days'

PAUL GALLAGHER AND TIM RIPLEY AT CENTCOM IN QATAR


THE United States-led advance on Baghdad appeared to have been placed firmly on hold yesterday after frontline units reported orders to settle into their positions for the next 35 to 40 days.

General Tommy Franks, the US commander, insisted there would be no pause in the assault on Saddam Hussein’s regime. But troops on the ground suggested there had been a marked change in the coalition’s military strategy.

Frontline soldiers to the south of Baghdad said they were digging trenches, laying mines and camouflaging vehicles to protect their positions, instead of preparing for an imminent advance on the Iraqi capital.

Initial reports at the weekend suggested there would be a delay of about six days to allow supplies and reinforcements to reach the front.

However, military officials reportedly told one frontline unit the "pause" in the attack could last 35 to 40 days. Other reports claimed there would be a two-week pause.

In the meantime, the aerial and artillery bombardment of Iraqi positions would continue to soften up the Republican Guard divisions which lie in the path of the US forces on the road to Baghdad.

Journalists travelling with US units in central Iraq have reported troops having their food and fuel rations cut as supply lines from Kuwait become overstretched and exposed to attack in towns such as An Nasiriyah and Najaf.

A Reuters reporter who is embedded with one US unit in central Iraq said: "It looks like they are going to be in this position for at least two weeks, the sergeant says.

"They’re going to send in the aircraft to do the work before the grunts [foot soldiers] go in. It’s going to be more air strikes, at least for a couple of weeks probably."

The Pentagon announced last Thursday that another 100,000 US soldiers would be sent to the Gulf by the end of next month to reinforce the 125,000 US and British troops already in Iraq.

Britain’s Defence Secretary, Geoff Hoon, confirmed yesterday that a long conflict in Iraq would lead to UK forces in the region being replaced.

Once the conflict moved into a new phase, the 45,000-strong deployment in the region would be reviewed, Mr Hoon said. "They [UK troops] can certainly stay there for months, and there has never been any doubt of that," he told BBC Radio 4. "I made clear [to the House of Commons] that that was a flexible force; it was designed to achieve certain objectives in a military sense.

"But clearly, ultimately, they would have to be replaced if that was such a long conflict. It’s always been the case that these kinds of conflicts require certain kinds of armed forces in the initial phase. Obviously once we move to a different kind of conflict we can then look at whether we have the right kinds of forces."

General Richard Myers, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, appeared to confirm a delay in the battle plans when he said his forces could afford to take their time and were prepared to dig in as they waited close to Baghdad. "The one thing that we have on our side and we are already using ... is patience," he said.

However, at the US Central Command in Qatar, Gen Franks flatly rejected suggestions of a pause in the coalition attack, although he did not deny that the advance from the south of Baghdad had been halted.

"There have been some pundits who have indicated that perhaps we are in an operational pause. It is simply not the case. There is a continuity of operations," he said. "Combat operations are continuing."

The most advanced US units are only 50 miles from Baghdad and more than 300 miles from their supply bases in Kuwait. Iraq said it would target the supply line and chop it up "like a snake".

The stalling of the advance on Baghdad has renewed questions about the coalition strategy and raised speculation of a conflict between senior generals and the hawkish US defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld.

The New Yorker magazine reported that Mr Rumsfeld overruled calls from military officials for more US assault troops and armour before beginning the ground war.

Quoting Pentagon insiders, the magazine claimed Gen Franks urged a delay while the 20,000 troops intended to form a northern front were re-deployed after the US was refused access to Turkey. Mr Rumsfeld, who was anxious to avoid a "heavy footprint" of US forces on the ground in Iraq, insisted the invasion went ahead, it said.

Gen Franks denied the report and said he had personally ordered ground troops to invade Iraq after Saddam’s forces started torching the southern oil wells. "Very few people know the truth of how the plan was put together" he said. "No one was driving the thing except the operational commanders."




http://thescotsman.co.uk/international.cfm?id=379692003
 
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