do not feed the troll.Beduin wrote:
what?
if you open your mind too much your brain will fall out.
do not feed the troll.Beduin wrote:
what?
If you would apply half a brain cell to that, Dilbert, you'd realize the increase in coalition casualties coincides with the new ROE that limit the use of air strikes and other indirect fires in order to limit collateral damage/casualties.Dilbert_X wrote:
At some point they'll realise assassinating individuals achieves nothing, and the collateral casualties counter-productive.
Doesn't really seem to be working either.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … _month.PNG
Makes for good TV though.
No.pace51 wrote:
Exactly. Show the muslims why they should fear technology, and why they are the morrally wrong people. Not the "infidelic west"
Y'know, you could jump in here and explain the Muslim perspective a metric fucktonne better than I've done...Beduin wrote:
sounds interesting, I just wanna hear more. Maybe I will learn a thing or two
You're not completely taking the Afghani culture into account there either.Dilbert_X wrote:
Oh of course, its the new ROE which are causing the Taliban to plant more IEDs and the civilians to turn a blind eye.
If you look at the chart you'll see a steady trend-line, with a spike which may or may not be related to the ROE.
Over the last 10 years the assassination policy seems to be sending things backwards instead of forwards - as it usually does.
So tinkering with the ROE, assassinating more people - what is the point really?They're not dumb - they just can't be bothered to give a shit about anything the Western mind values, in any reasonable timeframe, with any reliable results.
If we use precision targeted strikes to take out exactly the targets we want - they'll call it Assassination.FEOS wrote:
If you would apply half a brain cell to that, Dilbert, you'd realize the increase in coalition casualties coincides with the new ROE that limit the use of air strikes and other indirect fires in order to limit collateral damage/casualties.
Tinkering with the ROE is supposed to balance the safety of our forces, the safety of civilians, and the elimination of hostiles.Dilbert_X wrote:
So tinkering with the ROE, assassinating more people - what is the point really?
Welcome to the beginning of mankind. I don't know if you realize but meat-shields have been used for thousands of years.pace51 wrote:
Anyone fighting in the middle east is going to run into civilian casualties one way or another, I've heard people say that they use civilians as shields down there.SonderKommando wrote:
This unit is a esoteric group of enigmatic soldiers operating out of three bases in Afghanistan. They are tasked with neutralizing targets on the jpel list (targets of interest for internment or straight up execution). However, they dont seem to be as graceful and cunning as TF141. Seems like an awful mess of friendly fire, civ casualties, with some successes here and there. Pretty interesting read.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/ju … an-taliban
Killing people who may, or may not, be involved in hostilities against you when they are well away from the actual battlefield and impossible to positively identify is pretty dubious, I'm comfortable calling it assassination.rdx-fx wrote:
If we use precision targeted strikes to take out exactly the targets we want - they'll call it Assassination.FEOS wrote:
If you would apply half a brain cell to that, Dilbert, you'd realize the increase in coalition casualties coincides with the new ROE that limit the use of air strikes and other indirect fires in order to limit collateral damage/casualties.
We know Iraq wasn't related to 9/11 or WMD, he'd have found some other excuse.If 9/11 hadn't happened, GWB wouldn't have spontaneously decided to invade Iraq and Afghanistan.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-07-28 00:01:59)
Wrong (shocking). The increase in casualties is due more to troops in contact situations than to IEDs. We don't call in air support as often now under the new ROE, thus resulting in increased casualties due to enemy fire (vice IEDs), since our troops can't disengage as quickly without air or other indirect supporting fires.Dilbert_X wrote:
Oh of course, its the new ROE which are causing the Taliban to plant more IEDs and the civilians to turn a blind eye.
If you look at the chart you'll see a steady trend-line, with a spike which may or may not be related to the ROE.
Over the last 10 years the assassination policy seems to be sending things backwards instead of forwards - as it usually does.
The concepts started being implemented in late 05-early 06 and were established in doctrine in Dec 06 with the publication of Army Field Manual 3-24.Dilbert_X wrote:
I'm looking at the trend over the last 10 years, not the last few months.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-07-29 20:28:22)
When the coalition can't bring in the major advantage we have (airpower/arty), our casualty numbers go up. It's still not even close to a 1:1 ratio by any means, but still. So our casualty numbers can still go up even if we "steamroll through" them.-Sh1fty- wrote:
FEOS, what is this deal about more coalition troops dying in direct confrontations with the enemy (small arms fire) I thought most of the coalition forces steamrolled through the Taliban once they started using small arms instead of snipers/IEDs.