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View Full Version : Chinook Tragedy Won't Deter Troops' R&R Program



Grinder
3 November 2003, 20:09
By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 3, 2003 - The Nov. 2 downing of a U.S. military helicopter
that was flying troops en route to stateside leave won't affect a recently
expanded rest and recuperation leave program, according to U.S. Central
Command.

"The (R&R) program remains active," declared CENTCOM spokesperson Air Force
Maj. Mike Escudie, who added, "Flights are leaving Kuwait daily."

In fact, Escudie noted, the R&R program for service members supporting
operations in Iraq was expanded Nov. 2 to handle 470 troops a day headed for
two weeks' stateside leave from a previous daily limit of 270 service members.

And the Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, and Atlanta airports were added as stateside
destination points for troops in the expanded program, according to a CENTCOM
news release, joining the original Baltimore-Washington airport hub.

An insurgent using a hand-held surface-to-air missile, according to defense
officials, apparently had shot down the American Chinook helicopter. The Nov. 2
attack occurred near the Iraqi village of Amiryah, which is close to Fallujah,
a recognized stronghold of support for deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

The Chinook, U.S. officials said, was en route to Baghdad when it was shot
down, killing 16 and injuring 20 soldiers.

U.S. defense officials have acknowledged that insurgents have become bolder in
recent attacks on U.S., coalition, and allied-Iraqi targets in post-Saddam
Iraq. And officials agreed that insurgents in Iraq seem to be employing
weaponry of increasing sophistication.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld himself said Nov. 2 on "ABC's This Week With
George Stephanopoulos" that there were "enormous numbers" of shoulder-held
surface-to-air missiles in Iraq.

"(There) have to be more than hundreds," Rumsfeld asserted, noting, "there are
weapons caches all over" Iraq.

Rumsfeld has often pointed out that the anti-terrorism war must be taken to the
enemy and that Iraq is on the front line of that conflict.

"We can win this war. We will win this war," Rumsfeld declared on "This Week,"
noting President Bush "has every intention of staying after terrorists and the
countries that harbor terrorists until we have won this war."

Gambit
3 November 2003, 21:29
I don't get it... why would this incident have any effect on the R&R program? Do you really think the shooter knew where the chopper was going?

AirborneAli
4 November 2003, 10:46
It's probably just the fact that they are using a lot of choppers for transporting during the R&R program. Less birds in use would mean less birds get shot down.

Gambit
4 November 2003, 11:23
Ahh... got it.