British Military Critical Of US Troops'
Heavy-handed Style With Civilians By Richard Norton-Taylor and Rory McCarthy in
Camp as Sayliyah, Qatar The Guardian - UK 4-1-3
- Cracks are appearing between British and American
commanders which have serious implications for their future operations
in Iraq.
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- Senior British military officers on the ground are
making it clear they are dismayed by the failure of US troops to try to
fight the battle for hearts and minds.
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- They also made plain they are appalled by reports over
the weekend that US marines killed Iraqi civilians, including women and
children, as they seized bridges outside Nassiriya in southern
Iraq.
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- "You can see why the Iraqis are not welcoming us with
open arms," a senior defence source said yesterday.
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- General Sir Mike Jackson, the head of the army, drove
home the point at a press conference in London on Friday. "We have a
very considerable hearts and minds challenge," he said, adding: "We are
not interested in gratuitous violence."
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- British and American troops "must convince the Iraqis
of their good intentions", echoed Adam Ingram, the armed forces
minister. It was not clear whether he was referring to any particular
incident.
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- Yesterday, British officers described the very
different approach between UK and American soldiers by pointing to Uum
Qasr, the Iraqi port south of Basra and the first urban area captured by
US and UK marines. "Unlike the Americans, we took our helmets and
sunglasses off and looked at the Iraqis eye to eye," said a British
officer.
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- While British soldiers "get out on their feet",
Americans, he said, were reluctant to leave their armoured vehicles.
When they did do so - and this was the experience even in Uum Qasr - US
marines were ordered to wear their full combat kit.
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- One difference emphasised yesterday by senior British
military sources was the attitude towards "force protection". A defence
source added: "The Americans put on more and more armour and firepower.
The British go light and go on the ground." He made it plain what
approach should be adopted towards what he called "frightened
Iraqis".
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- British defence sources contrast the patient tactics
deployed by their troops around Basra and what they call the more brutal
tactics used by American forces around Nassiriya.
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- US marines in the southern Iraqi town appeared to have
fired indiscriminately, with orders to shoot at civilian vehicles. One
was reported to have knowingly killed an Iraqi civilian woman.
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- According to reports from journalists and military
spokesmen in the area, British troops - Royal Marines and the 7th
Armoured Brigade, the Desert Rats - have played a patient, waiting
game.
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- An officer described it yesterday as "raid and aid" -
a combination of raiding parties against specific targets such as local
Ba'ath party leaders, and at the same time delivering aid to the local
population.
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- Unlike their American counterparts, British commanders
have said they will not change their tactics following the suicide
bombing attack last week on a group of US marines in Nassiriya.
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- The British military put the difference in approach
down to decades of training as well as experience - first in colonial
insurgencies in Malaysia, then in Northern Ireland and peacekeeping
operations in the Balkans.
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- Experience "42 Commando's last tour was in Northern
Ireland," Major Tim Cook of the Royal Marines said yesterday, referring
to the unit now in Uum Qasr. Before that it was in Sierra Leone. Other
commandos in southern Iraq had recently been based in Pristina,
provincial capital of Kosovo.
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- Sir Roger Wheeler, former head of the army, points to
the "experience, awareness, and skill" - particularly important among
non-commissioned officers such as corporals and sergeants. "British NCOs
have the confidence," a senior officer echoed yesterday.
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- What is striking is the emphasis senior British
military figures are placing on the differences between their approach
and that of the Americans on the ground. They have gone out of their way
to draw attention to nervous, "trigger-happy" US soldiers.
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- American commanders say they are getting the message.
Brigadier General Vince Brooks, a senior US officer at central command
in Qatar, said yesterday his troops had a "heightened awareness" about
civilians on the battlefield.
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- He said soldiers were now aware they were facing a
"set of regime players who will quickly put themselves in civilian
clothes, hide weapons, do things that are inconsistent with the laws of
armed conflict, exhibit brutalities against civilians.
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- "We still make determinations on the ground about
whether a threat is posed or not. It is very, very difficult to sort
that out."
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- General Richard Myers, chairman of the US joint chiefs
of staff, went out of his way over the weekend to say his troops were
learning from the British.
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- After agreeing with General William Wallace, commander
of US ground forces in Iraq, that the enemy was responding in a way that
the allies had not "wargamed" for, he said American - as well as British
- forces could afford to be patient.
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- US marines in Nassiriya have said they had asked
British troops for instructions in how to conduct urban warfare.
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- They began using new tactics in operations around the
town yesterday when they started searching suburbs of the city block by
block.
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- "We are going in to go block by block and we are going
to weed out all enemy personnel," said Captain Rick Crevier, a company
commander with the US Marines.
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- British military sources are now concerned that the
experience in peacekeeping and unconventional warfare of British troops
will mean they will be in Iraq long after the Americans have left, even
for years, in policing and humanitarian operations.
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- Shortly after George Bush was elected president, the
former chief of defence staff, Lord Guthrie, told the Guardian that the
new administration was moving towards light, flexible forces which can
"get there quicker but not stay around for ever". He added: "The
Americans talk about the warrior ethic and ... that peacekeeping is for
wimps."
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- Iraq has shown that the quick-light-flexible force
strategy has not worked. The concern here among military chiefs is that
the experience will mean the US will want to get out of places even
quicker, leaving the British and others to continue fighting the battle
for hearts and minds.
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