Wednesday, May 20, 2009

WILD ASS NEW VIDEO OF SPECIAL FORCES FIGHTING TALIBAN IN MOUNTAINS OF AFGHANISTAN


Turn up your sound and enjoy the footage and music as U.S. Special Forces rip into the Taliban in the mountains of Afghanistan.

WATCH VIDEO HERE:

http://www.youtube.com/v/XcQqH2fxgZI&hl=en&fs=1

CLICK ON DIAMOND-SHAPED ARROW TO PLAY VIDEO

EXCITING NEW VIDEO OF FIREFIGHT WITH TALIBAN IN HELMAND PROVINCE AFGHANISTAN


INTENSE Firefight with Taliban in Helmand, Afghanistan. After numerous mortars being launched at the enemy position, enemy fire was still being received so they decide an M97 LAW would do some good.

TURN UP YOUR SOUND

WATCH VIDEO HERE:

http://www.youtube.com/v/X5vCUQ6bZBQ&hl=en&fs=1

CLICK ON DIAMOND-SHAPED ARROW TO PLAY VIDEO

BALL BUSTING VIDEO OF GUNSHIPS TAKING OUT TALIBAN IN AFGHANISTAN


This video gives you and overhead view of U.S. Gunships as they wipe out the Taliban in Afghanistan. Turn up your sound so you can hear the communication between Gunship crew and ground control.

WATCH VIDEO HERE:

http://www.youtube.com/v/VbxslQgUed0&hl=en&fs=1

CLICK ON DIAMOND-SHAPED ARROW TO PLAY VIDEO

NEWS ALERT: CAR BOMB KILLS 34 IN SHIITE AREA OF BAGHDAD


Car Bomb Goes Off By Ice Cream Parlor

By Nada Bakri

Washington Post Foreign ServiceThursday, May 21, 2009

http://tinyurl.com/q3x6f6

BAGHDAD, May 20 -- A car bomb exploded Wednesday near a crowded ice cream parlor in a Shiite neighborhood of northern Baghdad, killing at least 34 people and wounding 72 in one of the deadliest attacks in weeks.

Iraqi security forces cordoned off the bombing site as ambulances, their sirens wailing, ferried the dead and wounded to nearby hospitals. Witnesses said people ran frantically from the scene, terrified that another bombing might follow.

"These are desperate attempts to divide the Iraqi people," said Hamdallah Ali Rikabi, a neighborhood official in a movement loyal to Moqtada al-Sadr, a Shiite cleric whose followers once controlled the area. "But they have learned from their past."

A series of suicide bombings struck predominantly Shiite neighborhoods in Baghdad last month, making April the most violent month this year and fueling speculation that Sunni insurgents might be trying to instigate the sort of sectarian conflict that plunged Iraq into chaos in 2006 and 2007.

Civilian casualties have mounted each month this year, as the United States prepares to withdraw combat troops from cities by June 30.


But for days this month, amid a lull in the bombings, Baghdad's most formidable problems had seemed to be traffic sometimes snarled for a mile before omnipresent checkpoints and the heat of an early summer.