United States : US military ready to pack up bags after Iraq poll.Byline: rakshali03 A pole-dancer's pole and strobe lights strobe light n. A flash lamp that produces high-intensity short-duration light pulses by electric discharge in a gas. strobe light , packs of six-year-old spoiled meat and a brand new, unused van -- just some of the equipment in Iraq that has turned up in the American military withdrawal. The drama of bombing raids and firefights transmitted on live television marked the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, but for those last out of the door, packing up to go home is a more humdrum and often tedious business. More than three million pieces of military equipment spread throughout Iraq and worth around $36.4 billion must be accounted for before a U.S. troop withdrawal due by the end of 2011. "I can't believe how much crap has accumulated," said Gunnery Sergeant Gwen Sanders at a U.S. military transport hub in Kuwait, returning to Iraq to catalogue equipment. "Nobody really paid attention to accountability until the drawdown Drawdown The peak to trough decline during a specific record period of an investment or fund. It is usually quoted as the percentage between the peak to the trough. Notes: push. A lot of squadrons are complaining: 'Why just because I'm the last out here do I have to clean up after everyone?'" she added. The U.S. Third Army, responsible for equipment and personnel transfer, is preparing for a surge in activity. Violence has fallen sharply in Iraq since the worst of the sectarian sec·tar·i·an adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a sect. 2. Adhering or confined to the dogmatic limits of a sect or denomination; partisan. 3. Narrow-minded; parochial. n. 1. bloodshed blood·shed n. The shedding of blood, especially the injury or killing of people. bloodshed Noun slaughter; killing Noun 1. triggered by the U.S. invasion, Iraq's army has grown in size and confidence, and the country's leaders are keen to assert Iraqi sovereignty and independence. But much hinges Hinges may refer to:
Twin suicide bombs that killed at least 155 people in Baghdad on Sunday cast doubt on the abilities of Iraq's security forces. U.S. military leaders are reluctant to risk shifting assets out of Iraq too fast in case they might be needed again. "We're gearing up, given a peaceful, successful election, for a dramatic increase in drawing down equipment," said Brigadier General Mark MacCarley, a senior military logistician, at Camp Arifjan Camp Arifjan is a United States Army base with elements of the US Air Force, US Marine Corps, US Navy and US Coast Guard stationed there as well. Romanian, Polish, Australian and British military personnel are also stationed at Camp Arifjan. , the Third Army's headquarters in Kuwait. HERDING CATS Some work has been done, despite the uncertainty. The number of U.S. military vehicles Military vehicles include all land combat and transportation vehicles, excluding rail-based, which are designed for or are in significant use by military forces. See also list of armoured fighting vehicles. moved out of Iraq has recently doubled to about 3,000 a month and units have been assigned to track down and register U.S. equipment before it is either repatriated, redeployed, sold off or given free to Iraq. Expansion of customs capacity, such as vast halls to search departing troops and their bags and workshops to clean vehicles before their return to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , has started. MacCarley promised the "best planned and best executed" transfer of personnel and equipment in modern military history, and was determined to avoid the mistakes of the 1991 U.S.-led Desert Storm campaign to liberate (Liberate Technologies, San Mateo, CA) A software company that specialized in the information appliance field. Formerly Network Computer, Inc. (NCI), a spin-off from Oracle in 1996, it changed its name in 1999. Kuwait from Iraqi occupation. "We had significant losses of equipment. Some was found years later, some was lost. We're not going to allow that to happen again," he said. Most U.S. equipment and personnel leaving Iraq goes through Kuwait, the main gateway to U.S. operations in the Copyright : Euclid Infotech Pvt. Ltd. Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company |
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