One of the oldest defenses
In a post in November, I mentioned a few walls and barriers being constructed around the world primarily to keep out Islamic terrorists.
Yesterday, according to a CentCom release, construction began on a berm around a village in northern Iraq. The residents themselves are in favor of the berm.
I've remarked before that it seems a bit anachronistic that in the 21st century, this day and age of space travel, sophisticated computers and electronics, miracle medicines, etc... that we are fighting enemies in Iraq and Afghanistan so closely tied to the tribal system.
This also seems like a trip to the past, where centuries ago towns routinely surrounded themselves with walls of some kind for protection.
But this is war. If murderers were threatening my children, I'd excavate an abyss to protect them. May God preserve the people of this village, and the Coalition forces in that area.
Yesterday, according to a CentCom release, construction began on a berm around a village in northern Iraq. The residents themselves are in favor of the berm.
In a combined effort to reduce insurgent violence in As Siniyah, community leaders, Iraqi security forces and coalition Soldiers began construction on a berm around the village Jan. 5.
Following the recent spike in insurgent roadside and vehicle-borne bombs, leaders of this small village near Bayji in northern Salah Ad Din Province discussed what measures could be taken to improve the security situation.
Local police, city council members, sheiks and religious leaders met with leaders from the 1st Squadron, 33rd Cavalary Regiment 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) to discuss the operation.
As Siniyah's community leaders have long insisted those responsible for the violence were outsiders, not residents of the village. An overwhelming majority of those at today's meeting agreed that a berm would prevent these outsiders from using the village as a safe haven.
Once completed, the berm will be approximately 10 kilometers in length and nearly eight feet in height. Iraqi police and soldiers will man the access points into the village as well as guard towers being built in conjunction with the berm.
Iraqi citizens suffer the most from insurgent violence. Almost 80 percent of those killed and wounded by IEDs are Iraqis, not Coaltion Soldiers.
Provincial leaders expressed their approval of the berming operation. After a similar operation to deny insurgents access to the city of Samarra in August 2005, the level of violence sharply dropped off.
I've remarked before that it seems a bit anachronistic that in the 21st century, this day and age of space travel, sophisticated computers and electronics, miracle medicines, etc... that we are fighting enemies in Iraq and Afghanistan so closely tied to the tribal system.
This also seems like a trip to the past, where centuries ago towns routinely surrounded themselves with walls of some kind for protection.
But this is war. If murderers were threatening my children, I'd excavate an abyss to protect them. May God preserve the people of this village, and the Coalition forces in that area.






1 Comments:
At Sat Jan 07, 11:29:00 AM, Anonymous said…
amen to that.
i came across some analysis long time back about how for those socities and cultures whose past involved walled cities and compounds, their collective psyche was influenced by having those walls. as modern warfare and later stability made such construction seemingly irrelavant, OUR collective psyche now reads such events in different lights.
How ironic. City fathers used to decry the absence of walls and yet their usefulness continues.
Indeed, if we didnt have as much hescoes and concrete barriers, our safety would be very much more in jeopardy.
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