WORLD / Middle East |
Video said to show US copter shot down(AP)Updated: 2007-02-05 10:44 BAGHDAD, Iraq - The US command has ordered changes in flight operations after four helicopters were shot down in the last two weeks, the chief military spokesman said Sunday, acknowledging for the first time that the aircraft were lost to hostile fire.
All four helicopters were shot down during a recent increase in violence, which an Interior Ministry official said has claimed nearly 1,000 lives in the past week alone. At least 103 people were killed or found dead Sunday, most of them in Baghdad, police reported. Maj. Gen. William Caldwell told reporters that the investigations into the crashes of three Army and one private helicopters were incomplete but "it does appear they were all the result of some kind of anti-Iraqi ground fire that did bring those helicopters down." It was the first time a senior figure in the US Iraq command had said publicly that all four helicopters were shot down. Despite the losses, Caldwell said it was premature to conclude that the threat to US aircraft posed by Sunni insurgents and Shiite militiamen had increased dramatically. "There's been an ongoing effort since we've been here to target our helicopters," Caldwell said. "Based on what we have seen, we're already making adjustments in our tactics and techniques and procedures as to how we employ our helicopters." Caldwell did not elaborate, presumably for security reasons. In the past, defensive measures have included flying lower and faster, varying routes and using zigzag patterns over dangerous areas. Three crashed in mostly Sunni areas and the fourth was shot down during fighting with Shiite cultists near Najaf. US officials have accused Iran of providing sophisticated weapons to Shiite militants. In December, a spokesman for Saddam Hussein's ousted Baath party, Khudair al-Murshidi, told The Associated Press in Damascus, Syria, that Sunni insurgents had received shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles and "we are going to surprise them," meaning US forces. Al-Murshidi did not say when or how the missiles were obtained. Insurgents have used SA-7s, a shoulder-fired missile with an infrared homing device, against US and British aircraft since 2003. In an Internet statement, the al-Qaida-affilated Islamic State of Iraq claimed responsibility for the latest crash - an Apache Longbow helicopter that went down Friday north of Baghdad, killing two crew members. "We tell the enemies of God that the airspace of the Islamic State in Iraq is prohibited to your aircraft just like its lands are," the statement said. "God has granted new ways for the soldiers of the State of Iraq to confront your aircraft." It was unclear whether the "new ways" referred to new and advanced anti-aircraft weapons - such as SA-18 missiles - or was simply a boast. US military helicopters are equipped with long-range sensors and devices to jam radar and infrared technology, but they have proven vulnerable to intense gunfire, as well as rocket-propelled grenades.
Al-Jazeera showed a grainy 15-second video, filmed from the ground, which showed a helicopter plunging with a trail of black smoke emanating from it. It said the video was of the Apache hit Friday near Taji in central Iraq. The authenticity of the video could not be immediately verified. The crashes have occurred in the run-up to the new
US-Iraqi security crackdown, in which an additional 21,500 American troops and
about 8,000 Iraqi soldiers are being sent mostly to Baghdad in another bid to
quell sectarian violence.
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