Showing posts with label Snipers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snipers. Show all posts

Monday, August 26, 2013

UN says vehicle shot at by snipers near Damascus








A U.N. team, that is scheduled to investigate an alleged chemical attack that killed hundreds last week in a Damascus suburb, leaves their hotel in a convoy, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, Aug. 26, 2013. An Associated Press photographer saw the U.N. members, wearing body armor, leaving in seven SUVs. It was not clear if the team headed to the suburb where the alleged attack occurred. (AP Photo)





A U.N. team, that is scheduled to investigate an alleged chemical attack that killed hundreds last week in a Damascus suburb, leaves their hotel in a convoy, in Damascus, Syria, Monday, Aug. 26, 2013. An Associated Press photographer saw the U.N. members, wearing body armor, leaving in seven SUVs. It was not clear if the team headed to the suburb where the alleged attack occurred. (AP Photo)





Black columns of smoke rise from heavy shelling in the Jobar neighborhood, east of Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Friends pose for a photograph at coffee shop in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





This image provided by by Shaam News Network on Thursday, Aug. 22, 2013, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, purports to show several bodies being buried in a suburb of Damascus, Syria during a funeral on Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013. Syrian government forces pressed their offensive in eastern Damascus on Thursday, bombing rebel-held suburbs where the opposition said the regime had killed more than 100 people the day before in a chemical weapons attack. The government has denied allegations it used chemical weapons in artillery barrages on the area known as eastern Ghouta on Wednesday as “absolutely baseless.” (AP Photo/Shaam News Network)





Black columns of smoke rise from heavy shelling in the Jobar neighborhood, east of Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Snipers opened fire Monday at a U.N. vehicle belonging to a team investigating the alleged use of chemical weapons in Damascus, a U.N. spokesman said. The Syrian government accused the rebels of firing at the team.


Activists said later that the team had arrived in Moadamiyeh, a western suburb of the capital and one of the areas where the alleged attack occurred. They said the team was meeting with doctors and victims at a makeshift hospital.


Martin Nesirky, spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, said the vehicle was “deliberately shot at multiple times” in the buffer zone area between rebel- and government-controlled territory, adding that the team was safe.


News of the sniper attack came only a few hours after an Associated Press photographer saw the team members wearing body armor leaving their hotel in Damascus in seven SUVs, headed to the site of the alleged attack.


The photographer said U.N. disarmament chief Angela Kane saw them off as they left but did not go with them.


Nearly an hour before the team left, several mortar shells fell about 700 meters (yards) from their hotel, wounding three people. One of the shells struck a mosque and damaged its minaret, according to an AP reporter on the scene.


World leaders have suggested that an international response to the attack was likely.


The United States has said that there is little doubt that Assad’s regime was responsible for the attack on Aug. 21 in the capital’s eastern suburbs. The group Doctors Without Borders said 355 people were killed in the artillery barrage by regime forces that included the use of toxic gas.


Nesirky said one of the cars used by the team was “no longer serviceable.”


“It has to be stressed again that all sides need to extend their cooperation so that the Team can safely carry out their important work,” he said in emailed comments to The Associated Press.


The Syrian government said the U.N. team was subjected to fire by “terrorist gangs” while entering the Damascus suburb of Moadamiyeh west of Damascus, one of the areas that the opposition says were targeted by toxic gas in last week’s attack.


The government also says Syrian forces provided safety for the team until they reached a position controlled by the rebels, where it claimed the sniper attack occurred.


“The Syrian government holds the terrorist gangs responsible for the safety of the United Nations team,” said the government statement broadcast on Syrian TV.


President Bashar Assad denied in remarks published Monday that his troops used chemical weapons during the fighting in the rebel-held suburbs.


Wassim al-Ahmad, a member of the Moadamiyeh local council, said five U.N. investigators eventually arrived at a makeshift hospital in the suburb, where doctors and about 100 people still with symptoms from the alleged chemical attack were brought in to meet with the U.N. team.


The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says the eastern suburbs have witnessed a wide army offensive over the last week, but have been relatively quiet since Sunday night.


Mohammed Abdullah, an activist in the eastern suburb of Saqba, said the U.N. is expected to visit the rebel-held area on Monday and will be under the protection of the Islam Brigade, which has thousands of fighters in the area.


Syrian activists and opposition leaders have said that between 322 and 1,300 people were killed in the alleged chemical attack.


___


Mroue reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Nataliya Vasilyeva from Moscow and John Heilprin in Geneva contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



UN says vehicle shot at by snipers near Damascus

Syria snipers target UN inspectors" vehicle

UN Syria team says vehicle shot at by snipers





Black columns of smoke rise from heavy shelling in the Jobar neighborhood, east of Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Black columns of smoke rise from heavy shelling in the Jobar neighborhood, east of Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Friends pose for a photograph at coffee shop in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





This image provided by by Shaam News Network on Thursday, Aug. 22, 2013, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, purports to show several bodies being buried in a suburb of Damascus, Syria during a funeral on Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013. Syrian government forces pressed their offensive in eastern Damascus on Thursday, bombing rebel-held suburbs where the opposition said the regime had killed more than 100 people the day before in a chemical weapons attack. The government has denied allegations it used chemical weapons in artillery barrages on the area known as eastern Ghouta on Wednesday as “absolutely baseless.” (AP Photo/Shaam News Network)





Black columns of smoke rise from heavy shelling in the Jobar neighborhood, east of Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Syria reached an agreement with the United Nations on Sunday to allow a U.N. team of experts to visit the site of alleged chemical weapons attacks last week outside Damascus, state media said. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at his office, in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Al-Zoubi denied Syria has ever used chemical weapons and warned that the West was allowing chemical weapons to reach “terrorist groups” in Syria. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Top Headlines



UN Syria team says vehicle shot at by snipers

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Snipers" confirmed kills stat is pop-culture hit


Gary Payne / Getty Images for NBC News



Former Navy SEAL Brandon Webb poses with his Yak 52 airplane in a hangar in El Cajon, Calif.




By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor


Inside one of America’s most select clubs, the tally known as “confirmed kills” is revered yet rarely discussed — meant to be carried silently, worn proudly and certainly never hyped.


“It’s an intimate kill,” said Brandon Webb, an ex-sniper and former Navy SEAL who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. “I’ve dropped plenty of bombs on people in Afghanistan. I don’t count that as a confirmed kill. It’s a very personal thing to pull a trigger and take someone’s life.”


But to a growing audience of civilian consumers, the stat is pure mystique, darkly enticing, packed with alpha swagger. And to publisher HarperCollins, director Steven Spielberg, and an Iraq veteran-turned-author who bills himself as “one of the deadliest American soldiers of all time,” the grisly total also equates to money.


The late Navy SEAL Chris Kyle shared the concept with nearly 1 million readers of his 2012 autobiography “American Sniper.”


The book description by HarperCollins notes: “The Pentagon has officially confirmed more than 150 of Kyle’s kills.”


On Feb. 2, Kyle was shot and killed at a Texas gun range — former Marine Eddie Ray Routh was accused in the shooting, and was indicted on July 24. A film about Kyle, also titled “American Sniper,” directed by Spielberg and starring Bradley Cooper, is slated to debut in 2015.


“People are fascinated with precision kills and sniping in a way they never were with machine-gunners or artillery strikes,” said one of Kyle’s co-authors, Jim DeFelice. “There’s a preconceived notion of the lone sniper out in the jungle, stalking his target, and finally taking a shot. While they train to do that and it happens on occasion, that’s not where the bulk of any of these guys’ kills come from.”


“But the number — well, you have to know Chris. He would kind of shrug (it off),” DeFelice added. “If it was up to him, he wouldn’t have put the number in.”


Still, publicists for “American Sniper” listed Kyle’s tally in a matter-of-fact tone akin to how Major League Baseball sums up home runs — a stat that leads the all-time list of other U.S. military marksmen, eclipsing the “previous American record” of 109. That’s the count amassed by Army Staff Sgt. Adelbert F. Waldron III, who served in Vietnam, according to the Military Channel.


Then came the June release of “Carnivore” — another HarperCollins autobiography, co-authored by Iraq veteran and former Army Sgt. 1st Class Dillard “C.J.” Johnson.


It hit shelves with high dose of testosterone-pumped publicity: “… his crew are recognized by Pentagon reports to have accounted for astonishing enemy KIA totals while battling inside and out of the ‘Carnivore,’ the Bradley Fighting Vehicle Johnson commanded,” reads the publisher’s website. The book jacket lists his enemy kills at more than 2,600, including 121 “confirmed sniper kills.”


Some in the military community quickly slammed the book’s bluster as well as its accuracy, launching a “Carnivore Fraud” Facebook page and poking holes in Johnson’s accounts on websites popular with veterans.


Johnson was unavailable for an interview because he is being treated for cancer. In a July 7 article in Military Times, however, Johnson acknowledged the figures in the book are “incorrect,” but said his edits weren’t incorporated. He also complained about how the book had been marketed.


HarperCollins emailed several references for the figures in “Carnivore,” including “On Point,” the Army’s official history of the Iraq invasion. The publisher noted that the book was submitted to and cleared for publication by the Department of Defense.


Speaking generally about the notion of confirmed kills, Johnson’s editor, Peter Hubbard, acknowledged the value of such statistics, saying (via an email through a HarperCollins publicist): “The public has had a fascination with battlefield exploits from Homer’s Iliad to Sergeant York to Chris Kyle.”


But how are a sniper’s kills confirmed and catalogued with any precision?


For the record, the U.S. Army “does not keep any official, or unofficial for that matter, record of confirmed kills,” said Wayne V. Hall, a spokesman for the Army.  Similarly, U.S. Special Operations Command treats that tally as “unofficial,” said Ken McGraw, a spokesman for the command.


“If anything, we shy away from reporting numbers like that. It’s so difficult to prove. And what does it mean?” McGraw said. 


But Kyle’s co-author, DeFelice, said the sniper routinely reported his kills to immediate commanders “because they had to know what was going on,” and he “personally kept track.” 


“First of all, if he shot someone and let’s say the person crawled away, that wouldn’t be a kill. They had certain criteria. They basically had to see the person fall and be clearly dead,” DeFelice said. “Generally, because of where he was operating, it generally meant the body was recovered. Because they were in an urban environment where those kills took place … where other (U.S.) troops were present. They would recover a body so they had that evidence.”


“It’s one of those things that’s more on the honor system,” added Webb, who operates a website called SOFREP that describes itself as a “special operations forces situation report.” He won’t reveal his own count.  


“I’ve had plenty of people ask inappropriate questions. I tell them it’s none of their business. It’s a personal thing,” Webb said. “It’s one of those things where none of my civilian friends would understand, so why they hell would I talk to them about it?”


Related:






Snipers" confirmed kills stat is pop-culture hit