Thursday, 3rd March 2011 - 12:37CET
400 US Marines in Greece for Libya deployment
Around 400 US Marines have been dispatched to a US base in Greece ahead of deployment on warships off Libya, an American military spokesman said today.
"The operation is part of forces reposition in the region... with regard to Libya," said Paul Farley, spokesman for the US Souda base on the island of Crete.
He said the troops from North Carolina arrived at the base on Wednesday and would later join two US warships in Mediterranean.
The USS
Kearsage and the USS
Ponce steamed into the Mediterranean en route to Libya yesterday, the Suez Canal Authority said.
The
Kearsage amphibious ready group, with about 800 marines, a fleet of helicopters and medical facilities, could support humanitarian efforts as well as military operations.
http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles...ibya-deploymen
Thursday, 3rd March 2011 - 07:45CET
Dutch soldiers captured in Libya as rescue fails
Three Dutch soldiers were taken prisoner at the weekend by armed men during an operation to evacuate civilians from Libya, the Dutch defence ministry said today.
"We confirm it," a navy official told AFP when asked about the capture of three marines reported by Dutch daily
De Telegraaf.
The paper said the three marines were captured by armed men loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi while helping with the evacuation from Sirte in northern Libya of two unnamed civilians, one Dutch and another European, in a helicopter.
The marines were attacked after the helicopter landed. The two civilians were handed over by the Libyans to the Dutch embassy and have since left Libya, according to
De Telegraaf.
"Intensive diplomatic discussions are underway for the freeing of the prisoners," according to the Dutch defence ministry quoted by ANP news agency.
The marines and the helicopter were based on board the Dutch frigate
Tromp. The warship, which was initially to have taken part in an anti-piracy operation off Somalia, headed on February 24 for the Libyan coast.
The failure of the rescue operation and the capture of the Dutch marines were not made public earlier for security reasons,
De Telegraaf said.
http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles...s-rescue-fails
@ Gnadfly & CT
Journalists were embedded during WWII and their wires were heavily censored. Walter Cronkite landed with the troops via glider during Operation Market Garden. Here's an anecdote.
During Operation Market Garden (September 17–25, 1944) one of the American correspondents ‘attached to the 101st was a United Press reporter named Walter Cronkite, who landed by glider. Cronkite recalls that, “I thought the wheels of a glider were for landing. Imagine my surprise when we skidded along the ground and the wheels came up through the floor. I got another shock. Our helmets, which we all swore were hooked, came flying off on impact and seemed more dangerous than the incoming shells. After landing, I grabbed the first helmet I saw, my trusty musette bag with the Olivetti typewriter inside and began crawling toward the canal which was the rendezvous point. When I looked back, I found half a dozen guys crawling after me. It seems I had grabbed the wrong helmet. The one I wore had two neat stripes down the back indicating I was a lieutenant”’ (216-217).
Ryan, Cornealius. A Bridge Too Far. New York: Popular Library, 1974. pp. 670.
The Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Ernie Pyle reported from all theaters of the war before being killed during the battle for Okinawa. I have never read anything about journalists during the Korean War. I recommend Michael Herr's book Dispatches. Herr was a correspondent reporting from Vietnam for Esquire. Dispatches is a raw, unvarnished look at the Vietnam war from the perspective of a war correspondent, and it shows how much free reign journalists had throughout that war. Cronkite only made a cameo appearance in Vietnam during the Tet Offensive (the Battle of Hue), but it was enough to turn him against the American war effort. I'm guessing Rather's experiences were more similar to Herr's than Cronkite's, but IDK.
Of course, we all know the history of the First Gulf War. The military, acting on the lessons it learned in Vietnam, did not cooperate with reporters. The military eased off excluding reporters for the Second Gulf War, but it controlled access and censored the reporting (ask Geraldo Rivera) much like it did during WWII. It seems that journalists covering the peacekeeping operations in Iraq are happy to stay embedded, especially in the wake of the beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Most of today’s war correspondents do not venture anywhere without a U.S. military presence nearby.
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