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23 Days to Baghdad: U.S. Marine Aviation Combat Element in Iraq, 2003

Posted By: insetes
23 Days to Baghdad: U.S. Marine Aviation Combat Element in Iraq, 2003

23 Days to Baghdad: U.S. Marine Aviation Combat Element in Iraq, 2003 By Patricia D. Saint
2015 | 216 Pages | ISBN: 1944961216 | PDF | 5 MB


This book adds to the examination of U.S. Marines in the Global War on Terrorism and depicts a chronology of Marine aviation events and achievements in Operation Iraqi Freedom during 2003. This publication describes the uniqueness of a scalable Marine air-ground task force and clearly demonstrates its benefits when the 3d Marine Aircraft Wing formed an aviation combatelement to better support the ground maneuver element during the rapid 23-day march to Baghdad.In the period leading up to Operation Iraqi Freedom, our nation expressed a Pearl Harbor–likesentiment that stemmed from the deliberate 11 September 2001 attack on American soil, with parallels between Japanese pilots and the more contemporary terrorist hijackers who took control of civilian airliners. Defense strategists had begun drawing a plausible connection between the 9/11 attacks and Saddam Hussein’s suspected arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, thus fueling increased multinational support for an offensive against Iraq. Given this mindset along with military direction, Major General James F. Amos began preparing 3d Marine Aircraft Wing in August 2002 for an air campaign based on ground scheme maneuvers that would logistically and operationally challenge the Marine aviation community—once again.In this book, you will read accounts of Marines of all ranks and from all squadrons performing similaracts during Operation Iraqi Freedom. This holds true, particularly during the Opening Gambit, the Battleof an-Nasiriyah, the rescue of Jessica D. Lynch, and the Task Force Tripoli prisoner-of-war recovery mission.In retrospect, the aviation combat element strategy allowed the air wing to operate as a separatemaneuver element with Marines controlling Marine aircraft in a joint arena. Ultimately, Iraqi combatantswere forced to make two basic choices—remain in position and fight or flee and become a convenienttarget of opportunity.