Elusive sniper saps US morale in Baghdad
Commanders weigh their options as 'Juba' notches up more kills
Rory Carroll in Baghdad
The Guardian
Friday August 5, 2005
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1542824,00.html

They have never seen Juba. They hear him, but by then it's too late: a
shot rings out and another US soldier slumps dead or wounded.

There is never a follow-up shot, never a chance for US forces to
identify the origin, to make the hunter the hunted. He fires once and
vanishes.

Juba is the nickname given by American forces to an insurgent sniper
operating in southern Baghdad. They do not know his appearance,
nationality or real name, but they know and fear his skill.

Article continues
"He's good," said Specialist Travis Burress, 22, a sniper with the
1-64 battalion based in Camp Rustamiyah. "Every time we dismount I'm
sure everyone has got him in the back of their minds. He's a serious
threat to us."

Gun attacks occasionally pepper the battalion's foot and mounted
patrols, but the single crack of what is thought to be a Tobuk sniper
rifle inspires particular dread.

Since February, the killing of at least two members of the battalion
and the wounding of six more have been attributed to Juba. Some think
it is also he that has picked off up to a dozen other soldiers.

In a war marked by sectarian bombings and civilian casualties, Juba is
unusual in targeting only coalition troops, a difficult quarry
protected by armoured vehicles, body armour and helmets.

He waits for soldiers to dismount, or stand up in a Humvee turret, and
aims for gaps in their body armour, the lower spine, ribs or above the
chest. He has killed from 200 metres away.

"It was the perfect shot," the battalion commander, Lt Col Kevin
Farrell, said of one incident. "Blew out the spine.

"We have different techniques to try to lure him out, but he is very
well trained and very patient. He doesn't fire a second shot."

Some in the battalion want marksmen to occupy rooftops overlooking
supply routes, Juba's hunting ground, to try to put him in the
cross-hairs.

"It would be a pretty shitty assignment because he's good," said Spc
Burress. "I think it's a sniper's job to get a sniper, and it'd
probably take all of us to get him."

American snipers operate in teams of at least two people, a shooter
and a spotter, the latter requiring more experience since he must use
complicated formulae to calculate factors such as wind strength and
drag coefficients.

Some worry that Juba is on his way to becoming a resistance hero,
acclaimed by those Iraqis who distinguish between "good" insurgents,
who target only Americans, and "bad" insurgents who harm civilians.

The insurgent grapevine celebrates an incident last June when a
four-strong marine scout sniper team was killed in Ramadi, all with
shots to the head.

Unlike their opponents, US snipers in Baghdad seldom get to shoot.
Typically they hide on rooftops and use thermal imaging and night
vision equipment to monitor areas. If there is suspicious activity,
they summon aircraft or ground patrols.

"We are professionals. There is a line between a maniac with a gun and
a sniper," said Mike, 31, a corporal with a reconnaissance sniper
platoon who did not want to his surname to be used.

He spoke during a 24-hour mission on a roof during which his team ate
junk food and urinated into a bottle. During daylight they lay on the
ground, immobile, to avoid being seen. "It's not a glamorous life," he
said.

There was no sign of Juba, who tended to operate further east, but the
team spotted mortar flashes and fed the coordinates to base.

Mike said he had shot 14 people in Somalia, three in Afghanistan and
one in Iraq. "It's not like you expect it to be, an emotional high.
You just think about the wind, the range, then it's over with."

Sniper fire is only of the threats for an American military that has
suffered heavy losses this week.

Yesterday another soldier was killed in Ramadi, west of Baghdad,
adding to the 21 who died in attacks on Monday and Wednesday.

Roadside bombs account for most of the lives lost, and the size and
design of the explosions has led investigators to conclude that the
insurgents are learning bombmaking methods from other terrorist
organisations.

Yesterday's New York Times reported that the techniques used by
Hezbollah in Lebanon were increasingly being seen in roadside bombs in
Iraq.

An unnamed senior American commander quoted by the paper said bombs
using shaped charges closely matched the bombs that Hezbollah used
against Israel.

"Our assessment is that they are probably going off to 'school' to
learn how to make bombs that can destroy armoured vehicles," he said.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1542824,00.html







***************************************************************************
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