Wednesday, January 18, 2006

US Denies Report of 'Jumping' Insurgent Bombs in Iraq

"The U.S. Defense Department is denying a report in a publication specializing in defense issues that says insurgents in Iraq are using a new type of improvised explosive weapon that can be shot about 15 meters into the air to attack low-flying helicopters. The report came the day after the latest incident in which a U.S. helicopter went down, with the cause of the crash still under investigation.

A spokeswoman for the Defense Department's special task force on countering Improvised Explosive Devices says no aircraft have been lost to any new 'jumping' weapons, and indeed that there are no confirmed reports of any such weapons being used in Iraq.

At a news conference on Wednesday, the top civilian official in charge of the U.S. Army, Secretary Francis Harvey, had slightly different information from the task force statement issued later in the day. The military calls insurgent bombs IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices).

HARVEY: "That's an anticipated threat. To my knowledge we, we have not, I don't know if we've seen, we may have seen one of those. But to my knowledge we have not seen a lot of those so far, jumping IEDs.

PESSIN: "Have you got tactics to combat that sort of thing?"

HARVEY: "Yeah, we've got systems and tactics and I won't, certainly, go into that."

The officials were responding to a report in the Tuesday edition of Defense News that quotes Brigadier General Edward Sinclair, commander of the Army's Aviation Center in Alabama. The general is quoted as saying such weapons have been used against U.S. army helicopters several times, but he would not say whether they have been effective."
VOA

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