(군사) 긴급뉴스 미군 이라크 철군 생중계

조회수 823 2010-08-19 16:59:12

(군사)    긴급뉴스 미군 이라크 철군 생중계

 

You are looking live at the pullout. US combat forces driving out of Iraq tonight and our own Richard Angle from a moving convoy has an NBC News exclusive. Nightly News begins now. From NBC News world headquarters in New York, this is NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams.

 

Good evening. It has gone on longer than the civil war, longer than World War II. Tonight US combat troops are pulling out of Iraq. It’s been about seven and a half years since that first late night air strike decimated심하게 홰손 하다 the Iraqi government and lit up환하게 밝히다 American television screens. Saddam Hussein is now dead. The new Iraqi government is still taking tentative자신 없는 steps. And the toll on the United States has been substantial상당한. 4,415 American service members died in Iraq. Close to 32,000 Americans wounded.  

 

We watched the invasion happen on live television. Thanks to some brand-new at that time exclusive technology and tonight once again we watch the pullout of these combat troops the very same way though as you watch remember 50,000 Americans in uniform will remain behind in Iraq in what’s being called a non combat rule. Our chief foreign correspondent Richard Angle’s covered this war for so many years for us. With us from a moving convoy in the Iraqi desert tonight and Richard, I understand your reporting of this at this hour tonight constitutes… 되는 것으로 여겨지다 the official Pentagon announcement. Correct?

 

Yes, it is. Right now we are with the last American combat troops who are…..ands they’re in the process of leaving this country right now. We are with the 4-2 Stryker Brigade. I’m broadcasting right now live from the top of a Stryker fighting vehicle. As soon as all these soldiers leave Iraq, Operation Iraqi Freedom, the combat mission in Iraq will be over.

 

Combat soldiers from the 4th Stryker Brigade suit up tonight for their final mission. Their vehicles are all pointing south to Kuwait. They head out in darkness. The soldiers had just left camp Liberty in Baghdad. It’s about two o’clock in the morning. They’ll be driving for seven hours in the night, then take a break before pushing on to the border. Sunrise comes early here just five AM. They’ve been driving through the night. Daylight gives our first clear view of the road. The Strykers are traveling on Iraq’s main north south highway, smooth wide blacktop. What a difference to how American troops entered Iraq! In 2003, American forces crashed through the desert to stake unpredictable to the Iraqi army.

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