Mentions al Qaqaa, and interesting because it's about Fallujah
and you can sort of see the writer searching for the right spin.Although it is unclear where all the weaponry has come from, some of Iraq's largest munition dumps were looted when they went unguarded or underguarded by U.S.-led troops who invaded the country in March 2003.
At the sprawling Al Qaqaa ammunition site south of Baghdad, hundreds of tons of high-grade explosives apparently were hauled off in trucks, according to U.S. troops, who said they were unable to halt the theft because they were outnumbered.---
Dailey, who has spent 15 of his 23 years as a Marine in the explosive ordnance disposal unit, served in the 1991 Persian Gulf War and in missions in Somalia and Kosovo. Somalia, he said, was packed with explosives. "It was an EOD technicians' playground."
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There are indications that when the Iraqi economy was in near-collapse, ordnance became a kind of currency, with civilians being paid with grenades or rockets, which could then be bartered for food and other goods.
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To a degree unanticipated when the U.S. toppled Saddam Hussein, insurgents have proved resourceful in cobbling together roadside bombs to kill and maim U.S. troops. Larger munitions, such as antitank shells, have been known to destroy even the sturdiest of U.S. vehicles.
LA Times