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On March 24, 2003, 31 AH-64 Apache helicopters—America's most advanced attack aircraft—launched a deep strike mission against Iraq's Republican Guard Medina Division near Karbala. Only one returned combat-ready. This is the story of the raid that shattered the myth of the "invincible" Apache and ended the doctrine of helicopter deep strikes forever. The Apaches were designed as flying tanks—titanium cockpits, armored to survive 23mm anti-aircraft cannons. After dominating Desert Storm with zero losses, they seemed unstoppable. But the Iraqis had learned a devastating lesson: you don't need advanced weapons to down advanced aircraft. You just need coordination. Using cell phones and the local power grid as signals, Iraqi forces created a "flak trap"—camouflaged fire teams armed with PKM machine guns, RPGs, ZU-23 anti-aircraft guns, and even civilians with AK-47s. When the Apaches flew over Karbala, everyone fired at once. The results were catastrophic: 30 of 31 helicopters damaged, averaging 15-20 bullet holes each. One Apache took 29 hits. Sixteen main rotor blades destroyed. Six engines ruined. One helicopter shot down, crew captured. The entire squadron grounded for a month. In 2006, the Army quietly admitted what Karbala proved: "AH-64s would no longer have a major role in deep attacks." The Apache was "highly susceptible to rifle fire." The doctrine changed overnight—from attack to reconnaissance, from deep strikes to standoff weapons. This is how low-tech coordination defeated high-tech armor, and why 31 "invincible" helicopters proved very vincible. #Apache #IraqWar #MilitaryHistory #Karbala #AttackHelicopter #WarfareDocumentary