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  • 3 days ago
The Origin of the "37 Kills"The number comes from a series of insurgent videos released between 2005 and 2007 by the Islamic Army in Iraq (IAI).In the second "Juba" video (released around October 2006), a man is shown returning from a mission and marking a tally of 37 on a wall.The videos were designed to demoralize U.S. and coalition forces, often showing high-quality footage of attacks synchronized to music.The IAI eventually claimed their "sniper brigade" had killed hundreds of soldiers, but the figure of 37 was the one captured in that specific, widely-circulated clip.One Person or a Myth?There is significant debate over whether Juba was a single individual.The Composite Theory: Most U.S. intelligence officials and military analysts believe "Juba" was a composite character. By attributing multiple attacks across different parts of Baghdad to one person, the insurgency created a "ghost" or "legend" that seemed impossible to catch.The Tactics: The shooters associated with the Juba legend often fired from inside vehicles (like modified vans with small holes cut into the body) and used mattresses to muffle the sound of their Tabuk or Dragunov (SVD) rifles. They typically fired only one shot before relocating to avoid detection.The Inspiration: The Juba character was so prominent that he inspired the antagonist "Mustafa" in the film American Sniper and the sniper in the movie The Wall.The Reality of the "Sniper War"While the specific "Juba" figure is considered an urban legend or a propaganda tool, Iraqi snipers were a very real and lethal threat during the conflict.Verified Figures: According to independent tallies (like icasualties.org), roughly 300 to 500 U.S. soldiers were killed by small arms or sniper fire throughout the war.Counter-Operations: The U.S. military eventually deployed elite counter-sniper teams and units like Task Force Raptor specifically to hunt these shooters. Several insurgent snipers were captured or killed who claimed to be "Juba," further supporting the idea that the name was a shared title for many different fighters.

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00:00One Iraqi sniper killed 37 American soldiers, and the U.S. never found him.
00:07Early 2000s, Baghdad.
00:09American soldiers are dying.
00:11One shot, clean kills.
00:13No warning, the sniper leaves no trace.
00:16No shell casings, no witnesses.
00:19U.S. military intelligence gives him a name, Juba.
00:23They don't know who he is, they don't know what he looks like.
00:26All they know, he's hunting them.
00:27Juba operates alone, Dragunov rifle, moves through Baghdad's ruins like a ghost.
00:33He watches, waits.
00:35One shot, gone.
00:37The Americans try to track him, set up counter sniper teams, scan rooftops.
00:43Nothing.
00:43He hits a convoy, kills a soldier, vanishes before backup arrives.
00:48Next day, different district, another kill.
00:51The body count rises, 10 soldiers, then 20, then 30.
00:56U.S. commanders are obsessed.
00:58They redirect resources, deploy the best snipers they have.
01:02They bait him, leave fake targets, set traps.
01:06Juba doesn't take the bait.
01:08He chooses when, he chooses where.
01:11American troops stop looking through scopes, afraid he's watching, waiting for them to expose themselves.
01:16They change patrol routes, move differently, second-guess every window, every rooftop.
01:23One man has paralyzed their tactics.
01:25Intelligence believes he's one person.
01:27Others think it's multiple snipers using the same name.
01:31Nobody knows for sure.
01:322006.
01:33The kills stop.
01:35No body.
01:36No capture.
01:37No confirmation.
01:38Juba simply disappears.
01:40To this day, the U.S. military doesn't know if they killed him, if he left Iraq, or if he
01:46was ever one person at all.
01:4837 confirmed kills.
01:50Millions spent hunting him.
01:52Never found.
01:53The sniper who became a ghost.
01:55The soldiers who couldn't find him.
01:57The mystery that never got solved.
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