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[Editor's note] Today we are rejoicing and reveling in the fact that
Saddam
Hussein was dug out of the ground by our infantry troops in Iraq.
Hopefully, this is the beginning of the end and our kids can soon be
home.
Maybe it is time to begin reflecting back on some of the bravery and
sacrifice that got us this far.
In all wars, whether fought by Americans or others, signal instances of
bravery emerge by which we compare all actions that came before or
follow.
The story of the 2nd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division told below is
one
of those seminal events in warfare. Notice the heavy emphasis on the
Syrian
infantry defending Baghdad. I don't recall seeing that reported in this
context before. Since there is nothing I can or would want to add - read
the
story written by David Zucchino. Then, you too can wonder - where DO we
get
such men!
Lonnie
*****
The following is an excellent description of one helluva fight by the
Army
brigade that initially attacked and occupied a portion of Baghdad! As
has
been said in other wars..."where do we get such men".!!
Los Angeles Times Magazine
December 7, 2003
The Thunder Run
Fewer than 1,000 soldiers were ordered to capture a city of 5 million
Iraqis. Theirs is a story that may become military legend.
By David Zucchino
Nine hundred and seventy-five men invading a city of 5 million sounded
audacious, or worse, to the U.S. troops assigned the mission outside
Baghdad
last April 6. Ten years earlier, in Mogadishu, outnumbered American
soldiers
had been trapped and killed by Somali street fighters. Now some U.S.
commanders, convinced the odds were far better in Iraq, scrapped the
original plan for taking Baghdad with a steady siege and instead ordered
a
single bold thrust into the city. The battle that followed became the
climax
of the war and rewrote American military doctrine on urban warfare. Back
home, Americans learned of the victory in sketchy reports that focused
on
the outcome-a column of armored vehicles had raced into the city and
seized
Saddam Hussein's palaces and ministries. What the public didn't know was
how
close the U.S. forces came to experiencing another Mogadishu. Military
units
were surrounded, waging desperate fights at three critical interchanges.
If
any of those fell, the Americans would have been cut off from critical
supplies and ammunition. Embedded journalists reported the battle's
broad
outlines in April, but a more detailed account has since emerged in
interviews with more than 70 of the brigade's officers and men who
described
the fiercest battle of the war - and one they nearly lost.
Times staff writer David Zucchino, who was embedded with Task Force 4-64
of
the 2nd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized), returned to the
United
States recently to report this story.
On the afternoon of April 4, Army Lt. Col. Eric Schwartz was summoned to
a
command tent pitched in a dusty field 11 miles south of Baghdad. His
brigade
commander, Col. David Perkins, looked up from a map and told Schwartz he
had
a mission for him. "At first light tomorrow," Perkins said, "I want you
to
attack into Baghdad." Schwartz felt disoriented. He had just
spent several hours in a tank, leading his armored battalion on an
operation
that had destroyed dozens of Iraqi tanks and armored vehicles 20 miles
south. A hot shard of exploding tank had burned a hole in his shoulder.
"Are
you kidding, sir?" Schwartz asked, as he waited for the other officers
inside the tent to laugh. There was silence. "No," Perkins said. "I need
you
to do this." Schwartz was stunned. No American troops had yet set foot
inside the capital. The original U.S. battle plan called for airborne
soldiers, not tanks, to take the city. The tankers had trained for
desert
warfare, not urban combat. But now Perkins, commander of the 2nd Brigade
of
the 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized), was ordering Schwartz's tanks
and
Bradley fighting vehicles on a charge into the unknown. Schwartz's
"thunder
run" into the city the next morning was a prelude to the fall of
Baghdad. It
triggered a grinding three-day battle, the bloodiest of the war-and
dismissed any public perception of a one-sided slaughter of a passive
enemy.
Entire Iraqi army units threw down their weapons and fled, but thousands
of
Iraqi militiamen and Arab guerrillas fought from bunkers and rooftops
with
grenades, rockets and mortars. The
2nd Brigade's ultimate seizure of Baghdad has few modern parallels. It
was a
calculated gamble that will be taught at military academies and training
exercises for years to come. It changed the way the military thinks
about
fighting with tanks in a city. It brought the conflict in Iraq to a
decisive
climax and shortened the initial combat of the war, perhaps by several
weeks.
But when Eric Schwartz got the mission that would prime the battlefield
for
the decisive strike on Baghdad, he had no idea what he had taken on.
Task
Force 1-64, a battalion nicknamed Rogue, rumbled north on Highway 8
toward
Baghdad. The column seemed to stretch to the shimmering horizon-30
Abrams
tanks and 14 Bradleys, their squat tan forms bathed in pale yellow
light. It
was dawn on April 5, a bright, hot Saturday. Schwartz's battalion had
been
ordered to sprint through 10 1/2 miles of uncharted territory. The
column
was to conduct "armored reconnaissance," to blow through enemy defenses,
testing strengths and tactics. It was to slice through Baghdad's
southwestern corner and link up at the airport with the division's 1st
Brigade, which had seized the facility the day before.
In the lead tank was 1st Lt. Robert Ball, a slender, soft-spoken North
Carolinian. Just 25, Ball had never been in combat until two weeks
earlier.
He was selected to lead the column not because he had a particularly
refined
sense of direction but because his tank had a plow. Commanders were
expecting obstacles in the highway. The battalion had been given only a
few
hours to prepare. Ball studied his military map, but it had no civilian
markings-no exit numbers, no neighborhoods. He was worried about missing
his
exit to the airport at what fellow officers called the "spaghetti
junction,"
a maze of twisting overpasses and off ramps on Baghdad's western cusp.
Ball's map was clipped to the top of his tank hatch as the column
lumbered up Highway 8.
He had been rolling only about 10 minutes when his gunner spotted a
dozen
Iraqi soldiers leaning against a building several hundred yards away,
chatting, drinking tea, their weapons propped against the wall. They had
not
yet heard the rumble of the approaching tanks. "Sir, can I shoot at
these
guys?" the gunner asked. "Uh, yeah, they're enemy," Ball told him. Ball
had
fired at soldiers in southern Iraq, but they had been murky green
figures
targeted with the tank's thermal imagery system. These soldiers were in
living color. Through the tank's sights, Ball could see their eyes,
their
mustaches, their steaming cups of tea. The gunner mowed them down
methodically, left to right. As each man fell, Ball could see shock
cross
the face of the next man before he, too, pitched violently to the
ground.
The last man fled around the corner of the building. But then,
inexplicably,
he ran back into the open. The gunner dropped him.
The clattering of the tank's rapid-fire medium machine gun seemed to
awaken
fighters posted along the highway. Gunfire erupted from both sides-AK-47
automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, or RPGs, followed
minutes
later by recoilless rifles and antiaircraft guns. Iraqi soldiers and
militiamen were firing from a network of trenches and bunkers carved
into
the highway's shoulders, and from rooftops and alleyways. Some were
inside
cargo containers buried in the dirt. Others were tucked beneath the
overpasses or firing down from bridges. In the southbound lanes,
civilian
cars were cruising past, their occupants staring wide-eyed at the
fireballs
erupting from the tank's main guns and the bright tracer flashes from
the
rapid-fire medium and .50-caliber machine guns. From onramps and access
roads, other cars packed with Iraqi gunmen were attacking. Mixed in were
troop trucks, armored personnel carriers, taxis and motorcycles with
sidecars. The crews were under strict orders to identify targets as
military
before firing. They were to fire warning shots, then shoot into
engine blocks if a vehicle continued to approach. Some cars screeched to
a
halt. Others kept coming, and the gunners ripped into them. The crews
could
see soldiers or armed civilians in some of the smoking hulks. In others,
they weren't sure. Nobody knew how many civilians had been killed. They
knew
only that any vehicle that kept coming was violently eliminated.
As the column lurched forward, buses and trucks unloaded Iraqi fighters.
Some were in uniform, some in jeans and sports shirts. Others wore the
baggy
black robes of the Fedayeen Saddam, Hussein's loyal militiamen. To the
Americans, they seemed to have no training, no discipline, no
coordinated
tactics. It was all point and shoot. The machine guns sent chunks of
their
bodies onto the roadside. The Americans were suffering casualties, too.
A
Bradley was hit by an RPG and disabled. The driver panicked and leaped
out,
breaking his leg. A Bradley commander stopped and dragged the driver to
safety. At a highway cloverleaf, a tank was hit in its rear engine
housing
and burst into flames. The column stopped as the crew tried desperately
to
put out the fire. But the flames, fed by leaking fuel, spread. The
entire
column was now exposed and taking heavy fire. Two suicide vehicles
packed
with explosives sped down the off ramps. They were destroyed by tank
cannons.
After nearly 30 minutes of fighting, Perkins ordered the tank abandoned.
To
keep the tank out of Iraqi hands, the crew destroyed it with incendiary
grenades. By now the resistance was organizing. Fighters who appeared to
be
dead or wounded were suddenly leaping up and firing at the backs of
American
vehicles. Schwartz ordered his gunners to "double tap," to shoot anybody
they saw moving near a weapon. "If it was a confirmed kill, they'd let
it
go," Schwartz said later. "If it wasn't, they'd tap it again. We were
checking our work."
At the head of the column, Ball was approaching the spaghetti junction.
His
map showed the exit splitting into two ramps. He knew he wanted the ramp
to
the right. He had been following blue English "Airport" signs, but now
smoke
from a burning Iraqi personnel carrier obscured the entire cloverleaf.
In
the web of overpasses, Ball found the ramp he wanted and
stayed right. He was halfway down when he realized he should have taken
a
different one. Now he was heading east into downtown Baghdad, the
opposite
direction from the airport. The entire column was following him. He told
his
driver to turn left, then roll over the guardrail and turn back onto the
westbound lanes. The rail crumbled, the column followed, and everyone
rumbled back toward the airport.
Behind Ball, a tank commanded by Lt. Roger Gruneisen had fallen behind.
Some
equipment from the crippled tank had been dumped onto the top of Gruneisen's
tank, obstructing his view from the hatch. With the emergency addition
of
Staff Sgt. Jason Diaz, commander of the burning tank, and Diaz's gunner,
Gruneisen now had five men squeezed into a tank designed for four. The
gunner had swung the main gun right to fire on a bunker. In the loader's
hatch, Sgt. Carlos Hernandez saw that the gun tube was headed for a
concrete
bridge abutment. He screamed, "Traverse left!" But they were moving
rapidly.
The gun tube smacked the abutment. The entire turret spun like a top.
Inside, the crewmen were pinned against the walls, struggling to hold on
as
the turret turned wildly two dozen times before stopping. It was like an
out-of-control carnival ride. The crew was dizzy. Hernandez looked at
the
gunner. Blood was spurting from his nose. His head and chest were soaked
with greenish-yellow hydraulic fluid. The impact had severed a hydraulic
line. Except for the gunner's bloody nose, no one was hurt. The main gun
was
bent and smashed. It flopped to the side, useless.
The tank continued up Highway 8, Gruneisen on the .50-caliber and
Hernandez
on a medium machine gun. They rolled up to the spaghetti junction into a
curtain of black smoke-and missed the airport turn. They were headed
into
the city center. Hernandez saw that they were approaching a traffic
circle.
As they drew closer, he saw that the circle was clogged with Iraqi
military
trucks and soldiers. It was a staging area for troops attacking the
American
column. From around the circle, just a block away, a yellow pickup truck
sped toward the tank. Hernandez tore into it with the machine gun,
killing
the driver. The tank driver slammed on the brake to avoid the truck, but
it
was crushed beneath the treads. The impact sent Hernandez's machine gun
tumbling off the back of the tank. The tank reversed to clear itself
from
the wreckage, crushing the machine gun. A passenger from the truck
wandered
into the roadway. The tank pitched forward, trying to escape the circle,
and
crushed him. The crew was now left with just one medium machine gun and
the
.50-caliber. Firing both guns to clear the way, the crewmen helped
direct
the tank driver out of the circle. As they pulled away, they could see a
blue "Airport" sign. They were less than five miles from the airport.
They
caught up with the column.
They passed groves of date palm trees and thick underbrush, and everyone
worried about another ambush. In the lead platoon, Staff Sgt. Stevon
Booker
was leaning out of his tank commander's hatch, firing his M-4 carbine
because his .50-caliber machine gun had jammed. Enemy fire was so
intense
that Booker had ordered his loader, Pvt. Joseph Gilliam, to get down in
the
hatch. As Booker leaned down, he told Gilliam: "I don't want to die in
this
country." As he resumed firing, he shouted down to Gilliam and the
gunner,
Sgt. David Gibbons: "I'm a baad mother!" Gilliam, 21, and Gibbons, 22,
idolized Booker, who, at 34, was experienced and decisive. He was a
loud,
aggressive, extroverted lifer. His booming voice was the first thing his
men
heard in the morning and the last thing at night. As Gibbons, in the
gunner's perch at Booker's feet inside the turret, fired rounds, he felt
Booker drop down behind him. He assumed he had come down to get more
ammunition. But then he heard the loader, Gilliam, scream and curse. He
looked back at Booker and saw that half his jaw was missing. He had been
hit
by a machine- un round. The turret was splattered with blood. As Gibbons
crawled up in the commander's hatch, he saw that Booker was trying to
breathe. He radioed for help and was ordered to stop and wait for
medics. Gibbons and Gilliam tried to perform "buddy aid" to stop the
bleeding.
The medics arrived and, under fire, lifted Booker's body into the
medical
vehicle. The driver sped toward a MEDEVAC helicopter at the airport,
just as
the physician's assistant radioed that Booker was gone. The assistant
covered the sergeant's bloodied face and, not knowing what else to do,
held
his hand. Booker's body arrived just ahead of the rest of the column,
which
rolled onto the tarmac in a hail of gunfire.
Some of the tanks and Bradleys were on fire and leaking oil, but they
had
survived the gantlet. At the airport that morning, Col. Perkins spoke on
the
tarmac with his superior, Maj. Gen. Buford C. Blount III, the 3rd
Infantry
Division commander. Rogue battalion had lost a tank commander and tank,
but
they had killed almost 1,000 fighters and torn a hole in Baghdad's
defenses.
Blount wanted to keep the pressure on Saddam's forces. He had seen
intelligence suggesting that Saddam's elite Republican Guard units were
being sent into Baghdad to reinforce the capital. But, in truth, he
really
didn't have good intelligence. It was too dangerous to send in scouts.
Satellite imagery didn't show bunkers or camouflaged armor and
artillery. Blount had access to only one unmanned spy drone, and its
cameras
weren't providing much either. Prisoners of war had told U.S.
interrogators
that the Iraqi military was expecting American tanks to surround the
city while infantry from the 82nd Airborne and 101st Airborne cleared the
capital.
And that was the U.S. plan-at least until the Thunder Run that
morning altered the equation. Blount told Perkins to go back into the
city
in two days, on Monday the 7th. Blount wanted him to test the city's
defenses, destroy as many Iraqi forces as possible and then come out to
prepare for the siege of the capital. Perkins was eager to go back in,
but
not for another thunder run. He wanted to stay. He had just heard
Mohammed
Said Sahaf, the bombastic information minister, deliver a taunting news
conference, claiming that no American forces had entered Baghdad and
that
Iraqi troops had slaughtered hundreds of American "scoundrels" at the
airport. When Perkins got back to the brigade operations center south of
the
city, he told his executive officer, Lt. Col. Eric Wesley: "This just
changed from a tactical war to an information war. We need to go in and
stay."
The brigade was exhausted. It had been on the move day and night,
rolling up
from Kuwait and fighting Fedayeen and Republican Guard units-sprinting
435
miles in just over two weeks, the fastest overland march in U.S.
military
history. Their tanks and Bradleys were beat up. The crews had not slept
in
days. Now they had just one day to prepare for the pivotal battle of the
war. The charge up Highway 8 on April 7 was similar to the sprint by
Rogue
Battalion two days earlier. Fedayeen and Arab volunteers and Republican
Guards fired from roadside bunkers and from windows and alleys on both
sides
of the highway. Suicide vehicles tried to ram the column.
Gunners pounded everything that moved, radioing back to trailing
vehicles to
kill off what they missed. It took only two hours to blow through the
spaghetti junction and speed east to Saddam's palace complex. Schwartz's
lead battalion, Rogue, rolled to Saddam's parade field, with its massive
crossed sabers and tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Rogue also seized one of
Saddam's two main downtown palaces, the convention center and the Rashid
Hotel, home to the Ba'ath Party elite. Lt. Col. Philip deCamp's Task
Force
4-64, the Tusker battalion, swung to the east and raced for Saddam's
hulking
Republican Palace and the 14th of July Bridge, which controlled access
to
the palace complex from the south. The targets had been selected not
only
for their strategic value, but also because they were in open terrain.
The
palace complex consisted of broad boulevards, gardens and parks-and few
tall
buildings or narrow alleyways. The battalions could set up defensive
positions, with open fields of fire. The Tusker battalion destroyed
bunkers
at the western arch of the Republican Palace grounds, blew apart two
recoilless rifles teams guarding the arch and smashed through a metal
gate.
The palace had been evacuated, but there were soldiers in a tree line
and
along the Tigris River bank. The infantrymen killed some, and others
fled,
stripping off their uniforms.
At a traffic circle at the base of the 14th of July Bridge, Capt. Steve
Barry's Cyclone Company fought off cars and trucks that streaked across
the
bridge, some packed with explosives. There were three in the first 10
minutes, six more right after that. The tanks and Bradleys destroyed
them
all. By midmorning, Perkins was meeting with his two battalion
commanders on
Saddam's parade grounds. They gave live interviews to an embedded Fox TV
crew. Lt. Col. DeCamp and one of his company commanders, Capt. Chris
Carter-both University of Georgia graduates-unfurled a Georgia Bulldogs
flag. Capt. Jason Conroy toppled a massive Saddam statue with a single
tank
round. As his tankers celebrated, Perkins took a satellite phone call
from
Wesley, his executive officer. Wesley ran the brigade's tactical
operations
center, a network of radios, computers, satellite maps and
communications
vehicles set up on the cement courtyard of an abandoned warehouse 11
miles
south of the city center. It was hard for Wesley to hear on his
hand-held
Iridium phone; a high-pitched whine sounded over his head. He thought it
was
a low-flying airplane. Wesley shouted into the phone: "Congratulations,
sir,
I - " and at that instant an orange fireball blew past him and slammed
him
to the ground. The whine wasn't an airplane. It was a missile. The
entire operations center was engulfed in flames. Wesley still had the
phone.
"Sir," he said. "We've been hammered!" What?" "We've been hit. I'll have
to
call you back. It doesn't look good." Rows of signal vehicles were on
fire
and exploding. A line of parked Humvees evaporated, consumed in a
brilliant
flash. Men were writhing on the ground, their skin seared. A driver and
a
mechanic were swallowed by the fireball, killed instantly. Another
driver,
horribly burned, lay dying. Two embedded reporters perished on the
concrete,
their corpses scorched to gray ash. Seventeen soldiers were wounded,
some
seriously. The brigade's nerve center, its communications brain, was
gone.
The entire mission - the brigade's audacious plan to conquer a city of 5
million with 975 combat soldiers and 88 armored vehicles in a single
violent
strike - was in jeopardy. It got worse.
As Wesley and his officers tended to the dead and wounded, Perkins was
receiving distressing reports from Lt. Col. Stephen Twitty, a battalion
commander charged with keeping the brigade's supply lines open along
Highway
8. One of Twitty's companies was surrounded. It was "amber" on fuel and
ammunition-a level dangerously close to "black," the point at which
there is
not enough to sustain a fight.
The Baghdad raid, launched at dawn, was now approaching its sixth
hour-well
past the Hour Four deadline Perkins had set to decide whether to stay
for
the night. That benchmark was critical because his tanks, which consume
56
gallons of fuel an hour, had eight to 10 hours of fuel. That meant four
hours going in and four coming out. To conserve fuel, Perkins ordered
the
tanks set up in defensive positions and shut down. They couldn't
maneuver,
but they could still fire-and each hour they were turned off bought
Perkins
another hour. Even so, time was running out for Twitty, whose
outnumbered
companies were clinging to three crucial interchanges. "Sir, there's one
hell of a fight here," Twitty told Perkins. "I'll be honest with you: I
don't know how long I can hold it here." Even after Twitty received
reinforcements, tying up the brigade's only reserve force, his men had
to be
resupplied. But the resupply convoy was ambushed on Highway 8; two
sergeants
were killed and five fuel and ammunition trucks were destroyed. The
highway
was a shooting gallery.
If Perkins lost the roadway, he and his men would be trapped in the city
without fuel or ammunition. American combat commanders are trained to
develop a "decision support matrix," an analytical breakdown of
alternatives
based on a rapidly unfolding chain of circumstances. For Perkins, the
matrix
was telling him: cut your losses, pull back, return another day. His
command
center was in flames. He had spent his reserve force. And now his fuel
and
ammunition were burning on the highway. On the parade grounds, Perkins
stood
next to his armored personnel carrier, map in hand, flanked by his two
tank
battalion commanders. The air was heavy with swirling sand and grit.
Black
plumes of oily smoke rose from burning
vehicles and bunkers. Perkins knew the prudent move was to pull out, but
he
felt compelled to stay. His men had fought furiously to reach the palace
complex. It seemed obscene to make them fight their way back out, and to
surrender terrain infused with incalculable psychological and strategic
value. Sahaf, the delusional information minister, was already claiming
that
no American "infidels" had breached the city's defenses. Perkins had
just
heard Sahaf's distinctive rant on BBC radio: "The infidels are
committing
suicide by the hundreds on the gates of Baghdad." A retreat now, Perkins
thought, would validate the minister's lies. It would unravel the
brigade's
singular achievement, which had put American soldiers inside Saddam's
two
main palaces and American boots on his reviewing stand. Perkins turned
to
his tank battalion commanders. "We're staying."
Lt. Col. Stephen Twitty is right-handed, but early that morning he found
himself drawing diagrams with his left hand. He was crouched in a
Bradley
hatch, holding a radio with his right hand while he tried to diagram an
emergency battle plan. Over the radio net, Twitty had heard the tank
battalions in the city celebrating and discussing the wine collections
at
Saddam's palaces. He was only a few miles away, at a Highway 8
interchange
code-named Objective Larry, but he was in the fight of his life. Twitty
had
survived the first Gulf War, but he had never encountered anything like
this. His men were being pounded from all directions-by small arms,
mortars,
RPGs, gun trucks, recoilless rifles. The two tank battalions had
punched through Highway 8, but now the enemy had regrouped and was
mounting
a relentless counterattack against Twitty's mechanized infantry
battalion.
As he scratched out his battle plan, Twitty spotted an orange-and-white
taxi speeding toward his Bradley. A man in the back seat was firing an
AK-47. Twitty screamed into the radio: "Taxi! Taxi coming!" He realized how absurd he sounded. So he shouted at his Bradley gunner: "Slew the turret and fire!" The gunner spotted the taxi and fired a blast of 25mm rounds. The taxi blew up. It had been loaded with explosives. Twitty's China battalion, Task Force 3-15, would destroy dozens of vehicles that day, many of them packed with explosives. They would blow up buses and motorcycles and pickup trucks. They would kill hundreds of fighters, as well as civilians who inadvertently blundered into the fight. Twitty ordered his engineers to tear down highway signs and light poles and pile up charred vehicles to build protective berms. But several suicide cars crashed through, and Twitty's men kept killing them. Twitty was astonished. He hadn't expected much resistance, but the Syrians and Fedayeen were relentless, fanatical, determined to die.
Twitty saw a busload of soldiers pull straight into the kill zone. A
tank
round obliterated the vehicle-burning alive everyone inside. The driver
of a
second busload saw the carnage, yet kept coming. The tanks lit up his
bus,
too. From Objective Moe, about two miles north, and from Objective
Curly,
about two miles south, Twitty received urgent calls requesting mortar
and
artillery fire-"danger close," or within 220 yards of their own
positions.
Mortars and artillery screamed down, driving the Syrians and Fedayeen
back.
But at Curly, a stray round wounded two American infantrymen, and the
artillery was shut down there. At Curly, Capt. Zan Hornbuckle had enemy
fighters inside his perimeter. He sent infantrymen to clear the ramps
and
overpasses. It was dangerous, methodical work. The infantrymen crept up
behind a series of support walls, tossed grenades into trenches, then
gunned
down the fighters inside as they rose to return fire.
The Americans were killing fighters by the dozens, but the infantrymen
were
getting hit, too. Their flak vests protected vital organs, but several
men
were dragged back with bright red shrapnel wounds ripped into their
arms,
legs and necks. Dr. Erik Schobitz, the battalion surgeon, treated the
wounded. Capt. Schobitz was a pediatrician with no combat experience. He
had
never fired an automatic rifle until a month earlier. Schobitz wore a
stethoscope with a yellow plastic rabbit attached-his lucky stethoscope.
It
was hanging there when a sliver of shrapnel hit his face, wounding him
slightly. With Schobitz was Capt. Steve Hommel, the battalion chaplain.
He
moved from one wounded man to the next, talking softly, squeezing their
hands. Hommel had been a combat infantry sergeant in the first Gulf War,
but
even he was alarmed. He feared being overrun - there were hundreds of
enemy
fighters bearing down on just 80 combat soldiers, who were backed by
Bradleys but no tanks. Hommel tried to appear calm while comforting the
wounded. Enemy fighters were firing on the medics, and some of them
fired
back. The chaplain grabbed one medic's M-16 and shot at muzzle flashes
east
of the highway. Hommel didn't know whether he hit anyone, and he didn't
want
to know. He was a Baptist minister.
Several miles north, at Objective Moe, Capt. Josh Wright was struggling
to
keep his perimeter intact. Two of Wright's three platoon sergeants were
wounded, and two engineers went down with shrapnel wounds. A gunner was
hit
with a ricochet. An infantryman dragging a wounded enemy soldier to
safety
was hit in the wrist and stomach. One Bradley's TOW missile launcher was
destroyed. Another Bradley had a machine gun go down. One of the tanks
lost
use of its main gun. Wright radioed Twitty and asked for permission to
fire
on a mosque to the north. Through his sights, he could see an RPG team
in
each minaret and another on the mosque roof. Under the rules of
engagement,
the mosque was now a hostile, unprotected site. Twitty granted
permission to
fire. All three RPG teams were killed, leaving smoking black holes in
the
minarets. By now, Wright had managed to get infantrymen and snipers into
buildings north of the interchange. They were able to kill advancing
fighters while mortar rounds ripped into soldiers hiding in the palm
grove.
Then the mortars stopped. The platoon mortar leader at Objective Curly
radioed Wright and apologized profusely. He was "black" - completely out
of
mortar rounds. He couldn't fire again until the resupply convoy was sent
north.
Wright's own men were now telling him they were "amber" on all types of
ammunition. Wright wasn't certain how much longer he could hold the
interchange. At Objective Curly, Hornbuckle tried to sound positive on
the
radio but Twitty could hear the stress in his voice. He asked the
captain to
put on the battalion command sergeant major, Robert Gallagher. A
leathery-faced Army Ranger of 40, Gallagher had survived the battle at Mogadishu, where he had been wounded three times. Twitty knew Gallagher
would be blunt. "All right, sergeant major, I want the truth," Twitty
said.
"Do you need reinforcements?" "Sir, we need reinforcements," Gallagher
said.
Twitty radioed Perkins and told him he could not hold Curly without
reinforcements. "If you need it, you've got it," Perkins assured him.
Twitty called Capt. Ronny Johnson, commander of the reserve company
defending the operations center, which was still burning. "How fast can
you
get here?" Twitty asked. "Sir, I can be there in 15 minutes," Johnson
said.
It was only about two miles from the operations center to Curly. "That's
not
fast enough. Get here now."
Johnson and his platoon raced north on Highway 8, fighting through a
withering ambush. With 10 Bradleys and 65 infantrymen, the convoy bulked
up
the combat power at Curly. They plunged into the fight, stabilizing the
perimeter. At the burning operations center, executive officer Wesley
was
directing casualty evacuation and trying to build a makeshift command
center, combining computers and communications equipment that had
escaped
the fireball with gear salvaged from burning vehicles. Within an hour,
they
had fashioned a temporary communications network across the highway from
the
scorched ruins. Back in radio communication, Wesley resumed helping
Perkins
direct the battles. He offered to send the rest of Johnson's company to
Curly to solidify the interchange. That left the stripped- own
operations
center virtually unprotected.
At Objective Larry, Twitty's men were beginning to run low on
ammunition. He
could hear his gunner screaming, "More ammo! Get us more ammo!" Twitty
had
to get the supply convoy to the interchanges, a dangerous endeavor. The
fuel
tankers were 2,500-gallon bombs on wheels. The ammunition trucks were
portable fireworks factories. In military argot, they were the ultimate
"soft-skin" vehicles. Worse, there were no tanks or Bradleys to escort
them;
they were all fighting in the city or at the three interchanges. Twitty
called Johnson at Curly and asked for an assessment. "Sir," Johnson
said,
"what I can tell you is, it's not as intense a fight as it was an hour
ago
but we're still in a pretty good fight here." Twitty asked to hear from
Gallagher. "Boss," Gallagher said, "I'm not going to tell you we can get
'em
through without risk, but we can get 'em through." Twitty put the radio
down
and lowered his head. He had to make a decision. And whatever he
decided,
American soldiers were going to die. He knew it. They would die at one
of
the interchanges, where they would be overrun if they weren't resupplied.
Or
they would die in the convoy. He picked up the radio. "All right," he
said.
"We're going to execute."
Just north of the burning operations center, Capt. J.O. Bailey was in a
command armored personnel carrier, leading the supply convoy-six fuel
tankers and eight ammunition trucks. He felt vulnerable; he had no idea
where he was going to park all his combustible vehicles in the middle of
a
firefight. The convoy had gone less than a mile when Bailey spotted a
mob
of about 100 armed men across railroad tracks. He was on the radio,
warning
everyone, when the convoy was rocked by explosions. Near the head of the
convoy, Sgt. 1st Class John W. Marshall opened up with a grenade
launcher in
the turret of his soft-skin Humvee. Marshall was 50-one of the oldest
men in
the brigade-and had volunteered for Iraq. Marshall had just sent
grenades
crashing toward the gunmen when the top of the Humvee exploded. In the
front
seat, Spc. Kenneth Krofta was stunned by a flash of light. Black smoke
was
blowing through the Humvee. Krofta looked up into the turret. Marshall
was
gone. He had been blown out of the vehicle by a grenade blast. The
driver,
Pfc. Angel Cruz, stopped and got out, looking for Marshall. He saw
gunmen
approaching and squeezed off a burst from his rifle. Bullets ripped into
the
Humvee.
The radio squawked. Cruz was ordered to move out. Soldiers in another
vehicle had seen Marshall's body. He was dead. The convoy was speeding
up,
trying to escape the kill zone. A week would pass before the battalion
was
able to retrieve Marshall's corpse. As the convoy raced through the
ambush,
an RPG rocketed into a personnel carrier. Staff Sgt. Robert Stever, who
had
just fired more than 1,000 rounds from his .50-caliber machine gun, was
blown back into the vehicle, killed instantly. Shrapnel tore into Chief
Warrant Officer Angel Acevedo and Pfc. Jarred Metz, wounding both. Metz
was
knocked from the driver's perch. His legs were numb and blood was
seeping
through his uniform. He dragged himself back into position and kept the
vehicle moving. Acevedo was bleeding, too. Screaming instructions to
Metz,
he directed the vehicle back into the speeding column with Stever's body
slumped inside.
Riddled with shrapnel, the convoy limped into the interchange at Curly -
and
directly into the firefight. Bailey was trying to move his convoy out of
harm's way when something slammed into a fuel tanker. The vehicle
exploded.
Hunks of the tanker flew off, forming super-heated projectiles that tore
into other vehicles. Three ammunition trucks and a second fuel tanker
exploded. Ammunition started to cook off. Rounds screamed in all
directions,
ripping off chunks of concrete and slicing through vehicles.
The trucks were engulfed in orange fireballs. Mechanics and drivers
sprinted
for the vehicles that were ntact. They cranked up the engines and drove
them to safety beneath the overpass, managing to save five ammunition
trucks
and four fuel tankers-enough to resupply the combat teams at all three
intersections. Fuel and ammunition were unloaded under fire. The
surviving
vehicles headed north to Objective Larry, escorted by Bradleys, breaking
through the firefight there and arriving safely. Twitty felt
overwhelming
relief. He knew he could break the enemy now, and so could the combat
team
at Objective Curly. But he still had to resupply Capt. Wright at
Objective
Moe.
Capt. Johnson, whose Bradleys had escorted the convoy to resupply Twitty,
headed north toward Moe. By radio, Johnson arranged with Wright to have
Highway 8 cleared of obstacles so that the convoy could pull in, stop
briefly and let the resupply vehicles designated for Wright peel off.
Then
Johnson's vehicles were to continue on, obeying a new order from
Perkins to secure the mile-long stretch of highway between Objective Moe
and
Perkins' palace command post in the city center.
The convoy broke through the battle lines and stopped at the cloverleaf
at
Moe. But there had been a communication breakdown. The full convoy,
including the supply vehicles, pulled away under heavy fire, leaving
Wright's company still desperate for fuel and ammunition. Wright's heart
sank. He had been forced to tighten his perimeter to save fuel, giving
up
ground his men had just taken. Now he watched his fuel and ammo
disappear up
the highway. But the smaller perimeter also meant Wright could afford to
send two tanks to a supply point a mile away that Johnson set up near
the
palace. There, the tanks refueled as their crews stuffed the bustle
racks
with ammunition. A second pair of tanks followed a half- our later,
bringing back more fuel and ammunition. Wright's men were set for the
night.
In the city center, the tank battalions led by Schwartz and DeCamp were
holding their ground but still desperately low on fuel and ammunition.
With
the combat teams at all three interchanges able to hold their ground,
two
supply convoys were now sent up Highway 8 toward the city center. It was
a
high-speed race. Every vehicle was hit by fire, but the convoys
rolled into the palace complex just before dusk, fuel and ammunition
intact.
Tankers at the 14th of July circle cheered, and there were high-fives
and
handshakes when the trucks set up an instant gas station and supply
point
next to the palace rose beds. Perkins was convinced now that Baghdad was
his. He didn't need to control the whole city. He just needed the palace
complex and a way to get fuel and ammunition in. Now he had both. "We
had
come in, created a lot of chaos, lots of violence and momentum all at
once,"
Perkins said later. "We had speed and audacity. And now with the
resupply,
we were there for good and there was nothing the other side could do
about
it."
The next morning, Capt. Phil Wolford's Assassin tank company would repel
a
fierce counterattack at the Jumhuriya Bridge across the Tigris River.
Rogue
battalion would engage in running firefights throughout central Baghdad.
At
the three interchanges on Highway 8, Syrians and Fedayeen mounted more
attacks for much of the day, bringing the China battalion's casualties
to
two dead and 30 wounded. But the American forces now fought from a
position
of strength. On the third day, April 9, Saddam Hussein's regime
collapsed.
On the night of April 7, after a long day of sustained combat, there had
been an extended lull at the palace complex and up and down Highway 8.
The
tankers and the infantrymen sensed a shift in momentum. Some dared to
speak
of going home soon, for they now believed the war was nearly over. There
would be two more days of fierce fighting before Saddam Hussein's regime
collapsed. But on the night of April 7, theirs would be a decisive
victory,
the last one in Iraq for a long time.
David Zucchino is a Times national correspondent based in Philadelphia.
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