To: Hon
The grenade turned out to belong to an inexperienced soldier who had incorrectly set the pin for a hair-trigger detonation. Could someone here explain "hair-trigger" in the context of a grenade?
Also, was he the inexperienced solder?
74 posted on
02/23/2004 1:14:15 PM PST by
Dead Dog
To: Dead Dog
"Could someone here explain "hair-trigger" in the context of a grenade?"
The explanation I have seen is that for the longest while Cleland thought it was his grenade. He was the only person getting off the helicopter at the time, so that would seem to be the likely explanation.
When Cleland appeared on a History Channel program, an ex-Marine named David Lloyd of Annapolis, MD, saw him and said he knew that it was someone else's greande. Lloyd got in touch with Cleland and told him what he believed had happened.
Lloyd said that another Marine new to the front (though of course Cleland was also new to the front) had straightened out the kotter pin on his grenade so that he could pull it more readily. And that this was the grenade that had fallen and Cleland had picked up. When he picked it up the pin fell out.
This was reported in slightly different versions in two South Carolina papers.
81 posted on
02/23/2004 1:24:32 PM PST by
Hon
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