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Stranded Marines fight to last bullets
The Times (UK) ^ | 4/16/04 | James Hider

Posted on 04/15/2004 6:13:01 PM PDT by saquin

THE 15 Marines were trapped in a house, surrounded by hundreds of Iraqis armed with rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles, their armoured vehicle in flames on the street outside. Each man was down to his last two magazines.

“It was in my head, we just got to go. Whoever makes it back, makes it back, those who fall, fall,” said Staff Sergeant Ismail Sagredo, sitting in the relative safety of Bravo Company’s forward base yesterday, as mortars and machinegun fire sounded a few streets away.

“That was the decision I’d have had to make, and I’m glad I didn’t have to do it.”

It was one of the most dramatic actions of the war.

Sergeant Sagredo, 35, had been in one of two Amphibious Assault Vehicles running out from the Marines’ frontline close to the centre of Fallujah, trying to trap insurgents who had ambushed a supply vehicle.

But as they headed down the narrow, parallel streets of Fallujah, where Sunni tribesmen have battled the Marines for more than a week, their vehicle came under fire from rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs), the guerrillas’ weapon of choice.

Unable to turn the large vehicle around, the squad charged their attackers, but lost contact when they hit a bend in the road. They were driving into unknown territory. Then they turned another corner and saw hundreds of guerrillas.

“I’ve never seen so many RPGs. A lot of them were propped up against the walls with extra rounds,” said the sergeant.

The Iraqis, not expecting a lone American vehicle so far behind their lines, ran frantically for their weapons as the Marines opened up with M16 rifles and machineguns.

Rockets started smashing into their vehicle. One pierced the armour at the front, taking a large chunk out of the leg of Lieutenant Christopher Ayres, the officer in command. The rocket did not explode, but hit the engine, setting it ablaze.

Still under intense fire, the driver swerved south along a route known to the Marines as “Sh**head Alley”, desperate to find a turning to the east, towards their own lines. The gunner was dead from enemy fire, and several men had been knocked down by the continuing rounds of missiles.

The blaze was spreading toward the stockpiles of grenades when the engine gave out completely.

With the engine dead, the rear gate would not open. The men had to climb out of the hatch one by one, still taking small-arms fire. Luckily for them, their dash down the gauntlet of Sh**head Alley had left their attackers — up to 600 of them — behind. But only for a while.

“When we stepped out I was relieved. At least I wasn’t going to burn,” said Lance Corporal Abraham McCarver, a machinegunner.

The men had to help Lieutenant Ayres, who was crawling blindly toward the fire. Sergeant Sagredo and Corporal McCarver pulled him, but his webbing caught on a rack.

They were still taking fire, conscious that the vehicle could explode at any moment. Then the webbing ripped, and they carried the wounded officer to a nearby house, kicking down the door.

The Marines took up firing positions on the roof as more than 150 Iraqi gunmen converged on the small house.

“All the Iraqis surged south to join the festivities,” Sergeant Sagredo said. He now found himself in charge of an impossible situation reminiscent of scenes in Black Hawk Down, the film of a doomed US raid in Somalia that the sergeant had seen back home in America.

“It did remind me of that soldier being dragged through the streets back then,” he said, aware that a similarly gruesome scene had involved four US contractors just streets away, the trigger for the Marines’ invasion of Fallujah.

Ironically, Bravo Company’s call-sign is Blackhawk.

The Marines could hear the Iraqi fighters shouting outside, could see their feet shadowed under the front gate.

“I opened a window because I heard voices and I thought it was Americans,” said Corporal Koreyan Calloway. “There was a guy in a headscarf with an AK47 standing there looking at me, so I shot him.”

The attackers were darting down narrow alleyways beside the house, and lobbing grenades from neighbouring rooftops.

“They were running across our line of fire like we weren’t even shooting at them,” the corporal said.

“It was just like a range, we were just shooting them down,” said Corporal Jacob Palofax.

In the midst of the firefight, with the armoured vehicle’s munitions blowing up, an ambulance pulled up. The Marines thought they were being rescued. Instead, 15 men with RPGs jumped out and started firing.

The Americans were almost out of bullets. An Iraqi round hit a kitchen pipe and gas started whistling out as RPGs slammed into the building.

A guerrilla burst through the gate with an RPG and was shot dead. Another tried to follow and was wounded.

“Then the men started shouting that they could hear tanks. The first one went past, then the second,” Sergeant Sagredo said.

Horrified that the rescuers would miss him, Sergeant Sagredo radioed to tell them to back up. They did. A rifle muzzle appeared through the gate, and Captain Jason Smith of the 5th Marine Regiment came through shouting: “Marines, Marines, friendlies!”

It took an hour for the tanks to hook up with the burnt-out vehicle, but they were determined not to leave a dead Marine behind inside it.

Sergeant Sagredo does not want a medal for saving his men. “A decoration would only remind me of what happened. This is something I want to forget. Unfortunately, if it doesn’t affect me now, I know it will haunt me later.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ambulance; fallujah; gutsandglory; iraq; islamicbastards; marines; religionofpieces
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81 posted on 04/16/2004 6:27:45 AM PDT by eureka! (The shrillness of the left is a good sign.....)
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To: saquin
There was a guy in a headscarf with an AK47 standing there looking at me, so I shot him.”

You LOOKIN' at me, you lookin' at ME?? Hey, reason enough.

82 posted on 04/16/2004 7:15:45 AM PDT by zip (Monthly donations are the easiest way to say Thanks for FR)
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To: saquin
Sometimes you have no idea till it hits in your back yard. I have had personal contact with one of these Marines and I will tell you that he is a Marine through and through and even though severely wounded, will recuperate and stay a Marine. This incident shows what our young men are made of and their steel and temper is unparalleled. To let each of you know, Lt Ayers will survive to be a Marine another day. I am his father-in-law and no one could be more proud of a son than I am at this time. He and his men are truly my heroes.
83 posted on 04/23/2004 8:37:16 AM PDT by Texas Ed
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To: Texas Ed
Texas Ed...
Thanks for the post. I'm SSgt Sagredo's fiancee'. Name's Estela. Nice to meet ya! ;-)
Tell the family I send my prayers. Keep in touch.

Semper Fi!
84 posted on 04/23/2004 4:06:39 PM PDT by oneproudusmcgf
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To: Texas Ed
Semper Fi
85 posted on 04/23/2004 4:10:56 PM PDT by erinjohn (“There was a guy in a headscarf with an AK47 standing there looking at me, so I shot him.”)
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To: saquin

"Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have made a difference in the world. Marines don't have that problem." Ronald Reagan

The following slides depict Lt. Chris Ayres U.S.M.C. as he spoke to a League City, TX Republican Women's Club. The handsome Marine hero began by saying he was speaking for himself he did not represent anyone else. He told his personal story than taught the ladies to do a customary Marine response; The Marine Corps (phonetically spelled) “ooh-rah!” “It often is barked when troops want to voice approval or a sense of esprit de corps. Its full meaning is primal and difficult to define, he explained it also echoes the hardships faced by those in uniform.

The deep masculine sounding “ooh-rah”; Ok, well maybe not so deep or masculine with this group, but still the ladies were soon “ooh-rahing” with the best of Marines. Lt. Ayres then led the group to an outside area as part of
his presentation teaching them about observing your surroundings.Techniques of looking at the world around you were presented to teach the group a little of what this combat hardened marine infantryman had to do to survive in a hostile environment of good guys, bad guys, all of whom looked and dressed alike. A comment over heard "Wow! I will never walk mindlessly to my car again."

http://www.jarbobayoutimes.com/images/marine5.gif
Lt. Chris Ayres being introduced by League City Chief of Police Andrew Daniel
a former Marine.

http://www.jarbobayoutimes.com/images/marine2.gif
The ladies were soon “ooh-rahing” with the best of Marines.

http://www.jarbobayoutimes.com/images/marine9.gif
A whole different way of looking at your surroundings.

Lt. Chris Ayres was accompanied by his beautiful wife Renee' Ayres
http://www.jarbobayoutimes.com/images/marine4.gif

Lt. Chris Ayres escorting a real Lady. Alameda Wallingford.
http://www.jarbobayoutimes.com/images/marine6.gif

7. A gift for the Marine and his wife.
http://www.jarbobayoutimes.com/images/marine7.gif


While Lt. Chris Ayres unit was battling their way out of a fierce firefight with insurgents in Fallujah, Iraq. A blast from an (RPG) rocket-propelled grenade nearly blew his leg off, while his arms, legs and back were severely
burned he spent many months healing from his wounds. His best friend wife Renee' Ayres by his side the whole time


86 posted on 11/05/2005 5:04:34 PM PST by BellStar
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