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Bradley crew's shift: 19 hours in Fallujah shooting gallery
Yahoo ^

Posted on 11/14/2004 7:32:35 AM PST by LesbianThespianGymnasticMidget

After nearly 18 hours in the claustrophobic urban canyons that constitute the front lines of the battle for Fallujah, the crew of the lead Bradley Fighting Vehicle was cramped, weary and low on ammunition.

Then they came under heavy enemy fire for the first time all week.

Within 15 minutes, as shooting erupted around them, their radio crackled with the news that their company commander's vehicle, blocks behind them, had been hit by a rocket-propelled grenade. The blast killed an interpreter and severed a soldier's arm. A Bradley that sped to the rescue was hit by another RPG that slipped under its high-tech armor, wounding the driver.

A block away, they heard the boom as a third rocket from insurgents took out the transmission on a huge Abrams tank. The tank's turret wouldn't move. Nor could the tank drive in reverse or pivot.

In a quiet voice that cut through the garbled shouts on his radio, Sgt. Jack Ames, 29, the Bradley's gunner, noted to the six other soldiers and one reporter on board: "Wow. We're the only ones left here."

After five days of fighting in Fallujah, the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment of the 1st Cavalry Division had found Iraqi resistance in the last place the insurgents could hide: the tight streets of the Shuhada district on the city's south side. "Shuhada" translates as "martyrs."

They fought for a night and much of a day in streets so narrow they couldn't turn around, cruising devastated roadways that any second could explode in a barrage from rockets and Kalashnikovs.

Inside the troop compartment of Bradley Alpha 2-1--a space hardly larger than two refrigerators--a hulking 17-year-old from Florida crouched across from a skinny 24-year-old team leader, weighed down by 65 pounds of gear. Along with the reporter, two other soldiers crammed in, buried in equipment and juggling two machine guns, a grenade launcher and an anti-tank missile launcher the size of a fence post. The weapons were useless inside the vehicle. But in this neighborhood, getting out and fighting on foot would be too dangerous.

Ames and the Bradley's commander, Lt. Michael Duran, 24, rode in the turret above the troop compartment. Spec. Clint Hardin, 23, rode up front, steering the 30-ton vehicle using a monitor and periscopes.

The men in back slept uneasily for much of the night, leaning helmets against metal or one another as the Bradley's 25 mm gun tore apart houses and buildings where insurgents were thought to be hiding.

But at dawn, rifle rounds began pinging off the Bradley's armor and the RPGs began exploding, rocking the vehicle, raining dust on the men inside and sucking the air from the compartment again and again.

Search and destroy

Bradley Alpha 2-1's 19-hour mission into Fallujah began at sunset Thursday, hours after a briefing for battalion officers.

The goal was to move ahead of U.S. Marines and find the insurgents, remnants of a rebel force that in previous months had turned Fallujah into one of the most dangerous cities in Iraq (news - web sites). Failing that, the soldiers were to destroy the insurgents' hiding places, preventing them from being used to ambush the Marines.

In the normally bustling battalion command tent, two dozen senior soldiers in stifling body armor listened silently.

"Destroy everything you can destroy. Make sure you keep together," Lt. Col. Jim Rainey told his officers, reminding them of the rules of engagement established to protect civilians. "Given those constraints, kill everything that you can kill."

At dusk, Alpha 2-1's commander Duran led 36 soldiers into his and three other Bradleys for the assault. He would take the platoon into battle.

As Hardin cranked Alpha 2-1's diesel engine, he recounted the vehicle's war.

Since arriving in March, the men had run over eight bombs. Since fighting began in Najaf in August, the Bradley had been hit by 16 RPGs. One of them smacked the front armor outside Hardin's seat.

"Felt it, heard it, instant migraine," he said in a San Antonio twang. "I didn't see it coming, and it blew up right in front of my face."

Duran crawled into 2-1's turret next to Ames, a tiny man who sucked down cigarettes and travel mugs of Iraqi instant coffee, which he brewed throughout the night. He, Ames and Hardin would stay awake the entire night.

Up the back ramp clambered Pvt. Thomas Dennis, 17; Spec. David Garcia, 24; and Spec. Jimmy Baca, 26. Their job would be to jump out and fight if needed.

Last in was Sgt. Charles Thornton, 23, who sat and shouted "Close it!" over the engine noise. The heavy ramp clanged shut. The desert disappeared, and inside Alpha 2-1 all became noise and dark.

It was 6 p.m.

Until 1 p.m. the next afternoon, the crew's only view of the outside world would be on a green 8-by-10-inch monitor that switched between the gunner's thermal sights and an aerial-photo map of Fallujah that showed positions of friendly forces. It fizzed out periodically.

Fallujah became a shooting gallery on the screen, with everything that looked as though it could hide a bomb or an enemy sniper drawing fire from Ames' gun.

Working where tanks can't

DOOM-DOOM-DOOM. A cistern exploded in a cascade of water, sending a cat screeching into the darkness.

A suspected spotter for insurgent snipers appeared in an upper-floor window. Ames shot. DOOM-DOOM-DOOM. The man never reappeared.

Working in twos and with Alpha 2-1 in the lead, the four Bradleys of Duran's platoon rolled through streets so narrow tanks wouldn't enter; they couldn't have swung their cannons. The platoon essentially was on its own.

Obstacle by obstacle, the Bradleys sent high-explosive shells into the streetscape. Some found roadside bombs, many didn't. Mostly the night was quiet.

Inside the troop compartment, the soldiers dozed and watched the monitor, seeing the eerie infrared shapes of palm trees waving in a nighttime breeze they could not feel, as Bradleys slipped down broken streets crisscrossed with electrical extension cords above.

They tensed as Alpha 2-1 passed a blown-up bus where they thought explosives could have been planted. They listened on the radio as another platoon spotted a mortar team on a nearby block, raining shells down on them.

At midnight, six hours into the patrol, another company of Bradleys behind them stumbled on a huge ambush waiting to happen: A pile of concrete and metal bars, which snarl the tracks of Bradleys and tanks, a tipped-over fuel tanker packed with explosives, a gigantic dirt pile behind that, and a three-story building full of suspected insurgents.

Tanks, an Air Force AC-130 Spectre gunship and a Navy F-18 fighter dropping a bomb came in and destroyed the building.

The first bad news came at 2 a.m.: An Abrams lightly damaged in battle had tipped over in a ditch north of town. The tank's driver died instantly, prompting a sharp expletive from Garcia, who sat closest to the radio and relayed each scrap of bad news.

More came at 3:55. Alpha 2-1's mission was supposed to end at dawn. Instead, Duran relayed another message: "Continue to press the enemy." The soldiers groaned.

But the enemy did not appear until 6:45, when a man's thermal image appeared running between the arched windows on the ground floor of a mansion. Another silhouette appeared on a nearby roof.

On the monitor, the men watched Ames aiming the Bradley's gun, but the silhouettes didn't reappear and Ames didn't shoot. Twenty minutes later, an RPG found the Bradley. A sudden, high-pitched bang rocked the vehicle from side to side and the men crouched a little lower, ducking their helmeted heads like turtles disappearing into shells.

Searching for an open shot, the Bradley almost backed into a tank behind it. And then the tank fired its main gun, wrecking the opulent house across the way.

As dust and quiet settled, Ames griped, "How come they get to shoot the mansion?"

Low on ammo

Two hours later, RPGs erupted from the direction of a mosque. The platoon's four Bradleys opened up, firing for more than an hour as shapes of people flitted across the monitor in the troop compartment.

"We're getting low on ammo," Ames warned, reading off a list of what he had fired--hundreds of high-explosive shells that blew holes the size of dinner plates in cinder-block walls, and hundreds of other shells designed to take out enemy fighters.

When rocket fire picked up again, frustrated Bradley gunners trained their sights on buildings but held their fire. The Marines, who had arrived on foot, were too close--and right in the line of fire.

Alpha 2-1 was trying to find a way south to clearer shots when the insurgents' attack began in earnest.

"I'm hit!" Alpha Company's commander, Capt. Ed Twaddell, shouted over the radio at 11:43. The armor-penetrating RPG punched a half-dollar-size hole in his Bradley's back gate, then filled the troop compartment with light, noise, gore and flying metal before lodging in the turret where he was standing.

"I saw light and a flash down by my knee, and then the turret filled with smoke," Twaddell said later, his face still covered in soot and dust.

His interpreter, sitting behind him, had been killed instantly, a baseball-size gash in his side.

Two blocks north of Alpha 2-1, a Bradley maneuvered to help, disgorging a medic and soldiers under a hail of gunfire. Within minutes a penetrating RPG exploded under the second Bradley's driver compartment, wounding a man from West Virginia who had survived RPG shrapnel to the neck when his Bradley was hit in Najaf.

For an indeterminate time, Alpha 2-1 was all alone. Somehow the crew had been separated from the platoon's other three Bradleys, spread out somewhere in the tangle of buildings.

The crew heard another explosion at 11:59--the RPG shot that disabled the Abrams. Duran found his other Bradleys on the radio and ordered them to stand guard around the tank as more tankers hooked a tow bar to it. It took a half-hour.

As the armor limped north through town, a lone Marine hiding behind a tree flagged Alpha 2-1 and gestured toward a house across the street, indicating that an insurgent was inside.

Ames pumped his last few rounds into the top floor. Emerging from behind the tree, the Marine waved happily.

"No problem, buddy," Ames said wearily as Hardin drove slowly back to camp.

They arrived at 1 p.m., 19 hours after they had left.

But within an hour, Alpha 2-1 and its crew had refueled, reloaded and returned to Fallujah.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: fallujah; iraq
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To: tlb; All
"Since arriving in March, the men had run over eight bombs. Since fighting began in Najaf in August, the Bradley had been hit by 16 RPGs"
The main idea is how ineffective and inferior our high $$$ equipment is to the "insurgents" AK's and RPGs. How many vehicles did the enemy kill/stop? They are trying to a draw a false parallel with some other recent war in Asia.
C'mon, gang! Get with the program!
21 posted on 11/14/2004 8:02:15 AM PST by trentonrevolution (I apologize for my contrarian attitude, on second thought, no, I don't.)
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To: trentonrevolution

Welcome to Free Republic. I don't understand your post.


22 posted on 11/14/2004 8:04:32 AM PST by silent_jonny (Victory is sooooo sweet!)
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To: trentonrevolution
The main idea is how ineffective and inferior our high $$$ equipment is to the "insurgents" AK's and RPGs. How many vehicles did the enemy kill/stop? They are trying to a draw a false parallel with some other recent war in Asia. C'mon, gang! Get with the program!

True, and the fact is that we have retained the initiative from the start of this operation, killed hundreds of terrorists and captured thousands more, captured huge stockpiles of arms and ammo, taken away their prime sanctuary in Iraq and are finishing them off in detail. Of course, the MSM conveniently leaves those unimportant details out of their message.

23 posted on 11/14/2004 8:08:13 AM PST by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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To: bert

The Army uses the Bradley which is tracked. The Marine Corps uses the LAV(Light Armored Vehicle) which is wheeled.


24 posted on 11/14/2004 8:19:31 AM PST by earonthief (Semper Fi (Ret.))
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To: IStillBelieve

No, an E-5 Sgt. is normally a gunner on a Brad. You start out as a driver and work your way up. When he gets his E6, he will become a track commander TC.

Q6


25 posted on 11/14/2004 8:23:59 AM PST by Q6-God
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To: LesbianThespianGymnasticMidget

The "Memphis Belle" of Fallujah?


26 posted on 11/14/2004 8:27:20 AM PST by mad_as_he$$ (Off to the store for Marlboro Red's and Miller Beer, NSDQ)
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To: independentmind
I'm curious as to how soldiers and/or Marines get sleep and food in an urban combat setting. Do they plan to take breaks?


You eat and sleep when you can. Certainly nothing is by the clock.

27 posted on 11/14/2004 8:31:09 AM PST by CIB-173RDABN
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To: LesbianThespianGymnasticMidget
kill everything that you can kill

Aye aye sir.

28 posted on 11/14/2004 8:33:40 AM PST by csvset
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To: LesbianThespianGymnasticMidget
"Given those constraints, kill everything that you can kill."

Those are the kind of orders I like to hear, cut the PC crap.

29 posted on 11/14/2004 8:40:33 AM PST by chuknospam
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To: LesbianThespianGymnasticMidget
"Searching for an open shot, the Bradley almost backed into a tank behind it. And then the tank fired its main gun, wrecking the opulent house across the way.
As dust and quiet settled, Ames griped, 'How come they get to shoot the mansion?' "

Some people get all the breaks.

30 posted on 11/14/2004 8:50:33 AM PST by Oatka
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To: CIB-173RDABN
You eat and sleep when you can. Certainly nothing is by the clock.

Amen. Soldiers and Marines fully understand and accept this. Combat success, in this case, is measured in siezing and holding buildings, blocks and districts. Time duration is a factor but not a major one, except for the terrorists in terms of their life expectancy. The MSM would want us to believe otherwise, putting success or failure for Fallujah in context with a fast food, instant gratification mentality. Anything to portray a quagmire.

31 posted on 11/14/2004 8:54:23 AM PST by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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To: Q6-God

Thanks for the info! :-)


32 posted on 11/14/2004 8:55:35 AM PST by IStillBelieve (G.W. Bush '04: Biggest popular-vote victory in history, and first popular-vote majority in 16 years!)
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To: bert
Those are LAVs, Marine light armored vehicles. Much smaller. The Brad is about 30 tons, roughly the mass of a WW II Sherman tank, is fully tracked, has a turret mounted 25mm auto cannon (as does the LAV), plus coaxial 30 cal machinegun, and TOW ATGM launcher. And space in the back for a dismount fire team, 4 or 6 men depending on the model, who have Javelin ATGMs, LMGs, grenade launchers, and small arms.

Bradley Fighting Vehicle

33 posted on 11/14/2004 8:59:27 AM PST by JasonC
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To: SoCal Pubbie

Almost every weapon system deployed has been criticized and called an utter failure by the MSM over time. The Tomcat, the Eagle, the Patriot Missle System... we fixed 'em. Even the M-16 was criticized for beeing too little, not rugged enough, etc. We fixed it.


34 posted on 11/14/2004 9:04:13 AM PST by SolidRedState (Free Martha)
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To: CIB-173RDABN

Good morning.

CIB-173RDABN, I was briefly a member of B Co., 1st Bat, in 1967. I went through jungle school at Bien Hoa then volunteered for a new LRP comapany.

As a cherry with the Sky Soldiers I learned that you can actually sleep on your feet while continuing to funtion. It's really amazing what young combat soldiers can do, isn't it.

Michael Frazier


35 posted on 11/14/2004 9:10:05 AM PST by brazzaville (No surrender no retreat, Well, maybe retreat's ok.)
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To: LesbianThespianGymnasticMidget
I don't know why we don't flatten this area.

How come we can't build armor that withstands RPG's. Isn't this a old weapon? Is it just too powerful?
36 posted on 11/14/2004 9:10:06 AM PST by Vision ("When you trust in yourself, you're trusting in the same wisdom that created you")
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To: CIB-173RDABN

Good morning.

CIB-173RDABN, I was briefly a member of B Co., 1st Bat, in 1967. I went through jungle school at Bien Hoa then volunteered for a new LRP comapany.

As a cherry with the Sky Soldiers I learned that you can actually sleep on your feet while continuing to funtion. It's really amazing what young combat soldiers can do, isn't it.

Michael Frazier


37 posted on 11/14/2004 9:11:34 AM PST by brazzaville (No surrender no retreat, Well, maybe retreat's ok.)
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To: brazzaville

Oops, double post. Sorry.


38 posted on 11/14/2004 9:12:40 AM PST by brazzaville (No surrender no retreat, Well, maybe retreat's ok.)
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To: bert

http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/lav-25.htm

LAV's


39 posted on 11/14/2004 9:14:09 AM PST by SolidRedState (Free Martha)
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To: JasonC

Great site. Thanks.


40 posted on 11/14/2004 9:18:01 AM PST by raybbr
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