'I Got My
Kills ... I Just Love My Job'
By Toby
Harnden
10 November,
2004
The Telegraph
in Fallujah
observes American soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division taskforce
avenging their fallen comrades as battle begins
09/11/04 "The
Telegraph" -- After seven months in Iraq's Sunni triangle, for many
American soldiers the opportunity to avenge dead friends by taking a
life was a moment of sheer exhilaration.
As they
approached their "holding position", from where hours later they
would advance into the city, they picked off insurgents on the
rooftops and in windows.
"I got myself
a real juicy target," shouted Sgt James Anyett, peering through the
thermal sight of a Long Range Acquisition System (LRAS) mounted on
one of Phantom's Humvees.
"Prepare to
copy that 89089226. Direction 202 degrees. Range 950 metres. I got
five motherf****** in a building with weapons."
Capt Kirk
Mayfield, commander of the Phantoms, called for fire from his task
force's mortar team. But Sgt Anyett didn't want to wait. "Dude, give
me the sniper rifle. I can take them out - I'm from Alabama."
Two minutes
tick by. "They're moving deep," shouted Sgt Anyett with
disappointment. A dozen loud booms rattle the sky and smoke rose as
mortars rained down on the co-ordinates the sergeant had given.
"Yeah," he
yelled. "Battle Damage Assessment - nothing. Building's gone. I got
my kills, I'm coming down. I just love my job."
Phantom Troop
had rolled out of Camp Fallujah, the main US military base, shortly
before 4am. All morning they took fire from the Al-Askari district
in Fallujah's north-east, their target for the invasion proper.
The
insurgents, not understanding the capabilities of the LRAS, crept
along rooftops and poked their heads out of windows. Even when they
were more than a mile away, the soldiers of Phantom Troop had their
eyes on them.
Lt Jack
Farley, a US Marines officer, sauntered over to compare notes with
the Phantoms. "You guys get to do all the fun stuff," he said. "It's
like a video game. We've taken small arms fire here all day. It just
sounds like popcorn going off."
Another marine
stepped forward and began to fire an M4 rifle at the city. "He's a
reservist for the San Diego police. He wants a piece of the action,
too".
A Phantom
Abrams tank moved up the road running along the high ground. Its
barrel, stencilled with the words "Ali Baba under 3 Thieves"
swivelled towards the city and then fired a 120mm round at a house
where two men with AK-47s had been pinpointed. "Ain't nobody moving
now," shouted a soldier as the dust cleared. "He rocked that guy's
world."
One of
Phantom's sniper teams laid down fire into the city with a Barrett
.50 calibre rifle and a Remington 700. A suspected truck bomb was
riddled with bullets, the crack of the Barrett echoing through the
mainly deserted section of the city. The insurgents fired 60mm
mortars back, one of them wounding a soldier.
There were
25mm rounds from Phantom's Bradley fighting vehicles, barrages from
Paladin howitzers back at Camp Fallujah and bursts of fire from .50
calibre machineguns. One by one, the howitzers used by the
insurgents were destroyed.
"Everybody's
curious," grinned Sgt Anyett as he waited for a sniper with a
Russian-made Dragonov to show his face one last, fatal time. A
bullet zinged by.
Dusk fell and
7pm, "A hour", the appointed hour to move into the city, approached.
The soldiers of Phantom all reflected.
"Given the
choice, I would never have wanted to fire a gun," said Cpl Chris
Merrell, 21, manning a machinegun mounted on a Humvee. "But it
didn't work out that way. I'd like a thousand boring missions rather
than one interesting one."
On his wrist
was a black bracelet bearing the name of a sergeant from Phantom
Troop. "This is a buddy of mine that died," he said. "Pretty much
everyone in the unit has one."
One fear
playing on the mind of the task force was that of "friendly fire",
also known as "blue on blue".
"Any urban
fight is confusing," Lt Col Newell, the force's commander, told his
troops before the battle. "The biggest threat out there is not them,
but us."
His officers
said that the plan to invade Fallujah involved months of detailed
planning and elaborate "feints" designed to draw the insurgents out
into the open and fool them into thinking the offensive would come
from another side of the city.
"They're
probably thinking that we'll come in from the east," said Capt
Natalie Friel, an intelligence officer with task force, before the
battle. But the actual plan involves penetrating the city from the
north and sweeping south.
"I don't think
they know what's coming. They have no idea of the magnitude," she
said. "But their defences are pretty circular. They're prepared for
any kind of direction. They've got strong points on all four corners
of the city."
The aim was to
push the insurgents south, killing as many as possible, before
swinging west. They would then be driven into the Euphrates.
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