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FALLUJAH, Iraq -- “I feel like a fly
walking into a room full of frogs,” said
Sgt. Cory Johnson, a cavalry scout with
the 1st Infantry Division’s 3rd
Brigade Reconnaissance Troop (BRT).
Johnson laughed nervously as he sat
talking with his fellow scouts in the
dining facility at Forward Operating
Base Warhorse on the eve of their
departure for Fallujah with Task Force
2-2 Infantry, and Operation Phantom Fury
- a joint operation to aid the 1st
Marine Expeditionary Force in wresting
control of the city from a deep-rooted
insurgency.
The BRT’s mission: Secure the city’s
eastern flank and to help clear a path
for the main effort sweeping down
through the city from the north.
“Everyone’s excited, happy not to be
left out. They’re like little kids,”
said Sgt. 1st Class Anthony
Neusch, platoon sergeant for the BRT’s
“Hunter” platoon. “It’ll be one to tell
the grandkids about.”
As the troop moved out to the Marine
base of Camp Fallujah at 8:30 a.m. Nov.
4, Staff Sgt. Nicholus Danielsen turned
to Sgt. Brock A. McNabb, a medic from
Charlie Company, 201st FSB
who was attached to the troop, and
grinned.
“Are you ready to get your work on?” he
asked.
Danielsen, a section sergeant for the
BRT’s “Outlaw” platoon, assumed the roll
of platoon sergeant for the mission
while the platoon’s senior enlisted man,
Sgt. 1st Class Jamie Loy,
rotated out on leave.
A natural leader, Danielsen slipped into
the role effortlessly, crediting Loy
with preparing him and the platoon well
in advance of his absence. Always
maintaining control, he also joked with
troops, in an attempt to ease nervous
tension.
“Shut your mouth!” he would occasionally
growl at the sometimes raucous troops,
then break into a wide grin. They would
respond with a chuckle, continuing on
with their mission.
After arriving at the Marine base camp,
the scouts spent a few restless days in
preparation for the main assault.
On Nov. 8, the day had arrived. A 2 a.m.
wake-up call for the scouts, who would
be the first to position for the initial
push late that night. By 5 a.m., they
rolled out into a wet, cold morning,
rain and wind whipping at the men up in
the turrets.
“Man, I feel sorry for the Marines,”
said Spc. James Taylor, who sat
shivering miserably in one truck’s
turret. “They have to live here all the
time.”
Once in position and looking west down
into the city, the scouts used their
Long Range Acquisition Sight (LRAS) – a
device that uses thermal imaging to
register heat signatures - to call for
fire on targets deep into the city in
preparation for the main push.
“(Sgt. Michael R.) Cowles has been
Johnny on the spot today,” said Sgt.
Trevor Bremer, referring the LRAS truck
commander who had been calling in
artillery strikes. “I’ve been listening
to him on the radio all day.”
Airmen from the Tactical Air Control
Party of the 2nd
Expeditionary Air Support Operations
Squadron and Sgt.. Raymond Sapp, a
forward observer from 1st
Battalion, 6th Field
Artillery who is attached to Task Force
2-2, deployed together and accompanied
the troop to help integrate fires.
“We’re here so fratricide doesn’t
happen,” said Staff Sgt. Matthew Horgan
from the TACP. “The only time they use
us is when a bomb is going to be dropped
in close proximity to friendlies.”
Reinforced by two M1A2 Abrams tanks from
Alpha Company, 2nd Battalion,
63rd Armor, and two Bradley
Fighting Vehicles from Alpha Company, 2nd
Battalion, 2nd Infantry, the
Soldiers and Airmen maintained their
position on a screen line above the
city’s eastern flank for days while
receiving sniper fire and an incoming
mortar rounds.
During the day, a fierce blue sky to the
west provided a stark contrast to the
haze of smoke hanging over the city as
an endless chorus of thunderous booms
from artillery, mortars and bombs rained
down on targets throughout the city.
As the main push began and firefights
raged, the scouts, tankers and
infantrymen on the screen line added to
the cacophony with their own direct fire
weapons – the tank main rounds, the
Bradley Fighting Vehicle 25mm canons,
the 240B and .50 caliber machine guns,
Mark-19 automatic grenade launchers and
every other weapon in their arsenal.
On day two at about 7 a.m., the troops
again began taking sniper fire.
“That sniper’s still targeting us, my
truck just took a couple more hits,”
said Cowles.
“Yeah, he’s targeting the LRAS, he knows
we’re scanning for him,” responded
Danielsen.
As the gunners responded by returning
fire from their turrets, Danielsen
grabbed an AT-4 (shoulder-fired rocket)
launching it into the building the shots
originated from. The blast sent a shock
wave rolling through the nearby
vehicles, and elicited cheers along the
screen line.
“He ain’t shooting from there anymore,
is he?” he said with a laugh. “Whew!”
“No way, man,” said his gunner, Sgt.
Trevor Bremer.
Later in the day, the troops again began
receiving sniper fire. As Taylor scanned
the city through the LRAS, he spotted
another sniper in a window about 1200
meters out.
Sgt. Omar Torres, an infantryman and
sniper from the 2nd
Battalion, 2nd Infantry scout
platoon joined the men on the road,
bringing with him his .50 caliber M107
sniper rifle. With Taylor acting as a
spotter, he sent several rounds into the
building.
“Oh man, you nailed him,” shouted Taylor
who was still watching through the LRAS.
“That was so cool, he just exploded!”
The men were excited to learn that while
calling for fires, they had taken out a
top lieutenant of Abu Musab Zarqawi, a
Jordanian militant with ties to
al-Qaeda, said Outlaw Platoon Leader 1st
Lt. Chris Boggiano.
As the scouts and tank crews scanned the
city that day, both witnessed men
running back and forth carrying weapons
into a building in a mosque complex.
With dual confirmation from both the
tanks and the LRAS crews, a precision
strike was approved, destroying the
building but leaving the mosque itself
intact.
“Both the tank and the LRAS saw bodies
flying through the air,” said Boggiano.
“They said they saw them flying several
stories high. It was pretty exciting
because we knew we’d gotten someone
big.”
By Nov. 11, the fourth day of
operations, the task force had secured
the city north of phase line Fran, an
east-west route running through the
middle of the city. The scouts had been
extremely effective in calling for fires
and allowing the main effort to push
forward very quickly, said Task Force
Commander Lt. Col. Peter Newell.
That day, Outlaw platoon was performing
a reconnaissance mission into the
southern outskirts of the city. As they
dismounted to clear a house near their
observation post and ran toward the
house, they began receiving sniper fire
from the north. Danielsen and Bremer,
the first two out of the vehicles, were
caught in the open. They ran and dove
into a depression behind a small berm.
Staff Sgt. Jimmy Amyett, a section
sergeant, maneuvered his vehicle between
the men and the sniper fire, allowing
them to take cover, as the other gun
trucks returned fire.
“That truck never looked so good coming
up over the berm. Sand was kicking up at
my feet when I was running,” said
Danielsen. “It was just like in the
movies. It was like in a dream when you
just can’t run fast enough.”
Danielsen and Bremer laughed nervously
as they recounted the experience to the
others - as always, maintaining a sense
of humor about the experience.
“That would have made a perfect
commercial,” said Bremer. “Not going
anywhere for a while? Have a Snickers
bar.”
After days of performing a more
traditional scout role during the
initial assault, the troop also began
performing more direct, infantry-type
duties. While one platoon maintained an
observation post or conducted
reconnaissance missions, another would
take a dismounted force into the city to
aid the main effort in clearing
buildings.
“We went house to house, door to door,
street by street, side by side with
Alpha 2-2,” said Troop Commander Capt.
Kirk A. Mayfield. “We have a very mobile
force, and the way the BRT is designed
right now, it is reinforced with a
mechanized platoon so we brought some
armor capability which allowed us to get
into the city and have that extra
punch.”
The attached tank platoon from A, 2-63
was also proving to be an invaluable
asset.
“1st Lt. (Neil) Prakash made
me a believer in tankers,” said Mayfield
referring to the tank platoon leader
attached to the BRT. “He’s a great
officer with two great crews in his
tanks. Their ability to get into the
city and provide overwhelming firepower
against the AIF was instrumental in the
BRT’s success when we got into the
middle of the fight.”
As the troop began clearing houses and
buildings in the eastern and southern
sectors, they secured safeholds from
which they mounted operations. Nights
were spent posting guard and sleeping in
shifts. Early on, firefights raged and
artillery and bombs continued to pound
the city around them, shaking the
buildings to their foundations.
The fatigued troops slept on cold hard
concrete floors amid broken glass with
concrete blocks as pillows.
While conducting clearing operations,
they came under fire numerous times and
found several buildings rigged with
explosive devices, but came through the
encounters unscathed. They found caches,
fighting positions, and intelligence
items during these operations, the
largest on Nov 17.
“Oh my God, I found the motherlode!”
shouted Amyett after leading a squad
into a storage facility in the
industrial district of southern Fallujah.
After several hours of searching and
clearing buildings in the sector, the
exhausted scouts had found a cache
consisting of several anti-aircraft guns
and systems, dozens of 60mm rockets,
about 50 boxes of 14.5mm and 12.5mm
rounds, and about 100 mortar rounds – a
VBIED factory.
The following day, the troops were
treated to a fireworks display when the
Explosive Ordinance Disposal team,
deciding there were too many munitions
to move, blew them in place.
Over the last few days, the troop
finished clearing the last remaining
sectors in the city with little
resistance.
Back at Camp Fallujah, the scouts,
tankers and infantrymen who had worked
so well together during the operation
smoked victory cigars while
congratulating one another and
recounting the events of the past 16
days. Age-old branch rivalries – at
least for the moment – were set aside.
“The combined arms effort was
beautiful,” said Prakash. “It was just
the way it’s supposed to be. Tanks
protecting the dismounts and dismounts
protecting the tanks.”
The night before the troops were to
leave Camp Fallujah, the Marine command
thanked the service members of Task
Force 2-2. Word had also gotten round
that the Marine command was to award
those who fought in the battle with the
1st Marine Expeditionary
Force combat patch.
“I’m really just happy and proud that we
all made it back safe,” said Pfc. Martin
Reyna, a scout from the BRT’s Hunter
platoon. “If we got awarded that patch,
it would be a nice thing to have. My dad
was a Marine so I always had a high
opinion of the Marines. There’s nothing
wrong with calling for help, it was a
big operation. But I never expected for
them to call us in there.” (Story by
Sgt.. Kimberly Snow, 196th
MPAD) |