The time now is 01/08/09 - 08:45
Log in: Username: Password:
Search forums for:
  

Cool stories

Post new topic   Reply to topic
Author Message
Paco
RealPoor Jedi
RealPoor Jedi


Joined: 13 Oct 2002
Posts: 12939
Location: Jacksonville, FL



PostPosted: 03/28/05 - 08:45    Post subject: Cool stories Reply with quote

Thanks to Charlie
Subject: Raven 42 action in Salman Pak
Everyone,
Over the next few days you will see on the television news shows, and in
the print news media the story of a Military Police Squad who are heroes.
Through those outlets, I doubt that their story will get out in a truly
descriptive manner. I can't express to you the pride, awe, and respect I
feel for the soldiers of callsign Raven 42.

On Sunday afternoon, in a very bad section of scrub-land called Salman
Pak, on the southeastern outskirts of Baghdad, 40 to 50 heavily-armed Iraqi
insurgents attacked a convoy of 30 civilian tractor trailer trucks that were
moving supplies for the coalition forces, along an Alternate Supply Route.
These tractor trailers, driven by third country nationals (primarily
Turkish), were escorted by 3 armored Hummers from the COSCOM. When the
insurgents attacked, one of the Hummers was in their kill zone and the three
soldiers aboard were immediately wounded, and the platform taken under heavy
machinegun and RPG fire. Along with them, three of the truck drivers were
killed, 6 were wounded in the tractor trailer trucks. The enemy attacked
from a farmer's barren field next to the road, with a tree line
perpendicular to the ASR, two dry irrigation ditches forming a rough
L-shaped trenchline, and a house standing off the dirt road. After three
minutes of sustained fire, a squad of enemy moved forward toward the disabled and suppressed trucks. Each of the enemy had hand-cuffs and were looking to take hostages for ransom or worse, to take those three wounded US soldiers for more internet beheadings.
About this time, three armored Hummers that formed the MP Squad under
callsign Raven 42, 617th MP Co, Kentucky National Guard, assigned to the
503rd MP Bn (Fort Bragg), 18th MP Bde, arrived on the scene like the
cavalry. The squad had been shadowing the convoy from a distance behind the
last vehicle, and when the convoy trucks stopped and became backed up from
the initial attack, the squad sped up, paralleled the convoy up the shoulder
of the road, and moved to the sound of gunfire. They arrived on the scene
just as a squad of about ten enemy had moved forward across the farmer's
field and were about 20 meters from the road. The MP squad opened fire with
.50 cal machineguns and Mk19 grenade launchers and drove across the front of
the enemy's kill zone, between the enemy and the trucks, drawing fire off of
the tractor trailers. The MP's crossed the kill zone and then turned up an
access road at a right angle to the ASR and next to the field full of enemy
fighters. The three vehicles, carrying nine MPs and one medic, stopped in a line on the dirt access road and flanked the enemy positions with plunging fire from the .50 cal and the SAW machinegun (Squad Automatic Weapon). In front of them, was a line of seven sedans, with all their doors and trunk lids open, the
getaway cars and the lone two story house off on their left.
Immediately the middle vehicle was hit by an RPG knocking the gunner
unconscious from his turret and down into the vehicle. The Vehicle
Commander (the TC), the squad's leader, thought the gunner was dead, but
tried to treat him from inside the vehicle. Simultaneously, the rear
vehicle's driver and TC, section leader two, open their doors and dismount
to fight, while their gunner continued firing from his position in the gun
platform on top of the Hummer. Immediately, all three fall under heavy
return machinegun fire, wounded. The driver of the middle vehicle saw them
fall out the rearview mirror, dismounts and sprints to get into the third
vehicle and take up the SAW on top the vehicle. The Squad's medic dismounts
from that third vehicle, and joined by the first vehicle's driver (CLS
trained) who sprinted back to join him, begins combat life-saving techniques
to treat the three wounded MPs. The gunner on the floor of the second
vehicle is revived by his TC, the squad leader, and he climbs back into the .50 cal and opens fire.
The Squad leader dismounted with his M4 carbine, and 2 hand grenades, grabbed the section leader out of the first vehicle who had rendered radio reports of
their first contact. The two of them, squad leader Staff Sergeant and team
leader Sergeant with her M4 and M203 grenade launcher, rush the nearest
ditch about 20 meters away to start clearing the natural trenchline. The
enemy has gone into the ditches and is hiding behind several small trees in
the back of the lot. The .50 cal and SAW flanking fire tears apart the ten
in the lead trenchline.
Meanwhile, the two treating the three wounded on the ground at the rear
vehicle come under sniper fire from the lone house. Each of them, remember
one is a medic, pull out AT-4 rocket launchers from the HMMWV and
nearly-simultaneously fire the rockets into the house to neutralize the
shooter. The two sergeants work their way up the trenchline, throwing
grenades, firing grenades from the launcher, and firing their M4s. The
sergeant runs low on ammo and runs back to a vehicle to reload. She moves
to her squad leader's vehicle, and because this squad is led so well, she
knows exactly where to reach her arm blindly into a different vehicle to
find ammo-because each vehicle is packed exactly the same, with discipline.
As she turns to move back to the trenchline, Gunner in two sees an AIF jump
from behind one of the cars and start firing on the Sergeant. He pulls his
9mm, because the .50 cal is pointed in the other direction, and shoots five
rounds wounding him. The sergeant moves back to the trenchline under fire from the back of the field, with fresh mags, two more grenades, and three more M203 rounds.
The Mk 19 gunner suppresses the rear of the field. Now, rejoined with the squad leader, the two sergeants continue clearing the enemy from the trenchline, until they see no more movement. A lone man with an RPG launcher on his shoulder steps from behind a tree and prepares to fire on the three Hummers and is killed
with a single aimed SAW shot thru the head by the previously knocked out
gunner on platform two, who now has a SAW out to supplement the .50 cal in
the mount. The team leader sergeant, she claims four killed by aimed M4
shots. The Squad Leader, he threw four grenades taking out at least two
baddies, and attributes one other to her aimed M203 fire.
The gunner on platform two, previously knocked out from a hit by the RPG,
has now swung his .50 cal around and, realizing that the line of vehicles
represents a hazard and possible getaway for the bad guys, starts shooting
the .50cal into the engine blocks until his field of fire is limited. He
realizes that his vehicle is still running despite the RPG hit, and drops
down from his weapon, into the drivers seat and moves the vehicle forward on
two flat tires about 100 meters into a better firing position. Just then,
the vehicle dies, oil spraying everywhere. He remountes his .50 cal and
continues shooting the remaining of the seven cars lined up and ready for a
get-away that wasn't to happen. The fire dies down about then, and a second
squad arrives on the scene, dismounts and helps the two giving first aid to
the wounded at platform three. Two minutes later three other squads from
the 617th arrive, along with the CO, and the field is secured, consolidation
begins.
Those seven Americans (with the three wounded) killed in total 24 heavily
armed enemy, wounded 6 (two later died), and captured one unwounded, who
feigned injury to escape the fight. They seized 22 AK-47s, 6x RPG launchers
w/ 16 rockets, 13x RPK machineguns, 3x PKM machineguns, 40 hand grenades,
123 fully loaded 30-rd AK magazines, 52 empty mags, and 10 belts of 2500 rds
of PK ammo.
The three wounded MPs have been evacuated to Landstuhl. One lost a kidney
and will be paralyzed. The other two will most likely recover, though one
will forever have a bullet lodged between second and third ribs below his
heart. No word on the three COSCOM soldiers wounded in the initial volleys.
Of the 7 members of Raven 42 who walked away, two are Caucasian Women, the
rest men--one is Mexican-American, the medic is African-American, and the
other two are Caucasian-the great American melting pot. They believed even
before this fight that their NCOs were the best in the Army, and that they
have the best squad in the Army. The Medic who fired the AT-4, said he
remembered how from the week before when his squad leader forced him to
train on it, though he didn't think as a medic he would ever use one. He
said he chose to use it in that moment to protect the three wounded on the
ground in front of him, once they came under fire from the building. The
day before this mission, they took the new RFI bandoliers that were recently
issued, and experimented with mounting them in their vehicles. Once they
figured out how, they pre-loaded a second basic load of ammo into magazines,
put them into the bandoliers, and mounted them in their vehicles---the same
exact way in every vehicle-load plans enforced and checked by leaders! Leadership under fire--once those three leaders (NCOs) stepped out of their vehicles, the squad was committed to the fight.
Their only complaints in the AAR were: the lack of stopping power in the
9mm; the .50 cal incendiary rounds they are issued in lieu of ball ammo
(shortage of ball in the inventory) didn't have the penetrating power needed
to pierce the walls of the building; and that everyone in the squad was not
CLS trained.
Yesterday, Monday, was spent with the chaplain and the chain of command
conducting AARs. Today, every news media in theater wanted them. Good
Morning America, NBC, CBS, FOX, ABC, Stars and Stripes, and many radio
stations from Kentucky all were lined up today. The female E5 Sergeant who
fought thru the trenchline will become the anti-Jessica Lynch media poster
child. She and her squad leader deserve every bit of recognition they will
get, and more. They all do.
I participated in their AAR as the BDE S2, and am helping in putting
together an action report to justify future valor awards. Lets not talk
about women in combat. Lets not talk about the new Close Combat Badge not
including MPs.
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
These daily dispatches are from an Army colonel, surgeon, Brett Wyrick.
Interesting education he's getting!

Dear Dad,

If you remember, I took care of an Iraqi Colonel when I first got here,
and his parting words to me were that he was going to “ return the
compliment” to the bad guy; he kept his word on Sunday…

We had a barbeque scheduled for 1700, the CCAT guys (Critical Care Air
Transport) made a run up to Germany with a load of patients, and on the
return flight, they brought in Bratwurst, and chops, and other sausages.
We were just about to spread the mustard when the Mass Casualty started,
and the helicopters started unloading them two and three at a time. We
were about fifteen minutes into it , and I noted a couple of things that
were peculiar- they were all shot instead of blown up with minimal
fragmentation injuries- very unusual. They were also all bad guys. Within
an hour we had a squad of Samoans for security, and we were sorting out
17 patients. We operated side by side in the OR, and all the bad guys had
multiple wounds from AK rounds. At one time we were doing brain surgery
on two at the same time in one room and cracking open the chests of two
more in another room. We had two more with open bellies in the third
room, and the other surgeons were stabilizing in the ER. We were going
through the blood like it was water, and they had a base-wide call for
blood donors, and as is par for the Army, we had about 200 people to roll
up their sleeves and get drained within the first 20 minutes. In between
cases the guys would sneak out back for a Brat and sauerkraut, and in the
midst of all this, another team showed up to demonstrate telemedicine
capabilities from the AOR back to the States. They got an eyeful of a
Mass casualty live and in color back at Bethesda and Walter Reed and us
chowing on Bratwurst. Just when we thought we had it under control, we
got word of six more coming in from Balad Hospital. The Commander said we
were not able to accept transfers until later, and he was told these were
not transfers, but they were coming from the gunfight in the waiting
room. What a night. I lost track of the number of chest tubes I put in
and the number of Brats I consumed.

Anyway, my friend, Iraqi Colonel Y. shows up yesterday morning in the
outpatient clinic and he has a couple of broken ribs from an AK blast at
close range, nut he had his armor on, and he did not drop a lung. The
entire sequence of events was then relayed to me by his two American
advisors who are Majors with the Special Forces. On Sunday afternoon, the
bad guys tried to kidnap a British contractor on the other side of the
river, and he called for help on his cell phone while driving his SUV and
trying to escape. Colonel Y.’s troops were able to get there, and in a
10 mile running gun battle, saved the contractor, and killed several
carloads of bad guys. They tracked the remaining bad guys to their safe
house and called in for more ING and American troops. According to Major
J. ( American ). The gunfight was extremely hot when he and Colonel Y.
got to the scene. They were clearly outnumbered and it was growing dark-
it looked like the bad guys would escape to the river, but Colonel Y is
apparently some kind of Iraqi Audie Murphy. He told his troops, “Allah
hates cowards, follow me.” He charged the building with his pistol and
some grenades. Major J said he would have waited for air and armor
support, but he was “too damned ashamed” not to follow Colonel Y into the
building. When all was said and done, 35 bad guys were dead and 10 were
wounded. They took Colonel Y. to Balad hospital because it was closer,
and when Colonel Y walked through the door, he recognized some of the
wounded as bad guys, and the gunfight started there.

I ordered the X-rays for the Colonel and I told him that he was brave,
but he should wait for armor support next time. He told me it was getting
dark, and he was afraid the bad guys would escape along the river.
“Also,” he said, “I have two wives and they were both expecting me home
for dinner”. Glad he is on our side.
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic
Page 1 of 1

Related topics:
UFO and Ghosts stories! Poll.
Fellow Runescape stories
Swift boat vets' stories hold up under fire
Funniest "been kicked out of bar stories"
PvP stories?
Pledging stories
Cyb0r Stories?
Fry's Horror Stories
Gator/Python stories in the news again
Everquest Stories
Gross food stories
Yay for short stories!!
My funny life stories.
Catch the roomie jerking it? Horrible roomie stories here.
Do you share poop stories?
Comparing Stories
Share your humorous stories of idiots in MMO's