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About the Fox Company in Fallujah
Marines in Fallujah said they killed at least 11 insurgents in an ambush Saturday after laying still and silent for hours in buildings deep inside the embattled northwest corner of the city. "Marines can go to sleep tonight knowing they killed (some) bad guys," said 2nd Lt. Josh Jamison, leader of the 2nd Platoon, which infiltrated some 400 yards ahead of its defensive lines to finally put down some of the rebels who daily sneak up to shoot rifles and fire rocket-propelled grenades at the Marines. One squad killed five men who were carrying machine guns, the Marines said, and another squad, assisted by a tank that rolled up to help, killed six other insurgents who tried to counter the attack. No Marines were reported killed or wounded.

"They were definitely moving like trained military, bounding up the street using the buildings for cover," said Jamison, when he and his men returned to their lines just after 9 p.m. Saturday after hiding out and stalking the enemy for more than 20 hours. "These were definitely guys that were coming up on our pos (position) to (do us harm)." The Marines, members of Camp Pendleton’s Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, sneaked out of the houses they’ve occupied for nearly three weeks at 1 a.m. Saturday. They slowly and quietly crept south house to house toward a mosque where gunmen gather almost daily to lead attacks against American troops. They said their mission was originally a probe — a secret move behind enemy lines to check out their defenses and identify enemy positions as targets for a possible Marine offensive. That offensive is expected within days, according to military leaders, if rebels trapped in the city do not hand in their heavy weapons and the city’s residents do not turn in those who killed four American security contractors March 31.

On Saturday, after inching their way through buildings and homes full of broken glass and household goods scattered on the floors after weeks of warfare, the Marines set in near the mosque and waited all day until almost dark. "It was ghostly," said Cpl. Christopher Ebert, 21, of Forest City, N.C., after he and the others arrived back in their defensive position together and safe Saturday night. "We only had about three hours to go and then these six guys showed up." After the six armed men entered the mosque, the Marines radioed what they saw to Fox Company commander Capt. Kyle Stoddard, who watched the mosque from atop a building some 400 yards away. Moments later, at 7:10 p.m., Stoddard and others listened to the burst of fire as the insurgents ran out and Marines opened fire at close range. The deadly ambush was over in an instant. "We got ’em!" Jamison yelled. "They’re dead!"

The tank and the other squad battled back a hasty counterattack from the southeast. Insurgents fired mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and drove three vehicles down the street with gunmen firing rifles at the Marines. Two of the vehicles were disabled, and Marines said they believed their occupants were dead or wounded. Within an hour, the insurgents seemed defeated or had fled the area. The Marines said they then searched the mosque, searched the bodies, and lined them up in the street before they beat an uncontested retreat back to their positions in the north. "It was a long day — long day," said Pfc. Philip Marquez, 21, of Coachella, having just returned from the fight. "But it was worth the wait."

The Marines returned from the fight elated, patting one another on the back and shaking hands. Treated to a cooked meal instead of the normal packaged rations, the excited troops shed their gear in the dark and huddled around a digital video of the fighting recorded by a Marine combat cameraman. "That’s the way it’s done," said Sgt. Warren Hardy, 25, of Colorado Springs, Colo. "It couldn’t have gone better in books." Some of the young Marine leaders said Saturday’s successful ambush could help boost the troops’ morale and steel them for a possible final assault on the city, where military leaders say between 100 and 1,000 Iraqi insurgents and foreign fighters are trapped and preparing snares and defensive positions. "I think it was good that everyone got to get out and stretch their legs and get back in the offensive," said Cpl. Peter Madrigal, 21, of Tucson, Ariz., who led one of the squads involved in the fighting Saturday.

Stoddard, Fox Company’s commander, said Saturday’s battle proved what the Marines have been saying for weeks: that the insurgents are using mosques to fight the Americans. The insurgents were armed with assault rifles and machine guns with magazines taped together for quick reloading in combat, and were carrying grenades. "I have no sympathy for these guys," he said, as his men were returning from the operation. "They’re using holy places to conduct ambushes. It’s just — I don’t know — wrong." The Marines said the ambush would be a serious blow to the rebels’ morale as they face the American force of nearly 5,000 Marines who now surround the city. "They thought they’d be ambushing us, and look who got ambushed!" said Capt. Roy "Woody" Moore, reflecting the triumphant mood of the Marines who say they’ve been getting frustrated sitting behind defensive barriers just inside the city for weeks now. "When they see the bodies lined up in the street in front of the mosque — IDs out and weapons gone," Moore said, "they’re going to say, ’Things are really starting to go badly for us.’ "
Posted by: Sherry 2004-04-26
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=31557