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Iraq
The Paratroopers Who Killed 265 Insurgents To Defend One Downed Apache
2016-06-12
On Jan. 28, 2007, a 12-man Military Transition Team, or MiTT, composed of paratroopers from the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division was called upon to assist an Iraqi army unit that was engaged in a fierce battle with insurgents near the city of Najaf.

The mission was to orchestrate close air support by communicating with the helicopters circling over the firefight. The battle had already claimed the lives of 10 Iraqi soldiers. But before the team made it to its objective, something happened: An AH-64 Apache helicopter plunged from the sky.

“When I saw the Apache go down, it immediately changed everything,” Master Sgt. Thomas Ballard, the noncommissioned officer in charge of the team, later told an Army reporter. “Everything was focused on that crash site; nothing else mattered. That’s where we had to go and that’s what we did.”

Ballard’s team had been told that the enemy force numbered somewhere between 15 to 20 insurgents, but upon reaching the crash site, they quickly realized that wasn’t the case. Suddenly, Ballard and his men found themselves engulfed in heavy machine-gun fire. A rocket-propelled grenade exploded nearby. Then the battle started.

“We began engaging, and continued engaging,” Ballard recalled. “Everything we shot was targets and collectively, we burned up about 11,000 rounds of machine gun ammo, M4 ammo, M203 grenade launcher ammo and 10 airstrikes.”

The insurgents, who apparently belonged to a religious cult called the Soldiers of Heaven, had “ungodly amounts of weapons,” and were maneuvering through a series of bunkers, trenches, and tunnels that encircled the area. The firefight raged for nearly three hours before backup arrived.

The enormity of the force Ballard’s team was up against didn’t come to light until the dust finally settled. An estimated 1,000 enemy fighters had been on the objective. Of them, 265 were killed; 400 more were captured.

All 12 men on the MiTT team were recognized for their actions that day, with each receiving the Army Commendation Medal with Valor. Later, Ballard’s award was upgraded to a Silver Star.
Posted by:Pappy

#5  Soldiers of Heaven Occupants of Hell
Posted by: Frank G   2016-06-12 10:25  

#4  All 12 men on the MiTT team were recognized for their actions that day, with each receiving the Army Commendation Medal with Valor. Later, Ballard’s award was upgraded to a Silver Star.

Those on the inside understand and can read the 'fruit salad'. First - the valor device is rare. Not to the confused with the service's version of good attendance record for a tour anywhere. Second - approval authority for ARCOM in wartime is Brigadier General or Colonel in the position of a BG, or above. The silver star is the SAC. If the award authority hasn't been pulled up by higher authority, that means these were done on the spot, so to speak, rather than end of tour. It doesn't as the piece alludes to, prohibit the award being upped at a latter time. Having the 'old man' come down an pin those on you is a heck of a lot more value than the grin and grab at end tour.

A recommendation for an impact award should be submitted only when the act is of such magnitude that it cannot be recognized in any other manner, and to delay such recognition until completion of the individual's period of service would diminish the significance of the accomplishment. - AR 600-8-22

Posted by: Procopius2k   2016-06-12 08:19  

#3  ARCOM?

Administratively downgraded to a pat on the back.


Posted by: Besoeker   2016-06-12 08:03  

#2  ARCOM?
Posted by: Richard Aubrey   2016-06-12 07:57  

#1  Suddenly, Ballard and his men found themselves engulfed in heavy machine-gun fire. A rocket-propelled grenade exploded nearby.

Then the battle started.


Anyone else getting flashbacks to Mogadishu?

Even allowing for the sort of confusion only a liberal P.O.S. reporter can bring to bear, it sounds like someone earned his pay that day.
Posted by: Nguard   2016-06-12 00:36  

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