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Iraq-Jordan
Another First Hand Report From Fallujah
2004-11-23
Email from a Marine posted at The Green Side, just one short quote:
I will end with a couple of stories of individual heroism that you may not have heard yet. I was told about both of these incidents shortly after they occurred. No doubt some of the facts will change slightly but I am confident that the meat is correct.

The first is a Marine from 3/5. His name is Corporal Yeager (Chuck Yeager's grandson). As the Marines cleared and apartment building, they got to the top floor and the point man kicked in the door. As he did so, an enemy grenade and a burst of gunfire came out. The explosion and enemy fire took off the point man's leg. He was then immediately shot in the arm as he lay in the doorway. Corporal Yeager tossed a grenade in the room and ran into the doorway and into the enemy fire in order to pull his buddy back to cover. As he was dragging the wounded Marine to cover, his own grenade came back through the doorway. Without pausing, he reached down and threw the grenade back through the door while he heaved his buddy to safety. The grenade went off inside the room and Cpl Yeager threw another in. He immediately entered the room following the second explosion. He gunned down three enemy all within three feet of where he stood and then let fly a third grenade as he backed out of the room to complete the evacuation of the wounded Marine. You have to understand that a grenade goes off within 5 seconds of having the pin pulled. Marines usually let them "cook off" for a second or two before tossing them in. Therefore, this entire episode took place in less than 30 seconds.
Looks like giant cajones run in the family.
The second example comes from 3/1. Cpl Mitchell is a squad leader. He was wounded as his squad was clearing a house when some enemy threw pineapple grenades down on top of them. As he was getting triaged, the doctor told him that he had been shot through the arm. Cpl Mitchell told the doctor that he had actually been shot "a couple of days ago" and had given himself self aide on the wound. When the doctor got on him about not coming off the line, he firmly told the doctor that he was a squad leader and did not have time to get treated as his men were still fighting. There are a number of Marines who have been wounded multiple times but refuse to leave their fellow Marines.

It is incredibly humbling to walk among such men. They fought as hard as any Marines in history and deserve to be remembered as such. The enemy they fought burrowed into houses and fired through mouse holes cut in walls, lured them into houses rigged with explosives and detonated the houses on pursuing Marines, and actually hid behind surrender flags only to engage the Marines with small arms fire once they perceived that the Marines had let their guard down. I know of several instances where near dead enemy rolled grenades out on Marines who were preparing to render them aid. It was a fight to the finish in every sense and the Marines delivered.
Posted by:Steve

#12  Although, speaking from experience, the best reward is getting your buddies and you home, not in a box...

They better put Cpl Yeager in for a damn medal. Brass ones like that should not go unrewarded. (By now the guys in his squad are probably calling him John Wayne for getting the press that he did).
Posted by: OldSpook   2004-11-23 1:46:16 PM  

#11  Although, speaking from experience, the best reward is getting your buddies and you home, not in a box...

They better put Cpl Yeager in for a damn medal. Brass ones like that should not go unrewarded. (By now the guys in his squad are probably calling him John Wayne for getting the press that he did).
Posted by: OldSpook   2004-11-23 1:46:16 PM  

#10  I know of several instances where near dead enemy rolled grenades out on Marines who were preparing to render them aid. It was a fight to the finish in every sense and the Marines delivered.

Anyone still think the Marine in Sites' little video was unjustified in his actions?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2004-11-23 3:27:54 PM  

#9  "the best reward is getting your buddies and you home, not in a box"

Exactly. No medal or memorial compares to that.

Posted by: Pissed off Army   2004-11-23 2:27:09 PM  

#8  Although, speaking from experience, the best reward is getting your buddies and you home, not in a box...

They better put Cpl Yeager in for a damn medal. Brass ones like that should not go unrewarded. (By now the guys in his squad are probably calling him John Wayne for getting the press that he did).
Posted by: OldSpook   2004-11-23 1:46:16 PM  

#7  Oops, sorry, you're talking about inscriptions on the base only? Never mind. No prob with me.
Posted by: lex   2004-11-23 12:46:12 PM  

#6  Mike,
I recall the battles wrapped around the marble base in a chronological order with space for future "glory".
Posted by: Capsu78   2004-11-23 12:45:07 PM  

#5  Leave the memorial alone. We're not in danger of forgetting the other battles, and it's not like some particular social or ethnic group is being slighted. Iwo Jima is a symbol that transcends the particular event. IMHO it's far, far more powerful if it's kept simple and not drowned in tons of words and other associations.
Posted by: lex   2004-11-23 12:41:20 PM  

#4  Capsu78-
My understanding is that because of the way the Memorial is engraved, nothing can be added to it. On the other hand, it would seem to me that at some point in the near future, the Memorial should somehow be updated to include Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Desert Storm, Afghanistan, and Iraqi Freedom.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2004-11-23 12:37:11 PM  

#3  Ay Jarhead protocol buffs who know the criteria for inclusion of a battle on the base of the Iwo Jima Memorial next to Arlington? Does an event require a "battle plan", or is it a sacrfice of life (Beruit) threshold that gets a battle memorialized? How will the battles of the WOT be included?
Posted by: Capsu78   2004-11-23 12:21:12 PM  

#2  "Among the Americans serving on Iwo island, uncommon valor was a common virtue." Adm. Chester A. Nimitz

If Nimitz looked at these young men in Fallujah (and all over Iraq) today, he would expand his quote to include them.

We owe them so much.

Posted by: Justrand   2004-11-23 11:11:10 AM  

#1  I recently went through a briefing where we are teaching the lads to shoot anybody who comes out w/a surrender flag. The surrender flag is a myth. The only valid surrender is when the enemy comes out with his hands on his head and walks calmly toward us.
Posted by: Jarhead   2004-11-23 10:45:03 AM  

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