Marines prepare for assault of Fallujah
By
Patrick J. McDonnell / Los Angeles Times
November 1, 2004
November 1, 2004
NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq -- The Marines are getting ready for an all-out assault.
Troops are disassembling and cleaning their weapons, stocking up on supplies, studying tactics and participating in numerous drills in preparation for a large-scale assault. A sense of exhilaration is evident among the Marines training at dusty bases near Fallujah, a rebel stronghold now firmly in the cross-hairs of the U.S. military and the Iraqi interim government.
"I've been waiting for this fight ever since I joined the Marines,'' said Staff Sgt. Dennis Nash, an 11-year Marine veteran whose platoon has been fine-tuning its skills. "This battle is going to be written about in history books. . . . The terrorists who want to fight us are in that city, and we're going to get 'em.''
The day and night are filled with detonations: Mortars coming in, artillery fire going out, airstrikes on Fallujah, some three miles to the east.
Helicopter rotors rumble and F-16 fighter jets zoom overhead. The ground shakes, a slight wind ripples and mushroom clouds rise from massive controlled explosions of 2,000 pounds or more of captured weapon caches from Saddam Hussein's forces.
On Saturday, nine Marines were killed and nine others were wounded when insurgents ambushed a U.S. convoy on the outskirts of Fallujah. The car bomb attack was the deadliest incident involving U.S. troops in nearly nine months.
Marine commanders stress that they are still awaiting final orders, and will abide by a negotiated settlement if a deal emerges from ongoing talks between Fallujah representatives and Iraqi government officials.
In a news conference Sunday, Interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi warned that the window was closing for reaching a negotiated resolution with the insurgents, calling it ''the final phase" of efforts to avoid an all-out attack.
Using much the same language as the Americans, he described Fallujah residents as victims of foreign fighters and eager to be rescued from them.
U.S. troops are openly skeptical of any settlement. ''The terrorists are barking up the wrong tree," said Cpl. Anibal Paz, a 21-year-old from Boston. ''They're taking us on and they won't be able to back it up."
The upbeat mood contrasts with the generally spartan conditions here, where many Marines are billeted in bombed-out barracks that once housed Iranian fighters sponsored by Saddam. Arabic slogans meant to inspire the Iranians are still scrawled on many walls. Saddam's image stares down in one large room converted to a mess hall.
For many, there is a feeling that any assault will complete a job abandoned in April, when Marines were ordered to cut short an assault into Fallujah.
Commanders downplayed such motivation. ''It doesn't matter what happened in April," said Lt. Col. Gareth Brandl, who commands the 1st battalion of the 8th Marine Regiment. ''There's an enemy (in Fallujah), and my men are ready to go in and destroy the enemy."
Military officials will not say how many troops are preparing, or when the assault is scheduled to begin. But the numbers of Marines this time is sure to exceed the fewer than 3,000 who participated in last April's operation.
Joining the Marines will be Army units and an unknown number of Iraqi troops. Officials stress the need that any assault be perceived as an Iraq operation ordered by Allawi.
''Even more important than the battle is the aftermath," said one senior commander. ''The Iraqis need to go in there like the American government goes into Florida after a hurricane. They need to be seen on the ground helping people."
Several thousand Iraqi police, national guardsmen and Army personnel are said to be poised to move into Fallujah to help maintain order once the Marines have secured the city. Most are from outside of Fallujah, and thus immune from the intimidation and threats that contributed to the failure of the Fallujah Brigade, the special unit of Iraqi forces set up in April to help maintain the peace. Many turned out to be insurgents or sympathizers.
In addition, tens of millions of dollars in reconstruction funds may be spent on projects in Fallujah once the fighting stops. Marine lawyers are traveling with combat units, ready to handle compensation claims for battle damage.
But first, commanders say, the city must be wrested from criminals, religious militants, foreign fighters including Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and nationalist elements, including many former Iraqi army personnel still loyal to Saddam.
The insurgents have had six months to dig in. Some may have already slipped out of the city. But others seem ready for a battle.
''This is going to be our road to war,'' said Capt. Theodore Bethea II, commander of Charlie Company of the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, pointing to one of the amphibious tracked vehicles that the Marines use in both ground and water assaults.
A steady drizzle Sunday had turned much of the fine sand here into mud that clung to Marines' boots like wet cement. But the troops practiced their "dismount'' maneuvers without hesitation, even as they crouched down in the mud, rifles trained at a still-distant enemy.
Platoon leaders urged the troops to cut down on nonessential items in their backpacks -- some as heavy as 70 pounds, including flack vests, ammunition, weapons, food and extra clothing. In house-to-house fighting likely in Fallujah, mobility would be essential.
"Ask yourself if you really need the extra stuff -- do you really need eight pairs of socks?'' one Marine commander asked his charges.
They covered familiar territory: Watch out for your buddy. Mind the heavy fire likely to be coming from the Marines' armored vehicles as Marines on foot approach the buildings and insurgent positions. Pause for a second to get bearings if necessary amid the chaos of battle.
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