US Marines Turn Fire on Civilians at the Bridge of Death

                Mark Franchetti, Nasiriya

                The Times UK


                Sunday 30 March 2003

                THE light was a strange yellowy grey and the wind was coming up, the
                beginnings of a sandstorm. The silence felt almost eerie after a night of
                shooting so intense it hurt the eardrums and shattered the nerves. My
                footsteps felt heavy on the hot, dusty asphalt as I walked slowly towards
                the bridge at Nasiriya. A horrific scene lay ahead.

                Some 15 vehicles, including a minivan and a couple of trucks, blocked the
                road. They were riddled with bullet holes. Some had caught fire and
                turned into piles of black twisted metal. Others were still burning.

                Amid the wreckage I counted 12 dead civilians, lying in the road or in
                nearby ditches. All had been trying to leave this southern town
                overnight, probably for fear of being killed by US helicopter attacks and
                heavy artillery.

                Their mistake had been to flee over a bridge that is crucial to the
                coalition's supply lines and to run into a group of shell-shocked young
                American marines with orders to shoot anything that moved.

                One man's body was still in flames. It gave out a hissing sound. Tucked
                away in his breast pocket, thick wads of banknotes were turning to ashes.
                His savings, perhaps.

                Down the road, a little girl, no older than five and dressed in a pretty
                orange and gold dress, lay dead in a ditch next to the body of a man who
                may have been her father. Half his head was missing.

                Nearby, in a battered old Volga, peppered with ammunition holes, an Iraqi
                woman - perhaps the girl's mother - was dead, slumped in the back seat. A
                US Abrams tank nicknamed Ghetto Fabulous drove past the bodies.

                This was not the only family who had taken what they thought was a last
                chance for safety. A father, baby girl and boy lay in a shallow grave. On
                the bridge itself a dead Iraqi civilian lay next to the carcass of a
                donkey.

                As I walked away, Lieutenant Matt Martin, whose third child, Isabella,
                was born while he was on board ship en route to the Gulf, appeared beside
                me.

                "Did you see all that?" he asked, his eyes filled with tears. "Did you
                see that little baby girl? I carried her body and buried it as best I
                could but I had no time. It really gets to me to see children being
                killed like this, but we had no choice."

                Martin's distress was in contrast to the bitter satisfaction of some of
                his fellow marines as they surveyed the scene. "The Iraqis are sick
                people and we are the chemotherapy," said Corporal Ryan Dupre. "I am
                starting to hate this country. Wait till I get hold of a friggin' Iraqi.
                No, I won't get hold of one. I'll just kill him."

                Only a few days earlier these had still been the bright-eyed small-town
                boys with whom I crossed the border at the start of the operation. They
                had rolled towards Nasiriya, a strategic city beside the Euphrates, on a
                mission to secure a safe supply route for troops on the way to Baghdad.

                They had expected a welcome, or at least a swift surrender. Instead they
                had found themselves lured into a bloody battle, culminating in the worst
                coalition losses of the war - 16 dead, 12 wounded and two missing marines
                as well as five dead and 12 missing servicemen from an army convoy - and
                the humiliation of having prisoners paraded on Iraqi television.

                There are three key bridges at Nasiriya. The feat of Martin, Dupre and
                their fellow marines in securing them under heavy fire was compared by
                armchair strategists last week to the seizure of the Remagen bridge over
                the Rhine, which significantly advanced victory over Germany in the
                second world war.

                But it was also the turning point when the jovial band of brothers from
                America lost all their assumptions about the war and became jittery
                aggressors who talked of wanting to "nuke" the place.

                None of this was foreseen at Camp Shoup, one of the marines' tent
                encampments in northern Kuwait, where officers from the 1st and 2nd
                battalions of Task Force Tarawa, the 7,000-strong US Marines brigade,
                spent long evenings poring over maps and satellite imagery before the
                invasion.

                The plan seemed straightforward. The marines would speed unhindered over
                the 130 miles of desert up from the Kuwaiti border and approach Nasiriya
                from the southeast to secure a bridge over the Euphrates. They would then
                drive north through the outskirts of Nasiriya to a second bridge, over
                the Inahr al-Furbati canal. Finally, they would turn west and secure the
                third bridge, also over the canal. The marines would not enter the city
                proper, let alone attempt to take it.

                The coalition could then start moving thousands of troops and logistical
                support units up highway 7, leading to Baghdad, 225 miles to the north.

                There was only one concern: "ambush alley", the road connecting the first
                two bridges. But intelligence suggested there would be little or no
                fighting as this eastern side of the city was mostly "pro-American".

                I was with Alpha company. We reached the outskirts of Nasiriya at about
                breakfast time last Sunday. Some marines were disappointed to be carrying
                out a mission that seemed a sideshow to the main effort. But in an
                ominous sign of things to come, our battalion stopped in its tracks,
                three miles outside the city.

                Bad news filtered back. Earlier that morning a US Army convoy had been
                greeted by a group of Iraqis dressed in civilian clothes, apparently
                wanting to surrender. When the American soldiers stopped, the Iraqis
                pulled out AK-47s and sprayed the US trucks with gunfire.

                Five wounded soldiers were rescued by our convoy, including one who had
                been shot four times. The attackers were believed to be members of the
                Fedayeen Saddam, a group of 15,000 fighters under the command of Saddam's
                psychopathic son Uday.

                Blown-up tyres, a pool of blood, spent ammunition and shards of glass
                from the bulletridden windscreen marked the spot where the ambush had
                taken place. Swiftly, our AAVs (23-ton amphibious assault vehicles) took
                up defensive positions. About 100 marines jumped out of their vehicles
                and took cover in ditches, pointing their sights at a mud-caked house.
                Was it harbouring gunmen? Small groups of marines approached, cautiously,
                to search for the enemy. A dozen terrified civilians, mainly women and
                children, emerged with their hands raised.

                "It's just a bunch of Hajis," said one gunner from his turret, using
                their nickname for Arabs. "Friggin' women and children, that's all."

                Cobras and Huey attack helicopters began firing missiles at targets on
                the edge of the city. Plumes of smoke rose as heavy artillery shook the
                ground under our feet.

                Heavy machinegun fire echoed across the huge rubbish dump that marks the
                entrance to Nasiriya. Suddenly there was return fire from three large oil
                tanks at a refinery. The Cobras were called back, and within seconds they
                roared above our heads, firing off missiles in clouds of purple tracer
                fire.

                There were several loud explosions. Flames burst high into the sky from
                one of the oil tanks. The marines believed that what opposition there was
                had now been crushed. "We are going in, we are going in," shouted one of
                the officers.

                More than 20 AAVs, several tanks and about 10 Hummers equipped with
                roof-mounted, anti-tank missile launchers prepared to move in. Crammed
                inside them were some 400 marines. Tension rose as they loaded their guns
                and stuck their heads over the side of the AAVs through the open roof,
                their M-16 pointed in all directions.

                As we set off towards the eastern city gate there was no sense of the
                mayhem awaiting us down the road. A few locals dressed in rags watched
                the awesome spectacle of America's war machine on the move. Nobody waved.

                Slowly we approached the first bridge. Fires were raging on either side
                of the road; Cobras had destroyed an Iraqi military truck and a T55 tank
                positioned inside a dugout. Powerful explosions came from inside the
                bowels of the tank as its ammunition and heavy shells were set off by the
                fire. With each explosion a thick and perfect ring of black smoke ring
                puffed out of the turret.

                An Iraqi defence post lay abandoned. Cobras flew over an oasis of palm
                trees and deserted brick and mud-caked houses. We charged onto the
                bridge, and as we crossed the Euphrates, a large mural of Saddam came
                into view. Some marines reached for their disposable cameras.

                Suddenly, as we approached ambush alley on the far side of the bridge,
                the crackle of AK-47s broke out. Our AAVs began to zigzag to avoid being
                hit by a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG).

                The road widened out to a square, with a mosque and the portrait of
                Saddam on the left-hand side. The vehicles wheeled round, took up a
                defensive position, back to back, and began taking fire.

                Pinned down, the marines fired back with 40mm automatic grenade
                launchers, a weapon so powerful it can go through thick brick walls and
                kill anyone within a 5-yard range of where the shell lands.

                I was in AAV number A304, affectionately nicknamed the Desert Caddy. It
                shook as Keith Bernize, the gunner, fired off round after deafening round
                at sandbag positions shielding suspected Fedayeen fighters. His steel
                ammunition box clanged with the sound of smoking empty shells and
                cartridges.

                Bernize, who always carries a scan picture of his unborn baby daughter
                with him, shot at the targets from behind a turret, peering through
                narrow slits of reinforced glass. He shouted at his men to feed him more
                ammunition. Four marines, standing at the AAV's four corners,
                precariously perched on ammunition boxes, fired off their M-16s.

                Their faces covered in sweat, officers shouted commands into field
                radios, giving co-ordinates of enemy positions. Some 200 marines, fully
                exposed to enemy fire and slowed down by their heavy weapons, bulky
                ammunition packs and NBC suits, ran across the road, taking shelter
                behind a long brick wall and mounds of earth. A team of snipers appeared,
                yards from our vehicle.

                The exchange of fire was relentless. We were pinned down for more than
                three hours as Iraqis hiding inside houses and a hospital and behind
                street corners fired a barrage of ammunition.

                Despite the marines' overwhelming firepower, hitting the Iraqis was not
                easy. The gunmen were not wearing uniforms and had planned their ambush
                well - stockpiling weapons in dozens of houses, between which they moved
                freely pretending to be civilians.

                "It's a bad situation," said First Sergeant James Thompson, who was
                running around with a 9mm pistol in his hand. "We don't know who is
                shooting at us. They are even using women as scouts. The women come out
                waving at us, or with their hands raised. We freeze, but the next minute
                we can see how she is looking at our positions and giving them away to
                the fighters hiding behind a street corner. It's very difficult to
                distinguish between the fighters and civilians."

                Across the square, genuine civilians were running for their lives. Many,
                including some children, were gunned down in the crossfire. In a surreal
                scene, a father and mother stood out on a balcony with their children in
                their arms to give them a better view of the battle raging below. A few
                minutes later several US mortar shells landed in front of their house. In
                all probability, the family is dead.

                The fighting intensified. An Iraqi fighter emerged from behind a wall of
                sandbags 500 yards away from our vehicle. Several times he managed to
                fire off an RPG at our positions. Bernize and other gunners fired dozens
                of rounds at his dugout, punching large holes into a house and lifting
                thick clouds of dust.

                Captain Mike Brooks, commander of Alpha company, pinned down in front of
                the mosque, called in tank support. Armed with only a 9mm pistol, he
                jumped out of the back of his AAV with a young marine carrying a field
                radio on his back.

                Brooks, 34, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, had been in command of 200
                men for just over a year. He joined the marines when he was 19 because he
                felt that he was wasting his life. He needed direction, was a bit of a
                rebel and was impressed by the sense of pride in the corps.

                He is a soft-spoken man, fair but very firm. Brave too: I watched him
                sprint in front of enemy positions to brief some of his junior officers
                behind a wall. Behind us, two 68-ton Abrams tanks rolled up, crushing the
                barrier separating the lanes on the highway.

                The earth shook violently as one tank, Desert Knight, stopped in front of
                our row of AAVS and fired several 120mm shells into buildings.

                A few hundred yards down ambush alley there was carnage. An AAV from
                Charlie company was racing back towards the bridge to evacuate some
                wounded marines when it was hit by two RPGs. The heavy vehicle shook but
                withstood the explosions.

                Then the Iraqis fired again. This time the rocket plunged into the
                vehicle through the open rooftop. The explosion was deadly, made 10 times
                more powerful by the ammunition stored in the back.

                The wreckage smouldered in the middle of the road. I jumped out from the
                rear hatch of our vehicle, briefly taking cover behind a wall. When I
                reached the stricken AAV, the scene was mayhem.

                The heavy, thick rear ramp had been blown open. There were pools of blood
                and bits of flesh everywhere. A severed leg, still wearing a desert boot,
                lay on what was left of the ramp among playing cards, a magazine, cans of
                Coke and a small bloodstained teddy bear.

                "They are f****** dead, they are dead. Oh my God. Get in there. Get in
                there now and pull them out," shouted a gunner in a state verging on
                hysterical.

                There was panic and confusion as a group of young marines, shouting and
                cursing orders at one another, pulled out a maimed body.

                Two men struggled to lift the body on a stretcher and into the back of a
                Hummer, but it would not fit inside, so the stretcher remained almost
                upright, the dead man's leg, partly blown away, dangling in the air.

                "We shouldn't be here," said Lieutenant Campbell Kane, 25, who was born
                in Northern Ireland. "We can't hold this. They are trying to suck us into
                the city and we haven't got enough ass up here to sustain this. We need
                more tanks, more helicopters."

                Closer to the destroyed AAV, another young marine was transfixed with
                fear and kept repeating: "Oh my God, I can't believe this. Did you see
                his leg? It was blown off. It was blown off."

                Two CH-46 helicopters, nicknamed Frogs, landed a few hundred yards away
                in the middle of a firefight to take away the dead and wounded.

                If at first the marines felt constrained by orders to protect civilians,
                by now the battle had become so intense that there was little time for
                niceties. Cobra helicopters were ordered to fire at a row of houses
                closest to our positions. There were massive explosions but the return
                fire barely died down.

                Behind us, as many as four AAVs that had driven down along the banks of
                the Euphrates were stuck in deep mud and coming under fire.

                About 1pm, after three hours of intense fighting, the order was given to
                regroup and try to head out of the city in convoy. Several marines who
                had lost their vehicles piled into the back of ours.

                We raced along ambush alley at full speed, close to a line of houses. "My
                driver got hit," said one of the marines who joined us, his face and
                uniform caked in mud. "I went to try to help him when he got hit by
                another RPG or a mortar. I don't even know how many friends I have lost.
                I don't care if they nuke that bloody city now. From one house they were
                waving while shooting at us with AKs from the next. It was insane."

                There was relief when we finally crossed the second bridge to the
                northeast of the city in mid-afternoon. But there was more horror to
                come. Beside the smouldering wreckage of another AAV were the bodies of
                another four marines, laid out in the mud and covered with camouflage
                ponchos. There were body parts everywhere.

                One of the dead was Second Lieutenant Fred Pokorney, 31, a marine
                artillery officer from Washington state. He was a big guy, whose
                ill-fitting uniform was the butt of many jokes. It was supposed to have
                been a special day for Pokorney. After 13 years of service, he was to be
                promoted to first lieutenant. The men of Charlie company had agreed they
                would all shake hands with him to celebrate as soon as they crossed the
                second bridge, their mission accomplished.

                It didn't happen. Pokorney made it over the second bridge and a few
                hundred yards down a highway through dusty flatlands before his vehicle
                was ambushed. Pokorney and his men had no chance. Fully loaded with
                ammunition, their truck exploded in the middle of the road, its remains
                burning for hours. Pokorney was hit in the chest by an RPG.

                Another man who died was Fitzgerald Jordan, a staff sergeant from Texas.
                I felt numb when I heard this. I had met Jordan 10 days before we moved
                into Nasiriya. He was a character, always chewing tobacco and coming up
                to pat you on the back. He got me to fetch newspapers for him from Kuwait
                City. Later, we shared a bumpy ride across the desert in the back of a
                Humvee.

                A decorated Gulf war veteran, he used to complain about having to come
                back to Iraq. "We should have gone all the way to Baghdad 12 years ago
                when we were here and had a real chance of removing Saddam."

                Now Pokorney, Jordan and their comrades lay among unspeakable carnage. An
                older marine walked by carrying a huge chunk of flesh, so maimed it was
                impossible to tell which body part it was. With tears in his eyes and
                blood splattered over his flak jacket, he held the remains of his friend
                in his arms until someone gave him a poncho to wrap them with.

                Frantic medics did what they could to relieve horrific injuries, until
                four helicopters landed in the middle of the highway to take the injured
                to a military hospital. Each wounded marine had a tag describing his
                injury. One had gunshot wounds to the face, another to the chest. Another
                simply lay on his side in the sand with a tag reading: "Urgent - surgery,
                buttock."

                One young marine was assigned the job of keeping the flies at bay. Some
                of his comrades, exhausted, covered in blood, dirt and sweat walked
                around dazed. There were loud cheers as the sound of the heaviest
                artillery yet to pound Nasiriya shook the ground.

                Before last week the overwhelming majority of these young men had never
                been in combat. Few had even seen a dead body. Now, their faces had
                changed. Anger and fear were fuelled by rumours that the bodies of
                American soldiers had been dragged through Nasiriya's streets. Some
                marines cried in the arms of friends, others sought comfort in the Bible.

                Next morning, the men of Alpha company talked about the fighting over
                MREs (meals ready to eat). They were jittery now and reacted nervously to
                any movement around their dugouts. They suspected that civilian cars,
                including taxis, had helped resupply the enemy inside the city. When cars
                were spotted speeding along two roads, frantic calls were made over the
                radio to get permission to "kill the vehicles". Twenty-four hours earlier
                it would almost certainly have been denied: now it was granted.

                Immediately, the level of force levelled at civilian vehicles was
                overwhelming. Tanks were placed on the road and AAVs lined along one
                side. Several taxis were destroyed by helicopter gunships as they drove
                down the road.

                A lorry filled with sacks of wheat made the fatal mistake of driving
                through US lines. The order was given to fire. Several AAVs pounded it
                with a barrage of machinegun fire, riddling the windscreen with at least
                20 holes. The driver was killed instantly. The lorry swerved off the road
                and into a ditch. Rumour spread that the driver had been armed and had
                fired at the marines. I walked up to the lorry, but could find no trace
                of a weapon.

                This was the start of day that claimed many civilian casualties. After
                the lorry a truck came down the road. Again the marines fired. Inside,
                four men were killed. They had been travelling with some 10 other
                civilians, mainly women and children who were evacuated, crying, their
                clothes splattered in blood. Hours later a dog belonging to the dead
                driver was still by his side.

                The marines moved west to take a military barracks and secure their third
                objective, the third bridge, which carried a road out of the city.

                At the barracks, the marines hung a US flag from a statue of Saddam, but
                Lieutenant-Colonel Rick Grabowski, the battalion commander, ordered it
                down. He toured barracks. There were stacks of Russian-made ammunition
                and hundreds of Iraqi army uniforms, some new, others left behind by
                fleeing Iraqi soldiers.

                One room had a map of Nasiriya, showing its defences and two large
                cardboard arrows indicating the US plan of attack to take the two main
                bridges. Above the map were several murals praising Saddam. One, which
                sickened the Americans, showed two large civilian planes crashing into
                tall buildings.

                As night fell again there was great tension, the marines fearing an
                ambush. Two tanks and three AAVs were placed at the north end of the
                third bridge, their guns pointing down towards Nasiriya, and given orders
                to shoot at any vehicle that drove towards American positions.

                Though civilians on foot passed by safely, the policy was to shoot
                anything that moved on wheels. Inevitably, terrified civilians drove at
                speed to escape: marines took that speed to be a threat and hit out.
                During the night, our teeth on edge, we listened a dozen times as the
                AVVs' machineguns opened fire, cutting through cars and trucks like
                paper.

                Next morning I saw the result of this order - the dead civilians, the
                little girl in the orange and gold dress.

                Suddenly, some of the young men who had crossed into Iraq with me
                reminded me now of their fathers' generation, the trigger-happy grunts of
                Vietnam. Covered in the mud from the violent storms, they were drained
                and dangerously aggressive.

                In the days afterwards, the marines consolidated their position and put a
                barrier of trucks across the bridge to stop anyone from driving across,
                so there were no more civilian deaths.

                They also ruminated on what they had done. Some rationalised it.

                "I was shooting down a street when suddenly a woman came out and casually
                began to cross the street with a child no older than 10," said Gunnery
                Sergeant John Merriman, another Gulf war veteran. "At first I froze on
                seeing the civilian woman. She then crossed back again with the child and
                went behind a wall. Within less than a minute a guy with an RPG came out
                and fired at us from behind the same wall. This happened a second time so
                I thought, 'Okay, I get it. Let her come out again'.

                She did and this time I took her out with my M-16." Others were less
                sanguine.

                Mike Brooks was one of the commanders who had given the order to shoot at
                civilian vehicles. It weighed on his mind, even though he felt he had no
                choice but to do everything to protect his marines from another ambush.

                On Friday, making coffee in the dust, he told me he had been writing a
                diary, partly for his wife Kelly, a nurse at home in Jacksonville, North
                Carolina, with their sons Colin, 6, and four-year-old twins Brian and
                Evan.

                When he came to jotting down the incident about the two babies getting
                killed by his men he couldn't do it. But he said he would tell her when
                he got home. I offered to let him call his wife on my satellite phone to
                tell her he was okay. He turned down the offer and had me write and send
                her an e-mail instead.

                He was too emotional. If she heard his voice, he said, she would know
                that something was wrong.

                (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to
                those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and
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