March 6, 2005
SPLIT SECONDS AND CLOSE CALLS:
A speeding sedan and a close call for one marine unit (Dan Murphy, 3/07/05, CS Monitor)
Sgt. Jim Beere of the 23rd Marine Regiment Bravo Company knows something about protecting people.Back home he's an undercover cop in Oakland, Calif., where he works on a special-victims unit tracking rapists and child molesters. He's usually responsible just for himself and, at most, the safety of a partner.
But early on Feb. 22, he saved his own life and quite possibly the lives of a dozen other marines from Bravo Company who were taking a well-deserved catnap after an all-night operation in the city of Hit.
The split-second decisions by marines like Sergeant Beere are often made in the fog of war. During the same operation, his platoon accidentally killed two unarmed Iraqis who failed to obey orders to stop. Each situation reveals just how much pressure and how little time troops have to determine whether approaching cars mean them harm.
At about 5 a.m., the streets of the city were all but deserted when a sedan turned onto the road leading to the marines' temporary headquarters in a schoolhouse. The driver began to speed up toward the Abrams tank guarding the road, so the machine gunner opened fire with two long bursts that sent the car careening into a sewage canal in the middle of the road.
The driver, who was hit three times but still alive, rolled out of the car, and marines ran over to investigate. He was a Syrian who claimed in perfect, almost unaccented, English that he'd been forced to drive the car. (He later died on the way to the hospital.)
Beere then went over with another marine to check out the car.
As the marine in front of him leaned in the passenger-side front door to take out an AK-47 propped against the steering wheel, a man lunged out of the muck in the canal on the driver's side and went for a rocket-propelled grenade launcher in the back of the car. Beere quickly pulled his buddy back and to the side, swiped his pistol from his holster, and shot the man five times. The man fell back into the canal.
Beere took a few steps away to catch his breath and, turning back, saw the man coming out of the canal again, this time hitting a "clacker" in his hand - a detonating unit for mines and improvised bombs. Beere shot the man four more times, and he fell dead.
"I thought that was it for me, I really did," Beere said a few minutes later. He says he expected the whole car to go up in a ball of flames. "The best I can figure is that he had a mine down there with him and was trying to blow up all the explosives in the car. I think the wet ruined the detonator," he says.
In this case Beere was right: the trunk was loaded with explosives.
No Italian "journalist" in the back? Posted by Orrin Judd at March 6, 2005 9:51 PM
Don't get many sympathizers willing to don the suicide belts, do we?
I can't even fathom how mental these guys must be to rush an Abrams tank. What a waste of assets (looking at it from a tactical point of view).
Posted by: Randall Voth at March 7, 2005 4:41 AMOakland PD rocks!!
Posted by: kristaki at March 7, 2005 3:57 PMIt took NINE rounds of 9mm to stop one Rag? Sort of makes chucking the .45 seem like not such a good idea.
Posted by: Lou Gots at March 10, 2005 5:48 AM