Under Fire on a 'Fallen Angel' Rescue
Between the compound of buildings and the soldiers was a complex trench system built on two levels and filled with hundreds of enemy fighters. The 2-3 pulled back to a defensive position with the Special Forces team at the crash site. By that time, the compound was surrounded by Special Forces teams to the south and west, and elements of the Iraqi Army and police in the north.
For the first time in the war, mortar men from the 2-3 were called on to fire their weapons. One mortar operator confessed that he was so nervous about shooting his weapon for the first time in combat that he failed to properly plant the base of the tube launcher. His first shot went harmlessly off target.
More helicopters arrived, and with them came the Air Force. Commanders on the ground called for airstrikes against the trench system and the compound with precision munitions and cannon fire.
It was unlikely, the Army decided, that there were noncombatants in the trench line, so that area received the heaviest bombardment. The buildings were another matter, since it was clear that an unknown number of women and children might be inside. Precision munitions were used in these cases, Huggins says. "We'd been fairly discriminating firing into the buildings because you never know who was inside, but there were no women and children in the trench lines so we were fairly harsh with the application of firepower against the trench."
The bombing continued until midnight, when Huggins sent a unit forward with loudspeakers to call for the surviving cult members to surrender. "Nobody took us up on that offer," he says. Not only did enemy fighters continue to fire on American and Iraqi positions, he says, but some fighters tried to charge their lines as well.
The next morning, two companies from the 2-3 moved toward the compound from the west and east, attacking the remnants of the trench line and "flipping bricks" in the compoundArmy-speak for searching for survivors. They found hundreds of bodiesmostly fighters but women and children, too. It was a scene that still haunts many of the soldiers who fought there.
They found stores of food and ammunition, 11 mortar launchers, and an antiaircraft gun. There were so many enemy weapons that the 2-3 filled three pickup trucks with captured guns. More than 200 people surrendered in the morning, and more than 250 were reported killed. Sixteen of the wounded cult members were evacuated by helicopter, and many others were given treatment at the scene.
"We shifted from secure helicopter, defense, to hasty attack, to clear the trench, to humanitarian mission," says Huggins. "We didn't run out of ammo but did run out of medical supplies."
The motives of the cult were less clear. They were Shiites, convinced that if they killed the Shiite leadership of the country, it would bring about the arrival of the 12th Imama Shiite saintwhose messianic return signals the end of the world. They had compiled a target list, too, the Army report says, which included Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, hard-line cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, and Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, head of Iraq's largest Shiite party.
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