January 24, 2005

  • Im still gone but ill be back in better shape soon i hope.


     


     



     


    Lee Pitts Article, Update on the 278th. 1-23-05
     
    Soldiers recall close encounters with bomb blasts
    By Edward Lee Pitts
    Military Affairs
     
    JALULA, Iraq — Spc. John Belcher with the 278th Regimental Combat Team
    heard but never saw the roadside bomb blast that knocked him unconscious.
     
    The early January explosion by an improvised explosive device left a crater
    21’2 feet deep but caused only minor paint damage to the fully armored
    Humvee in which Spc. Belcher rode as a turret gunner. Spc. Belcher fell down
    the gunner’s hatch in the Humvee’s roof and landed in the arms of the
    interpreter riding inside the vehicle.
     
    An estimated 10 such explosive devices have detonated on 278th convoys
    during the Tennessee-based regiment’s first month inside Iraq. The unit
    conducted its 1,000th mission last week.
     
    All soldiers involved in the roadside explosions have escaped injury, but
    they said the experiences served as loud reminders that they are in a war
    zone where people’s lives are at stake. The bombs are the Iraqi insurgents’
    main weapon against U.S. forces.
     
    “This stuff is for real,” said Spc. Belcher, 20, of Athens, Tenn. “It isn’t
    training any more.”
     
    BLAST AFTERMATH
     
    Spc. Belcher, who returned from basic training just two months before the
    regiment began its deployment at Camp Shelby, Miss., in late June, suffered
    a concussion and hearing loss. But he said the incident left him with a
    week’s worth of nightmares.
     
    “I kept waking up to (bombs) going off,” he said. “I kept hearing that same
    noise, and it would wake me up.”
     
    One of the most difficult moments of the experience was telephoning his
    mother, he said.
     
    “It took me awhile to get her to stop crying and tell her I was OK,” Spc.
    Belcher said. “She kept saying, ‘I want you to come home.’ She was acting
    like any mom would.”
     
    Capt. Matthew Smith, commander of Third Squadron’s L Troop, said the
    explosion beside Spc. Belcher’s Humvee is the only roadside bomb to hit L
    Troop. The incident motivated his soldiers to corral Jalula’s insurgency.
     
    “We did some serious knocking on doors the next day,” said Capt. Smith, 35,
    of Nashville.
     
    “I want to see justice served,” he said. “I am looking at trying to get the
    big fish.”
     
    He said L Troop already has captured some area bomb makers and is using
    these detainees to track down others in an ongoing investigation with both
    day and night raids.
     
    BOMBINGS ON THE RISE
     
    The entire regiment has seen an increase in improvised explosive device
    activity as the scheduled Jan. 30 election draws near, officials said.
    However, not all bombs hit their intended targets. Recently elements of the
    regiment’s Third Squadron found two insurgents who had blown themselves up
    while trying to set up a bomb on the road near Jalula.
     
    Spc. Belcher said riding safely in Humvees exposed above the waist as a
    gunner for two weeks before the Jan. 3 explosion made him confident and
    relaxed just as if he was working a normal job back home.
     
    “It is just beyond belief when it happens to you,” he said.
     
    Sgt. Chris O’Barr, 41, survived a bomb attack on his Humvee from the same
    gunner’s spot. While on a supply convoy with elements of First Squadron’s
    Service Battery, Sgt. O’Barr’s vehicle came under attack this month outside
    a small town north of Camp Caldwell.
     
    Sgt. O’Barr said the bomb went off and sent him flying through the air soon
    after the Humvee slowed to make a sharp turn. The Humvee’s right side came
    completely off the ground before crashing back down, he said.
     
    “It picked me up off my feet and slapped me around,” he said. “I was
    bouncing around the turret like a pinball.”
     
    Sgt. O’Barr landed on his right arm and shoulder nearly upside down inside
    the Humvee. He said he checked to make sure he still had all his limbs and
    began to feel better when he didn’t see any blood.
     
    “The first thing I am thinking is ambush,” he said. “I needed to get the gun
    back in the game.”
     
    But the Humvee’s driver, Spc. Blaze Crook, already had hit the gas pedal.
     
    “I didn’t freak out,” said Spc. Crook, of Cleveland, Tenn. “I was calm the
    whole time. ‘Is everyone all right?’ and ‘Let’s get out of here’ were the
    only two things on my mind.”
     
    With ears ringing, the three soldiers in the vehicle had to give each other
    the thumbs-up sign to signal they had no injuries. Nearly a week after the
    explosion, Sgt. O’Barr said he still felt as though he was listening to
    people while underwater.
     
    The Humvee that Sgt. O’Barr and Spc. Crook rode in had been upgraded with
    steel doors and ballistic windows. Parked in the motor pool a week later, it
    had no visible signs of the attack.
     
    “The armor did its job and deflected everything,” Sgt. O’Barr said. “We were
    lucky.”
     
    The vehicle’s gun turret took minor shrapnel damage, and the explosion
    nearly blew off the Humvee’s canvas top and allowed smoke to pour inside.
     
    “It was like being in a big dust cloud,” Sgt. O’Barr said.
     
    TRAINING AND WARNINGS
     
    During the regiment’s nearly five months of training, instructors used
    simulated explosions to familiarize the soldiers with the sights and sounds
    of improvised bombs. The unit also watched videos about the various types of
    bombs. All that training has not stopped other members of the regiment from
    asking the bombing survivors to recount their experiences.
     
    “Everybody is asking me what it’s like,” said Spc. Crook, who kept a piece
    of shrapnel as a souvenir. “I tell them it is just like the videos they
    showed us, but it’s surround sound.”
     
    Several survivors of roadside bombings declined to be interviewed for this
    story. Some have yet to tell loved ones back home about their experiences.
    But they said they are more than willing to talk to fellow 278th soldiers
    about what happened in the hope their observations will help others who must
    venture outside the bases to conduct missions.
     
    Sgt. O’Barr, a Cobb County, Ga., police officer, said he remembers thinking
    something was not right when the crowd of people gathered on the roadside
    began to thin out as if they knew something was about to happen. It was a
    warning sign he will act on in the future, he said.
     
    Still, those who have lived through such an attack said bombs go off every
    day in Iraq, and with so many convoys driving around the country the odds of
    getting hit are too low to worry about.
     
    “It is like a lightning strike,” Sgt. O’Barr said. “Sometimes I think I have
    been shot up more at home than I’ve been here.”
     
    Spc. Belcher said he still pictures what happened during his close call, but
    it will not keep him from doing his job.
     
    “Every time we go by that spot, I duck down until we pass,” he said. “The
    driver usually speeds up for me.”
     
     
    BY THE NUMBERS
     
    * 10 — IED or roadside bomb close calls
     
    * 50 — roadside bombs discovered
     
    * 56 — weapons caches found
     
    * 70 — insurgents captured
     
    * 1,000 — missions conducted
     

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