My company
is fuel transportation. We are the Army Reserve 724th Transportation
Company. But in Iraq we have civilian contractors Kellogg Brown
and Root. They do all the fuel hauling. So we basically become
force protection for convoys. Friday, April 9th, about 7 a.m.,
my platoon started getting ready for a fuel convoy from LSA
Anaconda in Balad to Baghdad International Airport (BIOP). We
were running security for 21 civilian fuel trucks. We had 26
in the whole serial. I was in the 21st truck with a civilian,
riding shotgun (passenger). I had never ridden with a civilian
on a convoy before. The American civilians are non-combatants;
they do not carry weapons, so I was the only one in the vehicle
with a weapon. It made me extremely uncomfortable, because that
means no one has my back if we get attacked.
We left
the gates of Anaconda in Iraq about 10 a.m. The convoy was going
fine and it was almost a regular day in Iraq; there were cars
up and down the four lane highways and there were people everywhere
in all the towns; it was a normal day. About an hour and a half
into the trip, the people and the cars started becoming fewer.
Then, the next thing I knew, my LT (lieutenant) - who is in
the lead truck - comes on the radio and says, "We are taking
rounds - everyone get ready!" then not even a minute later,
someone else comes on the radio and says, "The LT’s
truck just blew up and I don’t know where to go or what
to do!" I looked at my driver and said "Oh sh** it’s
about to get bad." Next thing I know, the truck about a
hundred meters in front of us blows up right in front of us.
It was
unlike anything I have ever seen in my life. We were in the
middle of Baghdad on a main highway being attacked; there were
buildings all around us, and people in the buildings firing
weapons at us. I looked off to the left at a frontage road and
I saw nine cars in rows of three. There was a line of women
in front of all the cars, and some of them had children with
them. I thought they were just watching us get attacked, and
then men started popping up behind them firing at us - they
were using the women as shields!! It took me a second to realize
that. They were standing on the hoods of the cars behind the
women and children; it shocked the hell out of me. Then we started
getting hit with small arms fire, which sounded like golf balls
hitting metal. I started firing back at them but I couldn’t
get passed the women; they were all I could hit, and they started
falling down. The men turned around and ran back behind the
cars to fire.
It was
the first time I had ever shot anyone so I was extremely shaken
up. We were going about forty-five miles an hour, which was
the top speed possible. After we passed the women and cars,
we came to an overpass. It was loaded with people; they were
everywhere, and they had black blankets with what looked like
cursive writing; it was Arabic. They were firing down onto our
trucks from the bridge and attempting to drop the blankets on
our windshields. I couldn’t fire back because of the way
I was sitting in the truck. I told my civilian driver to keep
his head down, don’t let any more than his eyes over the
steering wheel. If he would have gotten shot, there would have
been no way we could have gotten off the highway, and we were
only 8 miles from our destination. The people on the bridge
missed our truck with the blankets, but they shot the heck out
of our cab and tanker. Our truck was spewing out gas everywhere
all over the highway. I told my driver to try to speed up, since
if the fuel ignited we would be goners.
We pulled
up behind Mathew Maupin's truck, a fellow soldier who was riding
with a civilian also, but no sooner did we get behind his truck
then his tanker exploded, the truck swerving off the highway,
down through a ditch into a bunch of buildings. It was one big
ball of flames. Later on, Matt was seen on the Al-Jazeera network
as a hostage, and is believed to be still in their custody.
After his truck exploded in front of us, we came upon another
truck that was laying on its side in the ditch on our left -
it was one of ours. There were Iraqi civilian tankers on both
sides of us, which the Iraqis use as roadside bombs - when you
drive past them they blow them up.
Behind
the military tanker on the right, I saw a man lying on his stomach,
popping his head up and down to look at us. He just kept popping
his head up, I propped my weapon up on the side mirror of our
truck and started aiming for his head; I was either going to
shoot him in the head or the back, all I could think at the
time was, "he is one of the attackers and he is going to
blow up both of
the trucks as we pass." I saw that he was holding something
up in his left hand. It was white. I didn’t know exactly
what it was, my heart was pounding so hard, and I was sure it
was a remote detonator, but I kept looking and I didn’t
fire at him. As we got closer and closer, I saw that he was
an American civilian, and he was holding his ID up trying to
let us know he was one of ours. When I was in the hospital later
on, I saw the same guy on the news, it was Thomas Hamill, who
later escaped his Iraqi captors when he heard American soldiers
outside the house he was being held prisoner in. We were going
too fast to do anything; we couldn’t stop and help him
because we were getting hit so hard with small arms fire and
there were explosions everywhere. At the time, however, I wasn't
even sure that we had done the right thing to leave him alone;
I wasn't completely sure he was really one of ours.
As we
passed him, I looked in the rearview mirror saw the truck behind
us explode, then it rolled side over side down the highway.
I had never seen anything like that in my life. It really shook
me up, it was just like something you would see in the movies.
We kept going, and came upon five or six Iraqi tanker trucks
that had been blown up and were on fire; there was black smoke
everywhere. We drove right through it, praying that we would
not hit any debris in the fire; we couldn’t see anything.
It was extremely hot in the fire and there was so much black
smoke everywhere that I couldn’t breathe.
Finally,
we saw light and pulled out of the fire. It was a horrible experience.
There was one more truck in front of us going very slowly, about
twenty miles per hour. Its trailer was on fire. We decided to
try to help them, and slowed down to pull up next to them. I
yelled at the driver to stop, we would pick them up. It was
two civilians; they slowed down and we pulled ahead of them
a little ways. Tragically, at that time their truck exploded
and blew us sideways. My driver kept our tractor under control
luckily for us. We kept going towards our destination; neither
one of us were sure where that was, but we were trying to get
there. There were semi-trucks everywhere blown up and on fire.
It was phenomenal - there is no way to exaggerate what was happening
and what it looked like, the most horrible thing you could imagine
is what it looked like; bodies everywhere, trucks on fire and
exploding, so much weapons fire.
Finally,
we saw the overpass we needed to reach. At this time, there
were only three other trucks remaining with us. One truck was
traveling over the overpass, and two were behind us. The one
behind us was about a mile or two back, and there was a Hummer
behind it. We went up the onramp to the overpass, but as we
were turning left to head towards BIOP, my driver started yelling.
I leaned forward and looked out his window. I saw a smoke trail
heading toward our truck; it was an RPG (rocket propelled grenade).
The next
thing I knew, our truck rolled onto its passenger side. I had
my seat belt on so I couldn’t move, but my driver didn't,
and fell down on top of me, kicking and screaming trying to
get out of the truck. He was all over me. I started hitting
the windshield with the buttstock of my weapon until I broke
through it. He ran out through it, turned around, and started
pulling at my Kevlar helmet. He was trying to pull me out of
the truck by my helmet, but my knee was stuck between the seat
and dash, and my seatbelt was still on holding me back. He continued
pulling on my helmet really hard, and at first I told him to
get down and take cover, because we were still being fired at.
But then it got to the point that I couldn’t breathe.
It felt like my head was going to pop, he was pulling so hard.
Finally, I unstrapped my helmet and he fell backwards off me.
I yelled at him and told him to get back in and lie down, but
he was not listening, instead he came after me again. I unstrapped
my seatbelt and pulled my knee out of the dash, falling down
on my behind as my feet went out the window.
Next he
started pulling my ankles to get me out of the truck. I kept
yelling at him to get down but he wouldn’t listen, so
finally I kicked him in the chest with my left foot, and in
the face with my right. As I kicked him in the face, he fell
backwards. Before he hit the ground, blood splattered all over
his face. I thought he had gotten shot, I thought "d***
he’s dead and now I’m alone." But he fell back
on his behind and just sat there. I thought, "that’s
weird he’s not dead." I was sure he had been shot
in the face, but then his eyes got big and he said, “oh
my G** you’ve been shot, I’m going to die I’m
going to die.”
I looked down and didn’t see any bullet holes. I had no
idea what he was talking about. Then I looked at him and said,
"Lay the f*** down and do not get up," just to keep
him safe."
Then I
stood up to get out of the truck. My right foot hurt so bad
I thought it was broken. I looked down and there was blood all
over my foot. Then I realized the blood on his face was from
my foot - when I was kicking him I got shot! I found out later
that two of my toes had been shattered. Looking down and seeing
the injury, I realized how badly it hurt. But there was so much
adrenaline pumping through me that I could still stand. I looked
back towards the rear of the truck to see if it was on fire.
There was about a six foot hole in the tanker trailer, fuel
was spewing out everywhere, and a small fire was building inside
the trailer and on the tires.
I turned
and looked towards the front of the truck, down the bridge.
But before I turned my head all the way toward the front, something
hit me in the chest. It hit so hard it felt like Sammy Sosa
hitting me with a bat. It knocked me off of my feet, back into
the truck. As I laid there, I looked down and saw a round (bullet)
buried in the vest on my chest smoking. It smelled awful. I
pulled it out of my vest and it burnt the hell out of my hand.
I pulled myself back up and got out of the truck. I looked down
the bridge in front of my truck and saw two little kids on the
bridge, about a hundred to a hundred-fifty meters away. They
both had AK-47s; one kid was about ten years old and the other
was about seven. The seven-year old was holding his weapon upside
down by the magazine, and the ten-year old was firing three
rounds at a time at me. His first round hit the driver's side
windshield on the truck - right next to my head. I turned around
to grab my gun, and when I did, he shot me two more times in
the back; the rounds went through me and into the cab of the
truck.
It infuriated
me as he kept shooting me. I grabbed my weapon, jumped out,
and fired two rounds over their heads; I didn’t want to
shoot them - they were just l'il kids. After I fired over their
heads, they turned around and ran down the bridge. Then
I fell down onto my hands and knees; I couldn’t breathe
or move. I had been shot four times! I looked over to where
my driver had been lying down - he was gone. I looked back and
saw him running behind the truck, the opposite direction from
where we were supposed to go. There was no way I could stop
him, he was just running frantic. So it was just me on my hands
and knees at this point, all alone. I couldn’t breathe
nor move, and my head was pounding very hard. I knew it was
over with; there was no way I was getting out of there alive.
I would either die or be captured.
I still
was not going to give up though. I got up, grabbed my weapon,
and walked over to the guardrail to look down on the highway.
I stood there looking at all of our trucks blown up everywhere;
the whole highway was scattered with our semis and our civilians.
There was fire and black smoke everywhere. It was horrible.
The last I remembered, there were two vehicles left on the highway,
but I didn’t see them anywhere, so I figured they had
been blown up also. While I was standing there looking at the
destruction, about twenty or thirty rounds hit the guardrail
next to me. I fell backwards and lied down. Then I started low
crawling towards the end of the bridge in the direction we were
originally going. Bullets followed me the entire way.
Then,
to my chagrin, I realized I was headed the wrong way on the
bridge - into the middle of the city (Baghdad). I was just going
to get shot again, and I probably wouldn't be so lucky the next
time around. Bullets were striking all around me as I got up
and ran back towards our burning truck. It sounds crazy, but
at the time that was the safest place. On my way back, the last
semi I had originally seen on the highway started coming up
the bridge from behind our truck. It was almost demolished.
All of the tires had been shot out, the trailer was burning,
and it had bullet holes everywhere. It was losing fuel in multiple
places. The tractor was completely trashed because of all the
bullet holes. It slowed down just enough so I could jump up
on the side. I jumped up on the steps of the passenger side
and told the driver to speed up. There was a driver and passenger
inside the truck, both civilians. The driver was wounded, but
not badly. The passenger was hyperventilating; he had been shot
in the right arm.
I continued
to stand on the side of the truck as we went only about twenty-five
to thirty miles per hour; there were no tires left on the truck,
it was driving completely on the rims. As we entered Baghdad,
I fired into the city buildings and just about everywhere trying
to keep the suppressive fire down. Unfortunately, it wasn’t
working. The more I fired, the more rounds were fired at us.
And I couldn’t stabilize my weapon; I was attempting to
hold onto the truck with one hand while firing with the other.
I decided I would be more stable on the hood of the truck. I
grabbed the side mirror to get up on the hood, but the mirror
broke off. As I was falling off, the passenger had enough sense
to grab the handle on the back of my flak jacket to keep me
on the truck. Since he was hyperventilating, I don’t have
any idea how he did it.
I tried
again. I reached back, grabbed the truck's passenger window,
pulling myself back up onto the truck, then I jumped up onto
the hood and lied down. I fired left and right into the city.
There were people everywhere with weapons firing at us, it was
horrible. I have no idea how I did not get shot. I heard a weapon
fire really close to us, closer then the others, coming from
my right side, which was the driver's side of the truck. I looked
over and saw the two little kids that were on the bridge earlier,
they were firing at me again. The older one, who had shot me
earlier, was firing at the trailer and the semi, and the younger
kid was firing two to three rounds at a time directly at me.
I fired another round over their heads but they didn’t
budge, and apparently they were not about to. Then I aimed at
the younger kid's chest and fired the round. It went into his
throat and out the other side, and he dropped to the ground
dead.
The older
kid looked down at him, then up at me, and started laying into
it; firing twenty to thirty rounds at a time at me. I rolled
over, trying not to get hit, then I aimed at his head and shot,
but I missed and it went over his head and hit the wall. Luckily
it knocked enough debris down on him to drop him. I knew he
wasn’t dead, but he was down on the ground and that was
good enough for me. Then the truck started slowing down more
and more until it came to a dead stop. I rolled off the hood
and lied down in front of the truck. As I lay there, I realized
all the bullets that were being fired were landing around me.
A couple of strays were hitting the semi where the two civilians
were. I knew that if a round hit them, they would not make it;
they were already in bad shape. I got up and ran away from the
truck, about fifty to seventy-five meters, and lied back down.
I fired into the buildings wherever I saw anyone. At that time,
to me everyone was the enemy except my own.
I looked
back at the truck and saw the driver getting out. I knew if
he got out, it would draw attention to him and he would end
up being shot. I started yelling, telling him to get back in
the truck, but he wouldn’t listen. I know I should not
have done it, but I aimed and shot a round into his door handle.
I knew I would not hit him, and I hit where I intended. He jumped
back into the truck and shut the door. They both sat there looking
at me. I hope they didn’t think I was going to shoot them.
I was just trying to keep them safe.
We were
stuck there for about ten minutes when a Hummer appeared coming
towards us from the bridge. It was the Hummer I had seen earlier.
That Humvee was our last chance. I jumped up and flagged it
down. I helped the two civilians out of the semi and into the
Hummer, then I jumped in. We took off towards the north gate
of BIOP Safety. We were still about three miles away though.
It was a long shot, and the Hummer had been shot up pretty badly.
We drove a little ways and picked up two more people; one soldier,
Gregory Goodrich, and a civilian. I was sitting behind the driver,
and so when Goodrich jumped in he sat on my lap, and the civilian
jumped in behind the passenger. We were really packed into the
Humvee; there were about ten people in this four-person Hummer.
As Goodrich
lay on my lap, he fired out the window. Next thing I knew, I
felt a thump - he had been shot. He started yelling, "ah..ah..ah..I
got hit, I’ve been hit!" I pushed him forward so
I could help him. I went into the back of the Humvee and pulled
out my first aid pouch. I leaned back up to help him, but blood
was coming out of his mouth and he wasn’t moving anymore.
He didn’t make it. We were rolling about ten miles an
hour at top speed. Then the Humvee died, I believe it had been
shot in the radiator. It was not going anywhere. We were still
about two to three miles from the gate, and we were under heavy
fire. There was no time in this entire attack that we were not
under small arms fire, RPG’s, or IED’s (improvised
explosive devices).
We sat
in the back of the Humvee looking at each other. We all knew
we were not going to make it. The passenger used the radio to
call for help, but no one was answering. It was hopeless. We
just sat there listening to the bullets bounce off the hummer,
hoping no RPG’s hit us, since it would certainly be all
over over then. But we all knew it was already over; the Hummer
was our last hope and now it was out of commission, and it was
too dangerous to try and run for the gate. We sat there for
about ten to fifteen minutes.
Then we
heard a loud screaming like a banshee. Three of us stood up
and looked out the roof of the Hummer. We saw a Bradley tank
coming towards us, it drove into the city firing at anything
that moved, and two more tanks were following behind it. They
pulled up on both sides of us, and two armored Hummers pulled
up in the front and back. They boxed us in for security. It
was cool as hell! The soldiers got us all out of the back of
the broken-down Hummer. I was put into the back of one of the
armored Hummers with three other people. We were taken up the
road about a mile, and then told that we were going to be put
into a tank. I got out, and along with one of the civilians,
helped the civilian that was hyperventilating walk to the tank.
Unfortunately, the civilian that was helping him also was shot
in the back and dropped. I dragged the hyperventilating guy
to the tank and went back for the other civilian, but someone
else had already got him. I looked around to see if I could
help anyone. Then I got in the back of the Bradley. The soldiers
shut the door and it took off. There were five people counting
myself in the back of the tank. Three of them were dead.
The tank
took us to BIOP to the hospital there. I can’t remember
much of what happened there; I was in so much pain. I believe
I passed out. I spent two days in BIOP Hospital, then I was
sent to Balad for a night in that hospital. The following day,
I was sent to Landstahl Regional Medical Center in Germany for
a week. After that, I returned to the U.S., to Walter Reed military
hospital in D.C., where I spent another week. The doctors there
thought it might be best for me to go home and spend time with
my family, in order to try and get over what happened. So now
I am home until May 25th. I will then go back for surgery. If
I heal fast enough, I will get sent back over to Iraq. I hope
I do get to go back. I left a lot of friends behind. And I lost
a couple good friends on the day of the attack.
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Jarob D. Walsh
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