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thedrifter
05-12-05, 05:12 AM
Demise of a Hard-Fighting Squad
Marines Who Survived Ambush Are Killed, Wounded in Blast

By Ellen Knickmeyer
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, May 12, 2005; Page A01

HABAN, Iraq, May 11 -- The explosion enveloped the armored vehicle in flames, sending orange balls of fire bubbling above the trees along the Euphrates River near the Syrian border.

Marines in surrounding vehicles threw open their hatches and took off running across the plowed fields, toward the already blackening metal of the destroyed vehicle. Shouting, they pulled to safety those they could, as the flames ignited the bullets, mortar rounds, flares and grenades inside, rocketing them into the sky and across pastures.

Gunnery Sgt. Chuck Hurley emerged from the smoke and turmoil around the vehicle, circling toward the spot where helicopters would later land to pick up casualties. As he passed one group of Marines, he uttered one sentence: "That was the same squad."

Among the four Marines killed and 10 wounded when an explosive device erupted under their Amtrac on Wednesday were the last battle-ready members of a squad that four days earlier had battled foreign fighters holed up in a house in the town of Ubaydi. In that fight, two squad members were killed and five were wounded.

In 96 hours of fighting and ambushes in far western Iraq, the squad had ceased to be.

Every member of the squad -- one of three that make up the 1st Platoon of Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment -- had been killed or wounded, Marines here said. All told, the 1st Platoon -- which Hurley commands -- had sustained 60 percent casualties, demolishing it as a fighting force.

"They used to call it Lucky Lima," said Maj. Steve Lawson, commander of the company. "That turned around and bit us."

Wednesday was the fourth day of fighting in far western Iraq, as the U.S. military continued an assault that has sent more than 1,000 Marines down the ungoverned north bank of the Euphrates River in search of foreign fighters crossing the border from Syria. Of seven Marines killed so far in the operation, six came come from Lima Company's 1st Platoon.

Lima Company drew Marine reservists from across Ohio into the conflict in Iraq. Some were still too young to be bothered much by shaving, or even stubble.

They rode to war on a Marine Amtrac, an armored vehicle that travels on tank-like treads. Marines in Iraq typically crowd thigh to thigh in the Amtrac, with one or two men perched on cardboard boxes of rations. Only the gunners manning the top hatches of Amtracs have any view of the passing scenery. Those inside find out what their field of combat is when the rear ramp comes down and they run out with weapons ready.

Marines typically pass travel time in the Amtrac by extracting favorite bits from ration packets, mercilessly ribbing a usual victim for eating or sleeping too much, or sleeping themselves.

On Monday, when the Marine assault on foreign fighters formally began, the young Marines of the squad from the 1st Platoon were already exhausted. Their encounter at the house in Ubaydi that morning and the previous night had been the unintended first clash of the operation, pitting them against insurgents who fired armor-piercing bullets up through the floor. It took 12 hours and five assaults by the squad -- plus grenades, bombing by an F/A-18 attack plane, tank rounds and rockets at 20 yards -- to kill the insurgents and permit recovery of the dead Marines' bodies.

Afterward, they slept in the moving Amtrac, heads back and mouths agape. One stood up to stretch his legs. He fell asleep again standing up, leaning against the metal walls.

Squad members spoke only to compare what they knew about the condition of their wounded. Getting the latest news, they fell silent again. After one such half-hour of silence, a Marine offered a terse commendation for one of the squad members shot at Ubaydi: "Bunker's a good man."

With the operation underway, Marine commanders kept the 1st Platoon largely to the back, letting its men rest.

Commanders had hoped the operation would swiftly capture or kill large numbers of foreign fighters. But the foreigners, and everyone else here, had plenty of warning that the Marines were coming -- including those ready to fight at Ubaydi.

By the time the squad from Lima Company crossed north of the Euphrates, whole villages consisted of little more than abandoned houses with fresh tire tracks leading into pastures or homes occupied only by prepubescent boys or old men. Men of fighting age had made themselves scarce. The AK-47 assault rifles ubiquitous in Iraqi households had disappeared.

Many Marines complained bitterly that commanders had pulled them out of the fight at Ubaydi while the insurgents were still battling, to start the planned offensive. "They take us from killing the people they want us to kill and bring us to these ghost villages," one complained Wednesday on the porch of a house commandeered as a temporary base.

Uneventful house searches stretched into late afternoon, the tedium broken only by small-arms fire and mortar rounds lobbed by insurgents hiding on the far side of the river.

This correspondent had just gotten off the Amtrac and the reconstructed squad from 1st Platoon was rolling toward the Euphrates in a row of armored vehicles, headed for more house searches, when the vehicle rolled over the explosive.

Marines initially said they believed the blast was caused by two mines stacked on top of each other. But reports from Marines that they had seen an artillery round and two hand-held radios near the blast site raised suspicions that the explosion was caused by a bomb that had been activated remotely, Lawson said.

Hurley and others pulled their comrades out of the Amtrac as flames detonated -- or "cooked off," in military jargon -- its ammunition. As Marines carrying stretchers ran to the Amtrac, bullets snapped out of the burning hulk and traveled hundreds of feet. The Marines ran back through the fusillade, carrying out the wounded. "C'mon, c'mon, c'mon," some shouted, desperate to get the wounded out.

The four dead were trapped inside the vehicle, Lawson said.

"We passed right over it. We passed right over it," one of many Marines in the convoy ahead of the burning Amtrac said of the explosive, puzzling over why he was still alive.

"That's the last of the squad," said another, Cpl. Craig Miller, whose reassignment last month had taken him out of the unit. "Three weeks ago, that would have been me."

Late Wednesday, helicopters flew out Hurley and the remaining members of 1st Platoon for time off. They are to return after the platoon is remade, Marines said.

Another Lima Company platoon commander ordered his men to bed early, in preparation for the next day's operations. Mourning could wait.

"We don't have time," the commander said.

Ellie

marinefamily5
05-12-05, 05:50 AM
does anyone know how to get names of the marines KIA because i'm in ohio and i know some marine from that unit.........!!!!!!!!!!!

mrbsox
05-12-05, 06:28 AM
Ms Ellie will pass the word, once the information is released.

She's a good Marine, that woman. Just stand by.

Semper Fi

marinefamily5
05-12-05, 06:33 AM
just wondering how does she get all this information........

mrbsox
05-12-05, 06:36 AM
It's MAGIC !! :banana:

But seriously, I'm sure she has an inside track somewhere. You know how RESOURCEFUL those women can be. And, she makes a SMOOOOOOOOTH cup of coffee. :)

Where is Chillicothe ??
South of Columbus.... found it !

thedrifter
05-12-05, 06:41 AM
Not a Marine, but My Late Husband taught me well, and My Boyfriend Mark aka The Fontman is continuing to teach me, the paths for You Marines...

I get the info, through the net, and friends and the above mention...
I do a lot of searching for all I can find for You Marines...

Obits I get when they release them after the famlies have been told...

Ellie

marinefamily5
05-12-05, 06:48 AM
yes chillicothe is about 45 minutes south of columbus. i'm actually getting ready to go to Lima 3/25 and once i get there i will chop over to RS charleston to become a EAD recruiter in chillicothe..

mrbsox
05-12-05, 08:55 AM
marinefamily5;

My fault if someone gained the idea that Ms. Ellie is in fact a MARINE herself.
I guess those that know her, and Roger (R.I.P.), and have been in here for awhile, kind of think of her that way in an honorary sense.

She will NEVER have any less respect from me, than if she had stood on those foot prints. But the years she spent with Rogers boots under her bed.... well.

Rest in Peace my brother :marine:

Semper Fi

marinefamily5
05-12-05, 09:24 AM
ok thank you for everyones help.....

thedrifter
05-12-05, 03:32 PM
Ohio Marine Reserve Unit Decimated In Iraq
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTED: 1:58 pm EDT May 12, 2005

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- An Ohio Marine Reserve unit suffered heavy casualties during recent fighting in Iraq, according to the Washington Post.

Every member of one of three squads that make up the 1st Platoon of Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment had been killed or wounded, Marines told the newspaper.

Marine Cpl. Dustin Derga, 24, of Pickerington, was one of two Marines killed and five wounded Saturday during a firefight in Ubaydi. On Wednesday, four more Marines were killed and 10 others were injured when a device exploded under their armored vehicle, according to the Post.

Derga was a member of the 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment, 4th Division based in Columbus.

The Lima Company draws reservists from across Ohio, the paper reported.


Ellie

Rest In Peace

marinefamily5
05-12-05, 07:41 PM
THANK YOU FOR KEEPING ME POSTED ON THIS

thedrifter
05-13-05, 04:20 PM
Friday, May 13, 2005 — Time: 11:42:12 AM EST








Ohio squad takes heavy hit in Iraq; six Marines killed, 15 wounded

By The Associated Press


COLUMBUS - Six Marines were killed and another 15 were wounded from one central Ohio squad in a major U.S. offensive near Iraq's border with Syria, a newspaper reported Thursday.

The squad that absorbed the casualties was one of three belonging to the 1st Platoon of Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment, according to The Washington Post, which has a reporter embedded with Operation Matador.
Chief Warrant Officer Orrin Bowman, the site commander for the Columbus-based company, confirmed Thursday that the company is participating in the operation and had taken casualties. He declined to say how many from the Marine reserve unit had been killed or release any names.

The military has identified two Ohio Marines with the 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment who have died in Iraq since Sunday. Lance Cpl. Wesley G. Davids, 20, of Dublin, was killed in an explosion in Karabilah on Wednesday and Cpl. Dustin A. Derga, 24, of Columbus, was killed by small arms fire in Ubaydi on Sunday, according to the Department of Defense.

Bowman said the unit is in the process of contacting and helping the affected families.

The U.S. military has confirmed five Marine deaths so far and says about 100 insurgents have been killed in the operation - one of the largest U.S. offensives since Fallujah was reclaimed from militants.

It was launched after U.S. intelligence showed large numbers of insurgents had moved into the northern Jazirah Desert following losses in Fallujah and Ramadi, further east. The area is believed to be a staging ground for foreign fighters crossing into Iraq from Syria along ancient smuggling routes.

The offensive started Saturday night and is aimed at rooting out followers of Iraq's most wanted militant leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Bowman said Lima is a rifle company that has four platoons. Each platoon has three squads that normally have 13 people but can be reinforced depending on a mission, he said.




Ellie

thedrifter
05-14-05, 05:40 AM
Sent to me by Mark aka The Fontman


The News From Iraq Hits Hard at Home
Ohio Families Grieve and Reminisce After Death of Marines From Lima Company

By Peter Slevin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, May 14, 2005; A13



COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 13 -- When the doorbell rang as they were fixing dinner, Jody Davids looked at her husband and knew. Only strangers used the front door. Everyone else went around to the back. She spotted three U.S. Marines in dress uniforms and felt the heartbreaking flash of intuition turning into immutable fact.

"If they're wounded, they call. If they're dead, they come to the door," Davids said Friday. "That changed our lives forever, one ring of the doorbell."

Davids is the mother of Lance Cpl. Wesley G. Davids, a Marine from Lima Company killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq on Wednesday, his 20th birthday. Other Marine delegations went to other front doors, while Chief Warrant Officer Orrin Bowman and colleagues telephoned 13 families to say their Marines had been hurt.

The Columbus-based Marine Reserve unit took two hard jolts this week during an offensive against insurgents near the Syrian border. Last Sunday, it was a firefight; on Wednesday, it was a bomb detonating beneath a crowded troop carrier. One squad from the 1st Platoon lost every member to death or injury, according to officers at the scene.

Home is where the news hits and the caskets come. It is where the mother of one Lima Company Marine wrote in an e-mail to another that her son had called from Iraq at 3 a.m. after the twin calamities: "He was crying and said 'It sucks over here' and that he was scared. (This is so out of character for him.)"

It is where another mother wrote, "I just heard on the news that Lima Company lost six Marines yesterday. Is this true? I can't stop crying. . . . What are they talking about? Please let me know what is happening."

The young warriors come from Ohio, Kentucky and Illinois. They are "white-collar, blue-collar, no collar. We have college students. We have roughneck construction guys. We have business guys who have committed themselves to the Corps," said former Marine Ken Hiltz. Among them is the son of Mayor Michael B. Coleman. A patchwork of relatives, friends and colleagues has spent the week trying to reassure one another even as they have struggled to hold themselves together.

Those who lost a son are seeking meaning.

"This mission Lima Co. has been assigned is just and is one this nation must have the guts to stand up and fight for, regardless of the cost," wrote Robert H. Derga Jr., whose 24-year-old son, Cpl. Dustin A. Derga, died in the fighting last weekend. "Our combined sacrifice will make Dustin's ultimate sacrifice have real meaning. Anything less and he died in vain."

The recipient of the e-mails was Isolde Zierk, mother of platoon Sgt. Guy Zierk and leader of the Marine-sponsored band of civilian volunteers trying to keep things stitched together. Before the 150 Marines shipped out in January, her primary role was organizing the annual picnic. When she arrived home on Thursday night after a meeting at Lima Company headquarters, 29 e-mails and a dozen phone messages awaited.

Before she could change clothes, the phone rang. One call blended into another, as relatives of Marines called to question and commiserate. Isolde Zierk stayed up until 1 a.m., listening and offering what solace she could. At 8 a.m., she was back in action at a meeting of a crisis team dispatched by higher-ups at the 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment.

"Go ahead and cry," Zierk said into the phone at one point, standing in the kitchen of her clapboard rambler, the one with the Marine Corps flag flying from the front porch. She asked if the caller had a friend nearby. "Sometimes it helps if you have a shoulder. You can just cry and it comforts you."

A wooden sign in the shape of Iraq is planted in her front yard. Hewn by her son and decorated by her, it says, "We love Sgt. Zierk and Lima Co. and pray for their safe return. Semper Fi."

Isolde Zierk's ambition had been to shepherd the families and girlfriends through a long deployment and see all the men come home alive. When she heard of Derga's death, the company's first, she went into the bathroom of her employer's computer firm and pounded the wall.

"The first was the hardest. It is a reality of war now," Zierk said.

The unexpected battle in Ubaydi that killed Cpl. Derga and a Marine from another company also left at least five wounded. It began last Sunday as the Marines fought their way through town, turning up caches of bombs, guns and ammunition about 15 miles east of the Syrian border. In the last house they intended to search, fighters ambushed them from the crawl space beneath the floor.

One Marine was killed during an assault staged to retrieve the body of the first Marine who fell.

"They came here to die," Gunnery Sgt. Chuck Hurley, referring to the insurgents, told a Washington Post reporter embedded with the unit. "They were willing to stay in place and die with no hope. All they wanted was to take us with them."

Barely two days later, the same battered and weary squad from Lima Company's 1st Platoon was packed into an Amtrac troop carrier when it rolled over a roadside bomb. The truck went up in flames when the bomb detonated, sparking a fireworks of ammunition. Four more Marines died, all but one from Lima Company, and about 10 were wounded, some severely.

With embedded reporters transmitting details -- The Post ran two front-page articles; ex-Marine Lt. Col. Oliver L. North was working for Fox News nearby -- the home front was soon abuzz with news and rumors. Families feared the knock and the phone call. They tried to remember what they had been told, that no news usually means good news.

"We're horrified to read it, but we can't stop reading it. It's hard not to panic," said the wife of a Lima Company sergeant and volunteer group member who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "I find peace on different days in different ways. It's gut-wrenching. It's heart-pounding. But you're also very proud."

Pride in their Marine men and respect for their choices are common threads. Although Lima Company is a reserve unit, everyone seemed to know that the military is stretched thin, with the reserves and the National Guard bearing a large share of the burden and the casualties.

Wesley Davids sounded buoyant when he last spoke with his mother from Iraq. It reminded her of his passion for rowing, for which he sat in the powerhouse seven seat for the Dublin Crew, a local club.

"That defined Wesley in the boat and it defined him as a Marine. He wanted the camaraderie, the team spirit, being part of something bigger than he was. He talked about that," Jody Davids said. During that last phone call, she was surprised by his enthusiasm. She said, "Wes, you sound really great. Are you having a good time?"

"I'm having a great time," he replied. "I love the guys I'm serving with. I love what I'm doing. We're really well-trained. The mission is worth it."

Davids said her son "was a winner in everything he did. Unfortunately, not in this situation. We've had a lot of friends over to the house. They're telling us great stories about Wes. In a strange way, we're getting to know him."

Robert Derga spoke about his own son's passion for life. Dustin Derga's latest plans had been to take the savings from his active-duty assignment, buy a new Dodge pickup and join friends in running a bar. His girlfriend had sent him a computer disc full of vacation plans. Disney World in October.

Robert Derga and Dustin's mother divorced in 1998. At 10 p.m. last Sunday, Marines simultaneously appeared at their doors.

"The doorbell rang. I ran to the door. I saw through the light panel two Marine officers. I knew immediately then what had happened," Derga said. The Marines came and went, leaving him to grieve and remember.

"He was a great pitcher and could play just about any position. Loved to play catcher, which was unusual. I remember all the weekends we would go out to the ball diamonds and watch him play ball. Really enjoyed that. He loved working with his hands. He just loved doing things and getting his elbows dirty."

Ellie

thedrifter
05-15-05, 05:49 AM
Marines' Families Await Word From Iraq


By NICK JULIANO
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Families of some Ohio Marines waited anxiously Saturday for word of whether their loved ones were injured during a major U.S. offensive in Iraq that has claimed the lives of four members of a reserve unit.

The families of those in the Columbus-based Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment met Saturday with a grief counseling team, hoping to find out who was injured during Operation Matador near Karabilah, a village close to the Syrian border.

Six Marines involved in the operation, including three members of Lima Company, were killed Wednesday when an explosive detonated near their armored transport vehicle, Marine Reserves spokesman Capt. Patrick Kerr said Saturday. Another member of Lima Company had been killed last Sunday as part of the operation.

Among the families learning of a Marine's death was that of Lance Cpl. Nick Erdy, 21.

"We still very much support what is going on over there. There are other Marines in harm's way, and they are Nick's brothers," said Erdy's father, Bill Erdy, in a telephone interview.

Also killed was Pfc. Christopher Dixon, 18, whose family learned of his death Friday.

Others from the company were injured, but Kerr would not say how many. The military said a total of 40 Marines were hurt during the campaign.

Kerr would not confirm a report last week by The Washington Post, which has a reporter embedded with Operation Matador, that six members of the company were killed and another 15 injured.

Lima Company has about 160 members, and most of their families have not heard from them because they are still fighting.

Some said the silence was a blessing.

"I haven't heard anything so that's always good news," said Chrystina Kreuter, 24, whose husband, David, has been away since January.

More than 100 family members and friends of the Ohio Marines filed into an auditorium Saturday as members of the stress-management team assured families that counselors were available for Marines suffering from battlefield stress. Military officials also distributed information about counseling available to family members.

Katie Brintlinger said her son Collin was supposed to be in one of the Humvees that was attacked, but dehydration kept him out of battle.

"He feels like he should have been there to help. I need someone to be there for him," she said.

Isolde Zierk, whose son is a part of Lima Company, leads a volunteer group in Columbus that supports Marine families. Even as she tries to comfort the grieving and anxious families, she is fighting an inner struggle herself.

"I need to be strong so I don't fall apart," she said, her voice breaking.

Zierk said she has spoken to more than 100 family members, telling them to not jump to conclusions. One mother cried nonstop for 45 minutes over the phone.

"Once people express their fears and anxieties, they calm down," she said. "We talk. That's all. And as long as I can do that with them, then I've done something worthwhile."

Families will sometimes go long stretches without hearing from loved ones, making news reports of casualties hard to bear.

Jason Ritchie called his family late Wednesday, only the second time he has called since being deployed in March.

"He said not to worry, it was nothing serious," said Jason's sister Rachel Ritchie, 19, whose voice shook as she described her closeness with her older brother. "You go from seeing him all the time, hanging out with his friends, to not knowing where he is."


Last modified: May 15. 2005 4:57AM

Ellie

kentmitchell
05-15-05, 12:49 PM
It's bad, no doubt about it but it ain't as bad as it used to be.
In Nam, it was platoons getting wiped out at times.
In Korea, it was companies.
In WWII, battalions.
But whenever a good Marine falls, it's still bad.