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thedrifter
01-06-07, 11:34 AM
Published: Saturday, January 6, 2007

Snipers target Iraq supply route
In two weeks, two Marines were killed on the link between bases in Al Anbar province.

Los Angeles Times

OUTSIDE FALLUJAH, Iraq - The battle for MSR Mobile, a desolate stretch of road east of Fallujah, is relentless: Twenty-four hours a day, Marines lumber up and down the six-lane freeway in 23-ton amphibious assault vehicles, looking for bombs and dodging snipers.

The shadowy gunmen are a constant menace on MSR Mobile - short for Main Supply Route Mobile, so dubbed because it serves as a main link between several U.S. bases in Al Anbar province. In just the last two weeks of December, two Marines from Company B of the 2nd Assault Amphibian Battalion from Camp Lejeune, N.C., fell to snipers' bullets: Lance Cpl. Luke Yepsen, 20, of Brazos, Texas, and Cpl. Joshua Pickard, 20, of Merced, Calif.

Marines suspect the same sniper killed Yepsen and Pickard.

"I hope he shows up today - I'd like to blast his ass," Sgt. Clayton Chism, 26, said at the beginning of a recent patrol involving 14 Marines and three vehicles from the battalion's Team Gator.

The mission on the road linking Fallujah to Baghdad could be seen as a microcosm of the Marine mission in Al Anbar: nothing likely to be made into a Hollywood war movie, just a "persistent presence" to wear down the insurgency.

But there are moments of adrenaline-pumping drama. On this day, the Marines shot an Iraqi spotted planting a roadside bomb. When Lance Cpl. William Shaw was lifting the wounded Iraqi into a vehicle to be taken to a field hospital, the Marine was shot in the back by a sniper.

The round struck the back plate in the flak vest worn by the 22-year-old from Fort Bend, Texas. A few inches lower, and Shaw might have been killed or had his spine severed.

The explosive ordnance detail was called to examine the bomb. It was fake.

Fake bombs are a recent wrinkle in the insurgents' game plan. The strategy, apparently, is to fire at Marines who arrive to examine and neutralize devices.

Navy trauma doctors who have treated wounded Marines say the snipers have learned to find vulnerable spots not covered by protective plates.

"We're not bionic men," said Gunnery Sgt. Justin Smith, 32, of Boston.

Several sniper shootings have taken place nearby. Marines suspect insurgents use a ramshackle collection of low-slung buildings parallel to the freeway as a staging ground and a place to make bombs.

The Marines raided the buildings recently and detained dozens of Iraqis. Some Marines had hoped to get permission to demolish the buildings, but that was denied by upper authority.

"It's like being in the U.S. and having a public park being used by drug dealers," said Capt. Eric Dominijanni, 34, of New York, commander of B Company. "Not everybody there is a drug dealer, and you can't destroy the park."

Chism's three-vehicle convoy arrived to provide additional security for the Marines. Inside one vehicle, nicknamed "Event Horizon" after a sci-fi movie, three Marines waited to respond if the searchers were attacked.

Protecting MSR Mobile is time-consuming and sometimes boring.

For four hours, they waited. "It was a good day: not much action," said Cpl. Dennis Bryant, 21, of Kodiak, Alaska. "Everybody came back OK."

Navy corpsman Raymond Casas, 35, of Victoria, Texas, was hit by a sniper round in the upper chest while on a mission just off the freeway. The bullet hit his M-16 and then the fabric of his protective vest, leaving Casas with a golf-ball-size hole in his Grim Reaper tattoo.

Casas said he felt a sharp sting in his chest and immediately went on the radio to report he'd been hit. "I was more mad than hurt," he said. He knows that if the bullet hadn't been deflected off his M-16, he'd be dead. "I was lucky, I guess."

Ellie