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thedrifter
04-16-03, 11:21 AM
Marines recount POW recovery


By Juan O. Tamayo, Knight Ridder
European edition, Wednesday, April 16, 2003



MARINE COMBAT HEADQUARTERS, Iraq — U.S. Marines were about to call off their search for seven American POWs, unable to find house No. 13 and edgy about the growing knots of civilians watching them from surrounding rooftops when one of the scouts heard a shout.

"Hey, we're Americans! We're over here!" It was Chief Warrant Officer David Williams, one of seven missing soldiers.

"I said, `Let's get them the hell out of here before we start taking fire,'" said Cpl. Christopher Castro, 21, of San Antonio, head of one of the eight-man units rushed into the Iraqi town of Samarra on Sunday to hunt for the POWs.

Castro recalled Tuesday after he and Cpl. Curney Russell returned from escorting the former POWs to a U.S. military hospital in Kuwait.

"We thought it could be a `Black Hawk Down' situation," said Russell, 18, of Manchester, N.H., referring to the movie and book recounting American soldiers surrounded in Mogadishu, Somalia.

Castro's unit, Delta Company of the 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, was supporting the Marine assault on Saddam Hussein's northern redoubt of Tikrit when company commander Capt. Gordon Miller summoned his officers to an emergency meeting.

Word had reached the Marines — exactly how remains unclear — that the Iraqi men guarding the Americans wanted to surrender their prisoners in house No. 13 of one neighborhood.

The Marines should knock three times on the door, and the guards would surrender, Delta Company was told.

Miller ordered two of his platoons to secure the area while Castro's platoon with five armored vehicles plus an Arabic translator and an intelligence officer looked for the house.

One platoon reported receiving sniper fire, but the order was to be careful.

"They didn't want any firing," Castro said.

Castro's platoon reached the right area, with the help of the translator and a map sketched by Miller. But 30 to 45 minutes into the search they could not find the house.

"We were going building to building. We found 11, and we found 12," he recalled, describing a warren of alleys off the empty lot.

Then civilians started to appear.

"I was thinking it was maybe a setup," said Castro, whose four-year enlistment runs out this summer.

Miller was about to order his men to withdraw when Lance Cpl. Aaron Greenleaf heard Williams, an Apache helicopter pilot, shout from behind a window of a two-story house, Castro said.

Russell said he entered the house's front yard and knocked three times but got no answer. "So I kicked it in," and shouted "everyone on the ground!"

Three guards stood inside the house, no weapons near them, in civilian clothes, he said. The Americans were in two rooms to the right of a hallway. Russell gave another shout. "If you're American, get up and get out."

Out came Williams, his gunner, Chief Warrant Officer Ronald Young, and five members of the 507th Maintenance Battalion: Sgt. James Riley, Pfc. Patrick Miller and Spcs. Joseph Hudson, Edgar Hernandez and Shoshana Johnson.

Castro quoted one of the POWs as urging him to protect the guards. "Don't hurt them. These are our friends. They helped us out." The Marines offered to take the guards with them, for their own protection.

"They were scared for their lives and scared for their families' lives," Castro said, but they decided to remain in Samarra, telling the Marines, "This is our house, and we want to stay."

The Americans were packed into one of the Marine vehicles and driven three miles out of town, where a team of POW specialists debriefed them for about one hour, they said.

Ordered to protect the POWs until they were turned over to a colonel or higher, Castro and Russell joined them in the two Marine CH-46 helicopters that flew them to the Numaniyah airfield southeast of Baghdad.

They stuck with the POWs until they were flown to a U.S. military hospital in Germany on Monday morning.

Castro said one of the POWS told him that he had always made fun of his ex-Marine father. "He said he's never making fun of the Marines ever again," Castro said.


Sempers,

Roger