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thedrifter
06-29-03, 08:16 AM
SEALs give glimpse of missions in Iraq

Special units played bigger role this time

By James W. Crawley
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

June 27, 2003

Dodging a web of high-voltage power lines, Air Force special-operations helicopters hovered over the hydroelectric dam, 57 miles northeast of Baghdad, as crewmen kicked thick ropes out the doors.

Under a moonless April night, dark figures quickly rappelled to the ground.

Several dozen Navy SEALs and Polish Grom commandos split into small groups and sprinted to predetermined locations on Mukarayin Dam, an adjacent power station and several buildings.

Within minutes, they located and held the dam's watchmen and power-plant operators, but it would take hours to search the massive structure for explosives and potential saboteurs.

"They were sort of startled" by the commandos' sudden appearance, recalled Cmdr. Tom Schibler, a San Diego-based SEAL who was operations officer for the Navy commandos in Iraq. However, the Iraqis didn't resist and no enemy troops or bombs were found, so the commandos let the dam operators continue their work.

For five days, the commandos guarded the isolated dam site to prevent Fedayeen Saddam irregulars or Baathist loyalists from damaging or destroying the dam and possibly flooding Baghdad downstream.

For the first time, Schibler and others this week described several missions that local SEALs and special-warfare boat crews conducted during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

They cracked open the door on their world of covert operations, disclosing in general terms the dam occupation in April, the capture of offshore oil terminals and the clearing of Iraq's only deep-water estuary in March.

They also touched on other wartime missions – sniper-vs.-sniper duels with Fedayeen Saddam loyalists in Baghdad, saving Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, behind-the-lines reconnaissance and searching for weapons of mass destruction – but declined to give details, saying those missions are still classified.

The Iraq war, coming on the heels of the special-operations-dominated Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, showed how the Navy's special-warfare units could become key players in a full-scale war, said Cmdr. Kerry Metz, who planned many of the SEALs' Iraq missions.

In Operation Desert Storm, the first war with Iraq, the SEALs were peripheral to the main action, said Schibler, who served in that conflict. This time, "we were very central" to the war effort, he said.

Nearly 250 SEALs were deployed in and around Iraq – the largest single deployment since Vietnam.

In all, about 500 naval special-warfare personnel, including special crewmen who operated high-speed boats that transport commandos, intelligence and communications specialists and even a public-affairs officer, were sent to Kuwait and Iraq.

"The missions were such that they required more forces than we customarily were used to operating with, and having more forces gave us . . . the ability to sustain operations and conduct multiple operations simultaneously," Schibler said.

In the past, special-operations forces have supported conventional troops, undertaking unusual or dangerous missions with little or no assistance from regular troops.

However, in Iraq, conventional forces assisted the SEALs, Schibler said.

"We had incredible support from the regular, big Navy, from ships, helicopters, planes, other support aircraft, even a (British) Royal Marine commando group, surveillance platforms," he said.

The capture of a northern Iraq dam brought together a mixed group of forces, including U.S. Air Force aircraft and Polish commandos, under the SEALs' command.

Military commanders worried that Mukarayin Dam could be sabotaged.

"There was no burning activity at the dam, but you have this big, fat target," Schibler said. "It was just sitting there until someone decides to blow it up or opens up the floodgates, flooding Baghdad."

After planning and rehearsing the takeover for several days, the commandos crammed inside several Pave Low special-operations helicopters for a nearly five-hour flight from their Kuwait base to the dam. On the way, each helicopter had to be refueled in midair by a KC-130 tanker.

It was during the rappel that the commandos' only casualty of the war occurred. A Polish soldier fell, breaking his leg.

While the dam seizure was one of the final acts during the major combat phase of the war, the SEALs and their Polish allies also participated in one of the first actions of the war.

In simultaneous attacks on the war's first night, using helicopters and high-speed boats crewed by sailors from Coronado's Naval Amphibious Base, SEALs and Groms captured Iraq's two offshore oil terminals in the northern Persian Gulf, two valve stations, and a pipeline and pumping facility onshore.

The operation prevented the Iraqis from blowing up the critical oil structures, which would have polluted the Persian Gulf and slowed reconstruction.

After the oil terminals were taken, the SEALs and boat crews switched jobs, clearing a path for warships and cargo vessels into Iraq.

Lt. Jake Heller said that for eight days, he led a small flotilla of high-speed Mark 5 craft and 35-foot-long, rigid-hulled inflatable boats in the narrow Khawr Az Zubayr waterway that connects Umm Qasr, Iraq's only deep-water port, to the Persian Gulf.

"Our mission was the clearance of the waterway," Heller said.

It wasn't an easy task.

The SEALs captured several vessels loaded with mines, including hard-to-detect Italian Mantra mines that could have sunk U.S. or British warships.

The estuary was a graveyard of derelict hulls – about 100 vessels, many rusted and partially submerged. Each vessel, whether a manned fishing dhow or a rusted hulk, had to be searched, Heller said.

Tides rose and fell a dozen feet, exposing dangerous shoals. Tall reeds concealed the shoreline.

Then, while a giant dust storm blanketed Iraq, forcing the ground war to a standstill, gale-force winds of 55 knots buffeted the SEALs' small, open craft.

"Those guys were getting battered," Heller said. "We were in enemy territory with death squads taking shots at us and with limited or no visibility. A little bad luck either way and things could have been ugly."

The special-boat crewmen, who were recognized only 18 months ago as a separate Navy specialty, showed their worth in Iraq, Heller said.

"The special-boat-team community is young, and we're still growing and developing and becoming more professional," he said. "I think we took some leaps and bounds."

The larger SEAL community also got a boost from the war, the officers said, because more special operators are now combat veterans.

"It provided our guys with experience in this sort of very, very fuzzy situation," Schibler said.

The conflict "showed a lot of our younger operators that (warfare) is not all black-and-white. The bad guys aren't all black-and-white. The missions aren't all black-and-white."



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James W. Crawley:
(619) 542-4559; jim.crawley@uniontrib.com

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/military/20030627-9999_1m27seals.html


Sempers,

Roger
:marine: