Marines work to keep bridge, area secure
Hiding spots, complacency among foes faced on patrol
By Franklin Fisher, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Sunday, August 12, 2007

PATROL BASE GETTYSBURG, Iraq — Each time the tide ebbs to reveal small nooks and inlets along his stretch of the Euphrates River, Marine Lance Cpl. Jori Ford wonders whether insurgents would try to use them as hiding places.

“The river levels will rise and drop,” said Ford, 23, of Sicily Island, La., “and so you can see little sandbars and islands around the banks. And you can see little caves or inlets …”

“So we make sure to sweep those really well,” he said.

Ford is one of the Marines of Company D, 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, who man austere patrol bases on both sides of the river, which runs through Rawah, in western Anbar province. They guard the bridge along with Iraqi security forces.

Ford and fellow Marines of the company’s 3rd Platoon work out of Patrol Base Gettysburg, on the bridge’s north bank.

Besides keeping close watch on the river itself, the Marines and Iraqis keep up a night-and-day schedule of patrols, some on foot, some in vehicles.

The Iraqis check vehicles wanting to cross the bridge. They and the Marines patrol the area continually, hoping to thwart any attempt to destroy or disable the bridge.

Coalition forces see the bridge as a crucial strategic asset because it’s one of few bridges in the region that span the Euphrates to begin with. But it’s also the route for oil trucks moving from a refinery in Beiji, to the northeast.

“This is a big-time strategic asset,” said Marine Capt. Ruben Gutierrez, Company D’s commanding officer.

“It’s crucial because all the fuel and the oil that comes from a refinery up in Beiji, is through here, to Ramadi,” he said.

But other traffic uses the bridge, as do shepherds who move their flocks across, occasionally a thousand sheep at a time, Gutierrez said.

“So that bridge is important for people. … So if we do keep the bridge up for them, that means they get food, they get commerce. That’s why the bridge is a big deal.”

The Marines are ready to kill any insurgents or criminals who might try to ram their way onto the bridge, said Marine 1st Lt. Damon Doykos, Company D’s 3rd Platoon commander.

“Any vehicle that tries to run on to the bridge is going to get lit up,” Doykos said.

But while the Marines stay ready, they say that coalition efforts have largely run the insurgency out of area cities in recent months. While attacks do occur still, for the past several months they’ve been only sporadic.

That poses an important challenge for Marine leaders and their Marines, Doykos and other Marine officers have said in recent interviews.

Part of the challenge now has become “basically … fighting complacency,” he said. “… when nothing’s happening, that’s the biggest problem, the Marines just” keeping the needed combat edge when there’s little in the way of combat.

Ford looks forward to going home after his Iraq deployment, and he’s not about to let his guard down.

“The hardest part is, it’s kind of hard to fight what you can’t see, not knowing exactly what they might throw at you … the what-ifs.

“Sometimes you feel, even though you’re surrounded by Hesco barriers and C-wire, you feel vulnerable. But it’s good to think that way,” Ford said. “It’ll keep you alive.”

Ellie