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Marines Fight On, Roof To Roof |
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It was a cacophony of
fire for five or six hours, leaving the bodies of Iraqi attackers lying
mangled in the dust, one with its head gone, but still clad in a vintage
U.S.-made flak jacket. Marines stepped warily
around the Iraqi bodies, looking for their own comrades. American Cobra and
Chinook helicopters thumped overhead, and Bradley Fighting Vehicles rumbled
on the roads. At least 12 Marines
were killed here, and 30 others injured. Ten of those killed were in Echo
Company, which was the first unit attacked in Ramadi. "They did a very
heroic, very courageous job," the unit's commander, Capt. Kelly Royer,
said. The fierce daylong
battle took place across this city of 350,00 people,
30 miles west of Fallujah, which is itself targeted and surrounded by
coalition forces a week after four American civilian security guards there
were killed, mutilated, burned and left hanging from a bridge. The ambushes were
launched in bright daylight by what appeared to be four well-armed and
coordinated groups of attackers in units of 10 to 15. Until yesterday, the
recently arrived Marines in Ramadi said they had found two dozen makeshift
bombs but encountered no open warfare, nothing like what erupted yesterday. The patrolling Marines
were slammed by M-16s, heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and
mortars. The attackers appeared acquainted with the Marines' patterns of
patrol. The coalition forces
responded with massive fire, armor and air support. Fighting raged around one
street corner in particular and extended to other areas. At one point, Marines
fought house-to-house, some even leaping from one rooftop to the next as they
chased and caught some of the insurgents. As the fighting died
off, at least four bodies were still lying in the dust while Americans went
corpse-by-corpse looking first for their own. Near the decimated
shell of a An Iraqi man working
for the Marines as a translator paced toward one of the bodies, kicked it, then turned away. This Sunni-dominated
city lies along the By "We are going to
find these thugs, these terrorists, and we are going to destroy them,"
said Royer. Copyright 2004
Philadelphia Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be
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