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Battle of fallujah operation phantom fury
Battle of fallujah operation phantom fury









battle of fallujah operation phantom fury
  1. Battle of fallujah operation phantom fury professional#
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“Oh, it will.”Ĭhapman’s family hadn’t been thrilled he joined the Marine Corps, but now they were just thankful he was alive. It was “the tone of voice,” he ­recalled. “It doesn’t even hurt,” the Marine told the ­corpsman. It was the moment after a corpsman yanked open his eye, and Chapman realized he could still see, that he will remember forever. He remembers reaching up to feel goggles, wax and blood. “Zig zag, back and forth, and the next thing I know everything went white,” Chapman said.

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He was in too close of quarters to shoot the TOW missile - the back blast would kill everyone - but he used the sight to search windows and scan the street. “A single shot usually meant sniper.”Ĭhapman didn’t know where the sniper was, so he couldn’t return fire.

battle of fallujah operation phantom fury

He remembers someone getting shot before him: An Iraqi National Guardsmen had been hit in the stomach area. The last time he had looked at his watch it was 4:34 p.m. He was shot two days into the battle: Nov. To get to the toilet you had to walk on arm rests and crawl over gear.” The aisles of the airplane were pretty packed. “We packed in - a bunch of gear with you. The Marines had flown over to Kuwait on a ­commercial flight. Erick Dickey, were D9 operators attached to 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines. Thaddeus Dymczenski along with Lance Cpl. I knew we were going to be going to Iraq.”Ĭpl. “I was as mentally prepared as I could be,” ­Chapman said. ­contractors were dragged from their vehicles through the streets of Fallujah and eventually hung over a bridge. The 24-year-old, who had joined the Corps after trying college and had celebrated his 21st ­birthday in boot camp, remembers the news from the first battle of Fallujah. He had gone on the deployment knowing it could get bad. He had the best seat in the house, he said, “and the only form of air-conditioning you can get.” Yet, Chapman had been shot from about 300-400 meters away by a rifle that should have killed him at twice that distance, he said.Ĭhapman liked sitting on the top of the truck.

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It wasn’t confirmed, but the alleged ­blonde-haired, blue-eyed sniper was apparently a Chechen ­mercenary, likely a paid-for professional fighter among the al-Qaida-led insurgents. The 0352 TOW gunner had been medically evacuated out of Iraq after getting shot above his left eye. Ryan Chapman was on convalescent leave and sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner with his immediate family. Nearly 7,000 miles away in Lawrence, Kansas, Lance Cpl. “It was a complete feeling of gratitude, of ­thankfulness for making it through.” From their safe spot with seven-layers of ­bulletproof glass, it was often hard to watch the wreckage ­happening around them.īut that Thanksgiving Day, Berge knew that the Marines had the city under control.











Battle of fallujah operation phantom fury