One Million Steps: A Marine Platoon at War

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One Million Steps: A Marine Platoon at War Page 24

by West, Bing

Faisal Haq

  Sean Heinz

  Maj Hekmatulah

  Sgt. Jordan Hintz

  Lt. Kurt Hoening

  Lt. Col. Jeff Hogan

  Capt. Nicolai Johnson

  LCpl. Jaspar Jones

  Lt. Karl Kadon

  Capt. Thomas Kearns

  Maj. Travis Kelley

  Father William Kennedy

  Capt. Jimmy Knipe

  Lt. James Koch

  Col. J. T. LeBonne

  Col. Craig Leflore

  1st Sgt. Alex Leibfried

  Staff Sgt. Edward Marini

  Maj. Eric McDowell

  Maj. Mcleash

  1st Sgt. Jorge Melendez

  Maj. Gen. Richard Mills

  Col. Mike Moore

  Capt. Pat Murray

  Sgt. Joseph Myers

  Capt. Reid Nannen

  Maj. Mike Nesbitt

  Capt. Geoff Newton

  Capt. Timothy Nogalski

  Ali Nor

  Maj. Chris O’Donnell

  LCpl. Jorge Ortiz

  Brig. Gen. Jodie Osterman

  Maj. Jennifer Parker

  Lt. Chuck Poulton

  Capt. Joshua Rogers, air kilo

  Lt. Stephen Russell

  Sgt. David Sarragoza

  Patty Schumacher

  Col. John Shaefer

  Lt. Col. Dan Shipley

  Amo Shuaraz

  Cpl. Jeff Sibley

  Sgt. Brandon Smith

  Capt. Richard Stinnett

  Staff Sgt. Nicholas Tock

  Lt. Gen. John Toolan

  Lt. Col. Stu Upton

  Terry Walker

  Maj. Walker

  Capt. Kyle Walton

  Brig. Gen. Wasea

  Maj. Vincent Welch

  Lt. Cameron West

  Capt. Dan Wilcox

  Maj. Steve Wolf

  Paul Wood

  Sgt. Maj. George Young

  Capt. Andrew Zetts

  Appendix D

  3RD PLATOON QUESTIONNAIRE

  PART I: INDIVIDUAL SURVEY AT PATROL BASE FIRES OF 3RD PLATOON, MARCH 11, 2011

  (51 Marines separately filled out the form)

  Two-parent family: 75%

  High school graduate: 100%

  Age 23 or younger: 80%

  Married: 32%

  Have children: 29%

  I plan to:

  [1] reenlist 54%

  [2] get out 46%

  [Note: by 2014, 70% of the platoon had returned to civilian life.]

  Are your tastes in music, movies, etc. the same as your civilian friends?

  [1] Yes 63%

  [2] No 17%

  [3] Don’t know 20%

  Do you see American civilian males your age as being:

  [1] just like you 6%

  [2] different, but the difference is of no importance to me 53%

  [3] softer and more spoiled 41%

  If you had it to do over again, you’d

  [1] not enlist 4%

  [2] enlist, but not in grunts 4%

  [3] I’d be right here 92%

  Did Marines change you:

  [1] a little bit 27%

  [2] a fair amount 50%

  [3] a lot 23%

  Did combat change you:

  [1] a little bit 27%

  [2] a fair amount 30%

  [3] a lot 43%

  Because of combat:

  [1] I am more caring of those close to me 33%

  [2] I’m harder 15%

  [3] I appreciate life more 52%

  Belief in God:

  [1] I believe in God, his rules and heaven 65%

  [2] I’m so-so about God and hereafter 25%

  [3] Probably a myth 10%

  Why did you join the Marines?

  [1] role model of a relative 12%

  [2] discipline & toughness 40%

  [3] straighten myself out 40%

  [4] learn a trade 8%

  PART II:

  Enemy: I have seen

  [1] 1–3 Taliban 12%

  [2] 5–10 Taliban 14%

  [3] Over 10 14%

  [4] Over 20 60%

  [Note: at the time of the survey, the average Marine had conducted over 65 patrols. Obviously, many of the same Taliban were seen on different occasions. In about one patrol in three, the average Marine saw one Taliban.]

  Enemy Casualties: I have hit

  [1] 1–2 Taliban 45%

  [2] 3–5 28%

  [3] 6–10 10%

  [4] Over 10 17%

  [Note: the sniper section accounted for all the kills in the “Over 10” category. In total, the Marines believed they had hit with small arms fire 221 of the enemy. It cannot be judged how many were actually hit, or how many others were hit by mortars, bombs, and helicopter gunship runs. Even if the individual estimates are cut in half, it is probable that 3rd Platoon by direct and indirect fire killed close to 200 Taliban over the course of 400 patrols.]

  PTSD. In your squad, how many do you believe have or will have PTSD?

  No one 25%

  One 18%

  Two 18%

  Three or more 36%

  Average guess March of 2011: 6 among the 51 Marines in 3rd Platoon have or will experience PTSD

  [Note: the 2014 actual number was 3 with PTSD diagnoses.]

  Afghan Soldiers vs. Taliban

  [1] Taliban better fighters than Afghan soldiers 37%

  [2] Both sides are about the same 43%

  [3] Afghan soldiers are better 20%

  View of Afghan people

  [1] can’t trust; they support the Taliban 36%

  [2] people OK, but intimidated by Taliban 58%

  [3] worth fighting for; they’re aligned with us 6%

  Endgame

  [1] Afghan people will side with government against Taliban 20%

  [2] We can train Afghan soldiers so they can defeat Taliban 25%

  [3] When we leave, Afghanistan will remain a mess 55%

  Appendix E

  3RD PLATOON, KILO COMPANY, 3RD BATTALION, 5TH MARINE REGIMENT AT SANGIN, AFGHANISTAN

  1ST SQUAD

  Cpl. Porfirio Alvarez

  Cpl. Chatchai Xiong

  Cpl. Juan Palma

  Cpl. Anthony Gonzales

  Cpl. Dylan Nordell

  Cpl. Edwardo Soto

  Cpl. Victor Valdez

  Cpl. Clayton Cook

  Cpl. Darin Hess

  Sgt. Dominic Esquibel

  LCpl. Brandon Weese

  MORTARS

  Sgt. Joshua Byram

  Cpl. Mike Domico

  Cpl. Christian Wall

  Cpl. Jim Parvin

  Cpl. Zach James

  Cpl. Philip Chronis

  Cpl. Paul Sharon

  Cpl. Leland Vaughan

  Sgt. Joe Myers

  LCpl. Ryan Echelbager

  2D SQUAD

  Sgt. Alex Deykeroff

  LCpl. Timothy Wagner

  LCpl. Trevor Halcomb

  LCpl. Mike Williamson

  LCpl. Aaron Lantznester

  Cpl. Armando Espinoza

  LCpl. John Payne

  LCpl. Oscar Orozco

  Cpl. Richard Hur

  LCpl. Zachary White

  ATTACHED

  RTO LCpl. James Helton

  HM3 Juan Hernandez

  HM3 Stuart Fuke

  Engineer LCpl. Colbey Yazzie

  Engineer Cpl. Kameron Delany

  HM3 Emmanuel Gonzalez

  Staff Sgt. Nicholas Tock

  Cpl. Kacey Harmon

  HM3 Redmond Ramos

  HM3 Stephen Librando

  3RD SQUAD

  Sgt. Phil McCulloch

  Cpl. Jaceon Skramstad

  LCpl. Kyle Doyle

  LCpl. Leonard Rausch

  LCpl. Adrian Barbiera

  LCpl. Jeffrey Rushton

  Cpl. Sam Saephan

  LCpl. Brett Stieve

  Sgt. Clint Thoman

  LCpl. Patrick Walker

  LCpl. Juan Dominguez

 
MACHINE GUNS AND COMMAND

  LCpl. Jorge Ortiz

  Cpl. Jeremy Moreno

  LCpl. Robert Baskins

  LCpl. Cole Christopher

  LCpl. David Hickle

  LCpl. Juan Covarrubius

  Cpl. William Lefevers

  Lt. Cameron West

  Staff Sgt. Siege Amey

  Lt. Vic Garcia

  Staff Sgt. Matthew Cartier

  LCpl. Joseph Miller

  Sgt. Ryan Krochmolny

  SNIPERS

  Cpl. Jacob Ruiz

  Cpl. Royce Hughie

  Cpl. Jordan Laird

  Cpl. Jeff Sibley

  Sgt. Brandon Rokahr

  LCpl. Willie Deel

  Cpl. Brett Sullivan

  Cpl. Kevin Henson

  Cpl. Sloan Hicks

  Sgt. John D. Browning

  Cpl. Logan Stark

  Sgt. Kevin Smith

  Sgt. Matt Abbate

  Notes

  INTRODUCTION

  1 “moral obligation” George W. Bush, Decision Points. New York: Crown, 2010, p. 205.

  2 “squeezed into extinction” General Tommy Franks, American Soldier. New York: Easton, 2004, pp. 338, 377.

  3 opium Alissa Rubin, “Opium Cultivation Rose This Year in Afghanistan, U.N. Survey Shows,” New York Times, November 20, 2012.

  4 “The central theme” Brig. Gen. Edward Butler, quoted in Bing West, “With the Warriors,” National Review, March 7, 2011.

  5 “Sangin was no safer” Patrick Bury, Callsign Hades. London: Simon & Schuster, 2010, p. 281.

  6 “ringed in” Ibid., p. 281.

  7 “stop referring” Gretel C. Kovach, “Darkhorse Battalion,” San Diego Union-Tribune, April 23, 2011.

  8 “I have pulled” Christian Science Monitor, December 6, 2006.

  9 “I’m pleading with you” Robert Johnson, “How to Work a Room Like Badass 4-Star Marine General ‘Mad Dog’ Mattis,” Business​Insider.com, September 25, 2012.

  10 “We can’t” Admiral Mike Mullen, House Armed Services Committee testimony, September 10, 2008.

  11 “diminish” Anne E. Kornblut, Scott Wilson, and Karen DeYoung, “Obama Pressed for Faster Surge,” Washington Post, December 6, 2009.

  12 “I urge our troops” Admiral Mike Mullen, Pentagon briefing, December 10, 2009.

  13 “We’ve got a government” David E. Sanger, “A Test for the Meaning of Victory in Afghanistan,” New York Times, February 13, 2010.

  14 “We [Marines] can’t fix” Gen. James Conway, Pentagon press conference, August 14, 2010.

  15 “biggest mistake” Robert M. Gates, Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War. New York: Knopf, 2014, p. 340.

  16 “He [Conway] insisted” Ibid.

  17 “Marine-istan” Rajiv Chandrasekaran, “Marines Gone Rogue,” Washington Post, March 14, 2010.

  18 “It’s a hard pill” Tom Coghlan, “American Marines Pay Heavy Price in Fight for Sangin,” The Times (London), December 6, 2010.

  CHAPTER 1: SHOCK

  1 he wrote to the families Lt. Col. Jason Morris, letter to 3/5 families, October 13, 2010.

  2 “Colonel Morris looked” Excerpt from the YouTube video “For the 25,” posted by Logan Stark, May 5, 2013.

  3 Lance Cpl. John Sparks The Story of the 3/5 Darkhorse Marine Battalion in Sangin, Afghanistan, p. 18.

  4 killing four Marines Corp. Justin Cain hailed from Manitowoc, Wisconsin, where a motorcycle club escorted his casket through town.

  In Eugene, Oregon, at the funeral of LCpl. Joseph Rodewald, hundreds wore a red jersey with his number, 33, honoring his passion for football.

  The Boy Scout troop in St. Charles County, Missouri, turned out at the Church of the Shepherd to say good-bye to LCpl. Phillip Vinnedge, who had once dressed up as the Easter Bunny to entertain children.

  Pfc. Victor Dew of Granite Bay, California, left behind a fiancée. His mother said that his desire to join the Marines was “every mother’s worst fear,” but she understood his determination. “Victor joined the Marines,” his father said, “to be on the front lines, where he felt he could make a difference.”

  5 five fatalities Marine Corps Times, October 18, 2010.

  6 a squad of thirteen Marines This was Sgt. Decker’s squad from 1st Platoon.

  7 second squad Sgt. Nick Glidden from 2d Platoon.

  8 Covered by Abbate suggested they head to Building 29 in P8T, 600 meters north of Fires.

  9 since he was three Rockford (Ill.) Register Star, October 15, 2010.

  10 trusted his judgment Los Angeles Times, November 21, 2010.

  11 Ceniceros “Irvin admired the strength of character of the Marines,” his sister said. “He wanted to be in the Marines because he was the same way.” Times Record (Fort Smith, Ark.), October 19, 2010.

  12 eight killed Marine Corps Times, October 18, 2010.

  CHAPTER 2: LEADER LOST

  1 “Wow, my son’s unit” Los Angeles Times, November 21, 2010, and NPR, November 1, 2010.

  2 honor man The Oregonian, October 18, 2010.

  3 “I have decided” Lt. Col. Jason Morris, letter to 3/5 families, October 18, 2010.

  4 “At the time” Tom Bowman, “Afghan Success Comes at High Price for Commander,” NPR.org, October 30, 2011.

  CHAPTER 3: WITH THE OLD BREED

  1 Seven out of ten civilian casualties Associated Press, November 26, 2010.

  2 Karzai had pointed as reported by CNN, July 27, 2010.

  3 The sentry Lance Corporal Kane was shot. Abbate, Ruiz, Sibley, and Laird then left the outpost.

  4 the summer of 1966 Capt. Francis J. West, Jr., Small Unit Action in Vietnam. U.S. Marines monograph, p. 5 (also New York: Arno Press, 1981).

  5 “Despite taking” Lt. Col. Jason Morris, letter to 3/5 families, October 25, 2010.

  6 “There is nothing out of the norm” Marine Corps Times, October 20, 2010.

  CHAPTER 4: LEADERS FOUND

  1 he decided Shortly after taking over, Garcia sent Esquibel’s 1st Squad to a cemetery north of Fires, searching for a path through the minefields along the edge of Route 611. The Radio Battalion intercept team at Inkerman warned Esquibel that Taliban were watching and talking excitedly over their Icoms. At the edge of a cornfield, the Marine at point, LCpl. Victor Valdez, saw two men crouching over a PKM not twenty-four meters away.

  “Machine gun!”

  The Marines went flat and bullets zinged in a dozen different directions. Once the Marines began plunking .203 rounds into the corn, the PKM gunners pulled back. Thinking they were under mortar shelling, the Taliban ran to the nearest compound. Garcia came forward from Inkerman with a quick reaction force. The two squads maneuvered slowly toward the compound. The intercept team radioed that inside the compound a man was calling for help over his Icom. His comrade had been hit in the chest and blown up by a .203 explosive. But by the time the compound was reached, the Taliban, both alive and dead, were gone.

  2 covering fire In late October, compass readings from several radio intercepts pointed to an enemy position on an azimuth of 300 degrees from Fires, which pointed at Compound 2 in sector Q1E. Esquibel went out, divided his squad into two maneuver elements, and closed on the compound from two sides. They killed one shooter and in the corner of a shed found a bag full of 12.7mm rounds. The 12.7 was a heavy Russian machine gun called a Dishka, a World War II antiaircraft weapon. The Taliban almost never made the mistake of shooting at helicopter gunships. Instead, they used the 12.7 to harass combat outposts from positions a mile away. The Marines’ seizure of the cache meant a month-long round-trip to Pakistan for the Taliban to resupply. The successful patrol confirmed Esquibel’s faith in his methodical approach.

  CHAPTER 5: TOE-TO-TOE

  1 Costing $500,000 each www.​money.​msn.​com, January 23, 2014.

  2 outdoorsman Denver Post, November 6, 2010.

  3 “He is with God now” Arizona Republic, November 9, 2010.

  4 No American squad dared to live There were some exceptions, like Maj
. Jim Gant of the Special Forces; see Ann Scott Tyson, American Spartan: The Promise, the Mission, and the Betrayal of Special Forces Major Jim Gant. New York: Morrow, 2014.

  5 xenophobic tribesmen Meanwhile, Afghan president Karzai railed against the American presence among the villagers, adding greatly to an atmosphere of distrust. The Afghan soldiers admitted that they did not know who among them would, on a whim or conviction, murder them as they slept. The high command issued a countrywide order that an armed American soldier keep watch over Afghan soldiers at all times.

  6 That night, the Marines ate Stacy The next day, 2d Squad was patrolling east of Fires when they saw a set of wires. Uncertain which wire to cut, the squad called an engineer team from Inkerman. While waiting, Sergeant Dy and Corporal Laird casually questioned a few passing farmers. Stevie, their shrewd translator, whispered that the farmers were subtly gesturing toward three men standing off to one side. When Stevie approached them, one nervously replied with a Pakistani accent. The three were flex-cuffed. After the engineers arrived, they uncovered an intricate network of seven IEDs.

  7 Lt. Gen. John Kelly Speech in St. Louis, November 11, 2010; see Appendix A.

  8 In London, the Sunday Times “We were there for four years,” said a British veteran, “and we’d already tried what they are now trying, which is obviously not working judging by the casualties.” Miles Amoore, “US Humbled in Bloody Sangin,” Sunday Times (London), December 12, 2010.

  9 Gen. James Amos Tom Bowman report, NPR, October 31, 2011.

  10 “I thought to myself” Gates, Duty, p. 561.

  11 “I don’t think there’s ever been” Gretel C. Kovach, San Diego Union-Tribune, November 10, 2010.

  12 “Military history must never stray” Victor Davis Hanson, Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power. New York: Anchor, 2001, pp. 56.

  13 “I directed all units” Gen. Stanley McChrystal, My Share of the Task: A Memoir. New York: Portfolio, 2013, p. 313.

  14 McChrystal even supported Ibid., p. 312.

  15 “At bldg 23” Platoon log, November 18, 2010.

  CHAPTER 6: THANKSGIVING

  1 “I like meeting people” See “Arden Joseph Buenagua,” Darkhorse Heroes Remembered, http://​darkhorse35.​com/​Buenagua/.

  2 called LAAWs Delany and Wagner fired the LAAWs.

 

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