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Rebels in Iraq kill people, then booby-trap them
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Mahmudiyah, Iraq — The deadliest weapons of the Iraqi insurgency — roadside bombs — are growing in size and sophistication and are being hidden in a bewildering variety of places.
Buried under patched asphalt on narrow country lanes, embedded in dog carcasses on highways, hung from overpasses or burrowed into the soft embankments beside irrigation canals, “improvised explosive devices,” or IEDs, are the most feared and common threats to U.S. troops.
Now, the ongoing cat-and-mouse game between insurgents who build and plant IEDs and the American bomb disposal experts who disarm them has taken a ghoulish turn. Insurgents have begun hiding bombs in the corpses of murder victims in an effort to kill people who retrieve the bodies and those who try to defuse the bombs.
“The IEDs are becoming more potent all the time,” said Staff Sgt. John Mason, 31, leader of a two-man explosives ordnance disposal team assigned to the Georgia Army National Guard’s 48th Brigade Combat Team. “The insurgents who make them are getting smarter, so we have to get smarter, too.”
Of the 323 American combat deaths in Iraq since the start of the year, 165, just over 51 percent, have been caused by IEDs, according to the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, an independent Web site that tracks deaths in Iraq.
On a recent morning in Mahmudiyah, a city just south of Baghdad, Sgt. Mason and Pfc. Brian James, 28, both members of the 717th Ordnance Company based at Fort Campbell, Ky., were called to three IED sites before noon. The final one would prove to be the trickiest and most dangerous: a series of artillery shells wired to the body of one of five men killed execution-style and dumped beside a rural irrigation canal.
The bomb team’s day had started in the heart of Mahmudiyah, where an Iraqi soldier reported a suspicious-looking white sedan parked near a mosque.
James unloaded a “Talon” robot, a surprisingly speedy tracked vehicle that looks like a department store toy. The camera-toting robot is the favored method for getting up-close looks at bombs without soldiers getting too close.
The driver steers the robot with a computer joy stick while watching a computer screen.
After other soldiers blocked traffic and cleared the area, James guided the robot to the suspicious car and used its mechanical arm to drop a thermite grenade into a side window.
The grenade quickly set the car afire and set off the hidden explosives inside with a series of destructive blasts.
It takes about a year of intensive training for U.S. soldiers to become explosives experts. About 60 percent of those who start the rigorous program wash out, Mason said.
In Iraq, bomb disposal experts serve six-month tours, half the length of the typical Army tour, because their work is so stressful.
They typically work 24-hour shifts — one full day on duty followed by a full day off.
But the workload here has been so heavy lately that the teams sometimes are called into action on their days off.
Man replaces robot
The morning car bomb was dispatched quickly and with only one casualty — the Talon.
The robot’s mechanical arm got stuck on the burning car’s door and caught fire. Mason and James had to replace it with a new robot on their next mission, and that’s when the real trouble started.
The two soldiers were wary when they arrived at the rural execution site in the midafternoon heat.
Despite the verdant farmland and 6-foot sunflowers that lined the route, Mason said he had a bad feeling about the mission. Would they face an ambush along the vulnerable canal road? Was the killing site mined?
It is widely believed that insurgents have placed a bounty on American explosives experts, who are frequently targeted by insurgents using guns, mortars and secondary IEDs.
One of the five bodies found at the site was wired with explosives. When James dispatched the replacement robot toward it, the team quickly ran into technical problems.
The new robot’s video images came back garbled and useless.
Mason would have to investigate the grisly scene himself.
Despite the searing 118-degree heat, he donned a stifling, four-piece protective suit that left him looking like a leaden Pillsbury Doughboy. A Kevlar helmet, yellow sunglasses, earplugs and gloves completed the cumbersome outfit.
Mason carried a telescoping metal pole with a hook at one end in case he needed to move anything.
Sgt. Guillermo Thorne, a member of the 1st Battalion, 108th Armor Regiment, who was providing security for the team, marveled at Mason’s willingness to approach a live bomb.
“Whatever they pay you, it’s not enough,” Thorne said. “You’re absolutely, without a doubt, nuts.”
Life-or-death moment
A few minutes later, Mason saw what the faulty robot could not show them. One of the decomposing bodies was attached to a homemade, remote-controlled detonator. That was connected to a length of electrical cord linked to a series of artillery shells.
Knowing that a lookout with a cellphone could trigger the bomb at any moment, Mason extended the hook to its full length and reached for the detonation cord.
He hoped to sever it from the explosives. But he also knew it might be wired to go off if moved, so he crouched low as he began to pull.
The remote control moved about four inches before an artillery shell exploded.
The blast engulfed Mason in smoke and dust and left him sprawled on the ground.
A member of Mason’s security team started to rush toward him, sure that he had been injured or killed. But Mason quickly stood and waved him off.
The concussion “went right through me,” he said later. His ears were ringing and he was covered with dust and debris, but he was alive.
“The only time I was really scared was after the explosion when I couldn’t hear anything and felt a trickle running down my neck,” Mason said. “I was afraid it was blood and that I’d busted my eardrums. But it was just sweat.”
He collected the detonator, carried it back to his vehicle a few hundred yards away and shed his protective suit.
“Jesus, you scared me with that one,” James told Mason.
“Yeah,” Mason replied. “Scared myself, too.”
After a drink of water and a 15-minute pause, the married father of two got back into his protective suit and returned to the gruesome bomb site.
Only one artillery shell had exploded. The rest were still dangerous.
Mason placed a plastic explosive next to the remaining shells and slowly walked away.
He yelled “Fire in the hole!” and detonated the shells with a violent roar that shook the ground hundreds of yards away.
Amazingly, the five bodies remained mostly intact.
“I’m glad the families will have something to bury,” Mason said. “I know that’s important in this culture.”
On the trip back to their base, Mason resumed his teasing banter with James.
“No IED is going to kill me,” he said. “Your driving, dude. That’s what’s going to kill me.”
For James and Mason, it was all in a day’s work.
“Not many people do what we do,” said Mason, who formerly served as a crew chief on Black Hawk helicopters.
“We keep other soldiers from getting killed or injured, and that gives us a lot of satisfaction. Even after a day like today, I’d much rather do this than work on helicopters.”





DEL.ICIO.US


Comments
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By Steve Haslup
July 16, 2005 08:40 AM | Link to this
Dave: I have enjoyed reading your reports on the activities of the 48th in Iraq. Thank you for covering this wonderful group of soldiers who are protecting us at home. May God protect you and our soldiers, and I look forward to your return to acro flying in Atlanta. … Steve Haslup
By Beverly Wiggins
July 16, 2005 07:01 PM | Link to this
SO…That’s way you Guys get paid the BIG BUCKS!? :0) SSG Cory Martin your Grandma said…”You can go to Iraq…but don’t you go any where else! (Private Joke!?) We love you guys and we’re PRAYING HARD FOR YOU! XO MOM XO
By Beverly Wiggins
July 16, 2005 07:08 PM | Link to this
DAVE, CURTIS…PLEASE DON”T LEAVE! I run to my computer every morning, EVEN BEFORE MY COFFEE, so I can see what my Son has been doing while I slept. I know it’s selfish of us back home, but we all NEED YOU THERE! THANKS SO MUCH FOR ALL YOU HAVE GIVEN. You have been our eyes and ears. My God Bless! SSG Cory Martin’s Mom XO
By Jean D
July 17, 2005 06:44 PM | Link to this
I want to thank You for Your coverage of the 48th. this whole thing is so frightening when You have Your only Child in harms way, I can get a little comfort from the information that You supply on a daily basic, My Son is ok with it I’m the one having a hard time.
By Jenny L
July 17, 2005 10:33 PM | Link to this
Thanks for telling about some of the guys who are often overlooked but essential to the success of any mission. Maybe this will remind folks exactly how much we owe these fine soldiers. An additional reminder…these guys are not “regular army” soldiers. They left behind family and careers to do this job so we don’t have to. They have my sincere and heart-felt thanks, my admiration, and my prayers.
By jessie haynes
July 18, 2005 03:20 AM | Link to this
Dear james and mason I want to thank you guys for watching over us while we sleep.I am so glad you guys have the Robots.take care of each other and hurry home.I will continue to pray for you all daily.PLEASE take care. s/o Haynes. suntrust Bank. Atlanta ga.
By Pauline C James
July 18, 2005 12:55 PM | Link to this
Dave:Thank you for your recent coverage on James & Mason. It was scary, knowing what my son Brian has to deal with daily. He’s a strong, brave and intelligent young man, so I know he’ll return home safely. He’s okay, but I’m the one who worries alot, but I guess that’s what all moms do. Love and Prayers to all our U.S. soldiers. We support you and Take Care! To PFC Brian James, GOD BLESS YOU LOVE, Mom
By Arrowood
July 18, 2005 08:23 PM | Link to this
My son is a member of the EOD security team. These guys do amazingly dangerous jobs. I pray for them every day. They need all our prayers and our support.
By Frances
July 21, 2005 09:00 AM | Link to this
Everytime I see written, “Mahmudiyah, south of Baghdad” I cringe! Mahmudiyah is NOT south of Baghdad and FOB Michael is NOT anywhere near Mahmudiyah, Iraq. In fact, Mahmudiyah, Iraq is very North of Baghdad near the Syrian border. FOB Micael is in/near Al Mahmudiyah, Iraq and Al Mahmudiyah is south of Baghdad, Iraq. I learned this using Google Earth (beta)
The satelite images are awesome and its realy cool seeing the city of where our soldiers are.
By Buffy Wiggins
July 21, 2005 11:28 AM | Link to this
Dear Jean D. I KNOW how you feel! My ONLY CHILD is also there. At Camp Row. He’s “FINE”…but I’m not. My nights are his days…and every time I go to bed my last thoughts( other than my prayers…) are..I wonder what Cory will be going through while I sleep. I spoke to a women the other who has two sons there and her third was also going. She said it wasn’t fair for ALL of her kids to be there…I told her ALL OF MINE ARE. We’ll get through this…IF THEY CAN…WE CAN! “PROUD MOM”
By Alexandra Maisonet
July 21, 2005 10:42 PM | Link to this
I would like to know why you guys don’t talk about the soldiers that are at Camp Roe. I really would like to see more information about what is going on with the mitt 1 team 3 id where my husband is. It is frustrating knowing that there are some soldiers that have free time going shopping to the PX when others such as my husband is getting shot every day doing his job. I just pray that nothing happens to him or any of the guys that are serving with him.
By zarin newman
July 25, 2005 09:20 PM | Link to this
i’d like to thank everyone in 48th for protecting our country and puting their lives on the line for us back at home May God be with you -Zarin Newman Lanham,Maryland