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Whats your reaction to this? Rest of the Story
usahog Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 12-06-1999
Posts: 22,691
This was just sent to me recently from a good friend and Fellow Vet...

Hog

Subject Perspective . . .

Friday, Nov. 19, 2004 11:07 a.m. EST
Letter From a Fallujah Marine

Once again the blogger world has stepped up to the plate to do job the mainstream media are supposed to do - but seldom bother to do anymore.


While U.S. and Arab media went-pedal-to-the-metal with the NBC video of a Marine in Fallujah committing the "atrocity" of defending himself and his platoon against a wounded terrorist, PowerlineBlog.com has helped put the incident in perspective by publishing a letter from a brother Marine who describes just what our guys are up against.

The moving account is beginning to make the rounds on talk radio, with WABC host Mark Levin sharing it with his audience Thursday night.

We thought it was worth doing the same:

Letter From a Fallujah Marine:

This is one story of many that people normally don't hear, and one that everyone does. This is one most don't hear:

A young Marine and his cover man cautiously enter a room just recently filled with insurgents armed with AK-47's and RPG's. There are three dead, another wailing in pain. The insurgent can be heard saying, "Mister, mister! Diktoor, diktoor (doctor)!"

He is badly wounded, lying in a pool of his own blood. The Marine and his cover man slowly walk toward the injured man, scanning to make sure no enemies come from behind. In a split second, the pressure in the room greatly exceeds that of the outside, and the concussion seems to be felt before the blast is heard. Marines outside rush to the room, and look in horror as the dust gradually settles.

The result is a room filled with the barely recognizable remains of the deceased, caused by an insurgent setting off several pounds of explosives.

The Marines' remains are gathered by teary-eyed comrades, brothers in arms, and shipped home in a box. The families can only mourn over a casket and a picture of their loved one, a life cut short by someone who hid behind a white flag.

But no one hears these stories, except those who have lived to carry remains of a friend, and the families who loved the dead. No one hears this, so no one cares.

This is the story everyone hears:

A young Marine and his fire team cautiously enter a room just recently filled with insurgents armed with AK-47's and RPG's. There are three dead, another wailing in pain. The insurgent can be heard saying, "Mister, mister! Diktoor, diktoor (doctor)!" He is badly wounded.

Suddenly, he pulls from under his bloody clothes a grenade, without the pin. The explosion rocks the room, killing one Marine, wounding the others. The young Marine catches shrapnel in the face.

The next day, same Marine, same type of situation, a different story. The young Marine and his cover man enter a room with two wounded insurgents. One lies on the floor in a puddle of blood, another against the wall. A reporter and his camera survey the wreckage inside, and in the background can be heard the voice of a Marine, "He's moving, he's moving!"

The pop of a rifle is heard, and the insurgent against the wall is now dead. Minutes, hours later, the scene is aired on national television, and the Marine is being held for committing a war crime. Unlawful killing.

And now, another Marine has the possibility of being burned at the stake for protecting the life of his brethren. His family now wrings their hands in grief, tears streaming down their face. Brother, should I have been in your boots, I too would have done the same.

For those of you who don't know, we Marines, Band of Brothers, Jarheads, Leathernecks, etc., do not fight because we think it is right, or think it is wrong. We are here for the man to our left, and the man to our right. We choose to give our lives so that the man or woman next to us can go home and see their husbands, wives, children, friends and families.

For those of you who sit on your couches in front of your television, and choose to condemn this man's actions, I have but one thing to say to you. Get out of your recliner, lace up my boots, pick up a rifle, leave your family behind and join me. See what I've seen, walk where I have walked. To those of you who support us, my sincerest gratitude. You keep us alive.

I am a Marine currently doing his second tour in Iraq. These are my opinions and mine alone. They do not represent those of the Marine Corps or of the US military, or any other.
Charlie Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 06-16-2002
Posts: 39,751
My reaction....the Marine did what he had to do and should be given a medal!

Charlie
rayder1 Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 06-02-2002
Posts: 2,226
My first thought when I saw the news report was "I would have done exactly what he did"

I'm f$%@ing sick and tired of the liberal media slant. They should take the embedded reporters out of their units and give them a hole a few miles out of town to film from.

Guess what? War is not pretty. You have to take out everyone who is a threat...even with a white flag. There could have been 20 lbs of C-4 under that blanket ready to go off.

Guess what...put the shoe on the other foot. If you are being over-run by the enemy you're gravely hurt and you have a grenade or a claymore. You are going to die and you know the enemy will not make it pretty if they find you alive. You take a few of them with you when they show up.

Back in the Marine's shoes... this (now dead) one may have not had a trap for them. The next one will.
Anyway...he did him a favor and put him in Allah's hands.
Intel Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 06-24-2002
Posts: 546
TRUE!
PMoreno349 Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 07-05-2002
Posts: 665
great post... thanks Hog
lukin Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 03-31-2004
Posts: 2,205
Instead of blaming the soldier, they ought to have the cameraman put on trial for sedition and treason. Tom me, he is undermining the war effort and putting soldiers in harms way.

Thi marine should be proud of what he and his fellow brothers have done. Thanks God for them and for this soldier.
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