--- Page 1 --- A Marriage of Convenience125 discovered what a useful and flexible tool Marine air control was.413 For the British the war began in much the same way as it had for I MEF headquarters. On 20 March, one of the incoming Iraqi theater ballistic missiles flew directly over the division headquarters, certainly capturing the attention of the staff. With British un- derstatement, and humor, General Brims commented at the evening update brief that the "Iraqis were showing that they too had a vote" in how the war would run.414 By the afternoon of 21 March, 3 Com- mando Brigade, the Royal Marine formation, had suc- cessfully deployed into the Al Faw Peninsula, despite "blackened skies from burning oil infrastructure" and a deadly crash of a U.S. Marine helicopter carrying Royal Marines.' In the meantime, 15th MEU (SOC) took the port of Umm Qasr, encountering some stiff resistance, par- ticularly from Saddam Fedayeen, but not enough to prevent it from making "excellent progress."4'5 The next day, 3 Commando Brigade reported Umm Qasr "clear though 15 MEU continued to have sporadic contacts," while 7 Armored Brigade and 16 Air As- sault Brigade each carried out a relief in place with the 5th and 7th Regimental Combat Teams, respec- tively, in the Rumaylah oil fields. There was some friction, a blue-on-blue "friendly fire" incident with no casualties between 15th MEU and 7Armored Brigade on 21 March, and some confusion "due to 'Thevalue of the Marine contribution is suggested by the House of Commons report on the war, which stated that the British forces needed more practice and training when it came to close air sup- port. To the same effect, Capt Arnold M. Kiefer of 1st ANGLIC0, found that the British did not have as much experience with com- bined arms as did the Marine Corps and tended to view the em- ployment of supporting arms in a sequential way. They did not use and deconflict all of their supporting arms options. Capt Kiefer added the comment that their light infantry skills were otherwise world-class. (House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, Vol. 1, p. 63; Capt Arnold M. Kiefer intvw, 17Mar03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA) **42 Commando's insertion started badly in appalling visibility, made worse by blowing sand and smoke from fires started the previous day. Tragically, the Marine Ch-46 "Sea Knight" helicop- ter carrying the headquarters of the Brigade Reconnaissance Force crashed. ... Withthe cloud base dropping still further, the inser- tion was aborted, forcing the Brigade HQ rapidly to identify other aviation assets and plan a new insertion for 42 Commando at dawn, using RAF Chinook and Puma helicopters. Although the landing took place six hours late, Onto insecure landing sites, and in some case miles away from those originally intended, all ob- jectives were secured." There was apparently some bad blood over the U.S. Marine Corps' decision to abort, which may explain why the British decided to use their own assets. (Cmdr 1 (UK) Armored Division's Diary, entry for 21Mar03 [Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA]; Ministry of Defence,Operations in Iraq: Lessons for the Future [London, UK: 11Dec03], p. 12) the large volume of Coalition traffic" when the British division relieved the American division in the oil fields, not surprising considering the volume of friendly forces passing through the area.416 But over- all, the first days of the war went very well, and the British were pleased with the situation. The 15th MEU (SOC), which was to chop back to U.S. control on 25 March after being relieved in Urnm Qasr on 24 March, had meshed almost seamlessly with the British brigade. The Marine unit commander, Colonel Thomas D. Waldhauser, found it to be a great experience "by design and by default." He Com- mented that even though the expeditionary unit's ground combat element had more organic combat power, there was a lot of congruence in the way both sides were organized. The Royal Marines were true to their doctrine, giving the U.S. Marines mission orders and then giving them the leeway to execute those orders, which were fourfold: to annihilate the enemy who fought; to accommodate the enemy who capit- ulated; not to destroy the infrastructure of the city; and not to get bogged down within city limits. Given the opportunity to make a contribution under un- usual circumstances—this was not your normal cruise, the Marines of the 15th MEU (which, Wald- hauser noted, had never carried out an exercise but only real-world operations) accomplished the mis- sion with gusto." Overall, the British were on plan and the Iraqis were not; in particular, the British had been able to seize petroleum and shipping infrastructure before the Iraqis could do much harm to it. While it would prove impossible to get the oil flowing again quickly, it was soon possible to get ocean-going ships into Umm Qasr, especially to unload large quantities of supplies for the expected humanitarian crisis. The Royal Fleet Auxillery Sir Galahad (L3005), the first ship with a humanitarian load, began to unload on 28 March. Considering the overall situation, the Ministry of Defense postwar study concluded that: Four days into the campaign the Iraqi 51st Di- vision had been removed from its defence of the oil fields. The 3 Commando Brigade held critical oil infrastructure at Al Faw and the port of Umm Qasr. The 16 Air Assault Brigade held "Col Thomas Waldhauser also noted the 15thMEU's air combat el- ement was detached while the unit was in Iraq. He would have preferred to keep his own aviation combat element, but apart from that had no complaints about air support. This tracks with Task Force Tarawa's experience; its aviation combat element had also been stripped away when it landed in Kuwait. (Col Thomas D. Waldhauser intvw, 14Apr03 tMCHC, Quantico, VAI) --- Page 2 --- 126Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond DVIC DM-SD-04-01657 Fire and smoke from a damaged oil and gas separa- tion plant is visible in the background as elements of the 1 (UK) Armored Division move into southern Iraq. the vital oilfield at Rumaylah and threatened Iraq's 6th Armoured Division to the north of Basrah to such an extent that it could not in- terfere with Coalition operations. The 7Ar- moured Brigade held the bridges over the Shatt-al-Basrah waterway to the west of Basrah [a canal that ran from Basrah to Umm Qasr to the sea, paralleling the much larger Shatt-al- Arab to the east]....[T]hiswas the most cm- cia! ground to hold in order to achieve the overall plan of protecting the right flank of the U.S. advance to isolate Baghdad.417 Like their American allies to the west, the British were finding that the regular Iraqi Army was not as much of a threat as had been feared but that there might be more of an irregular threat than had been predicted. On the evening of 23 March, General Brims spoke with 7ArmoredBrigade about "the changing nature of our understanding of the conflict. •There was not to be a solely conventional battle, rather resistance especially focused on urban areas, and troops either bypassed or deliberately inserted behind the forward line of our own troops."418 The issue confronting the British was what to do next. Ultimately they would have to occupy Basrah, Iraq's second city and that was not up for discussion. As Genera! Brims commented: "to remove a regime you cannot leave [it]...incontrol of an urban area."419 So it became a matter of timing and method. As for timing, CFLCC did not want the British to get ahead of the rest of the force; General McKiernan had directed them not to occupy Basrah proper until he gave the word. He told General Brims that he wanted the fight for Basrah to wait until the Coali- tion had isolated Baghdad, because he did not want to risk a dramatic urban fight in the south that could drive Iraqis into the arms of the regime and make the overall mission that much more difficult.42° General Conway's guidance was similar hut keyed to I MEF's scheme of maneuver; he directed Brims simply to make sure that whatever he chose to do in Basrah, he should remember the paramount goal of protect- ing I MEF's flank.421 What Generals McKiernan and Conway wanted was the reverse of what the Ba'athist strongman in Basrah wanted. He was Saddam Hussein's cousin, Ali Hassan Al-Majid, commonly known as "Chemical Mi" for his murderous suppression of the Kurds in 1988 with chemical weapons. He had been equally brutal in his dealings with the Shia in the south in the 1990s after the Gulf War, and was one of the prime movers in the draining of the swampland north of Basrah, the ancestral home of the "Marsh Arabs" and their distinctive culture, in order to eliminate it as a haven for potential or actual rebels. The result was an eco- logical and economic disaster. Since Basrah's ap- proximately 1.25 million citizens were predominantly Shia, he was feared far more than respected. At the beginning of the war, he presided over a mix of un- reliable regular army units and more reliable hut not particularly skilled irregulars like the Saddam Fe- dayeen. To the extent that he had a strategy, it ap- pears to have been one of trying to draw the British into a drawn-out fight within the city limits of Basrah, with the attendant collateral damage to cultural and religious sites, and of course civilian casualties, the kind of thing that hurts the Coalition when it appears on the front page of an Arab daily, not to mention The Washington Post or Le Monde. British intelligence reports suggested just how basic the Iraqi plan for Basrah was: "Whenever theBritish intercepted enemy communications, Saddam's henchmen were merely urging loyalists to fight, fight, fight, without specifying how."422 This was exactly what the British were determined not to do, whatever the timing of the attack. British officers commented repeatedly that they were always determined to avoid the kind of hitter, costly, house- to-house, street-to-street fighting that had recently oc- curred in Chechnya, where the Russian army had become bogged down in its fight with rebels, or like the Eastern Front in World War II. "We were deter- mined," Brims commented after the war, "not to have --- Page 3 --- any sort of Grozny or Stalingrad scenes."423 Over the period between 25 March and 6 April, through a process of thinking and experimentation, almost like a Warfighting Laboratory evolution, the British came up with the alternative approach that fit the situation. The preliminary experiment took place in the much smaller city of Az Zubayr, population about 100,000, to the southwest of Basrah in 7 Ar- mored Brigade's zone of action. The soldiers of 7 Ar- mored, who wore the "Desert Rats" patch their predecessors had worn at the battle of El Alamein in World War II, found themselves taking heavy ma- chine gun and rocket fire from irregulars every time they came near the city. The 7 Armored had the com- bat power to enter and reduce the city, but exercised restraint, starting out small with a raid into the city by 1 Black Watch battalion on 25 March. On 26 March, 7 Armored proceeded to isolate the city, which was not the same as besieging it but rather a matter of controlling ingress and egress or, just as important, demonstrating its ability to do so.424 General Brims tells the Basrah story in a very Eng- lish way as if he and his subordinate, Brigadier Binns, had "casually" solved the problem in the same way As Gen James Mattis had demonstrated outside Al Kut, I MEF was very much aware of the legal implications of besieging a city, which both the Marine and the British divisions wanted to avoid. a Londoner might "casually" solve the wickedly con- voluted Times of London crossword puzzle, when in fact it was their lifelong devotion to the art of war that was manifesting itself: I talked to the Brigade Commander. ..about four or five days into the thing. ..andhe said, "I am going to work out how we are going to take Az Zubayr," and I said, "Good, I will go away and consider Basrah." And he said, "I have got the most powerful armoured brigade the British Army's ever put in the field, and I will back-brief you on my bit, of Az Zubayr, to- morrow morning." I arranged to see him first thing...andhe asked me to come aside of him for a short time, and he said to me, "I have worked out, we cannot go into Az Zubayr because that is what the regime want; we will inflict undue casualties, we will take undue ca- sualties, we will hurt the civilians...thatis what he is after. We have got to do it in a more cunning way." I said to him, "Well, that's funny, because I have worked out precisely the same thing for Basrah."425 On 26 March, General Brims convened a com- mander's conference at Brigadier Binns' headquar- ters,where theydiscussedtheissueamong A Marriage of Convenience127 JCCC 030328-N-3783H-479 Royal Fleet Auxiliary Landing Ship Logistic, Sir Galahad (L 3005), arrives at the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr to de- liver the first shipment of humanitarian aid from Coalition forces. --- Page 4 --- 128Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond themselves. Brims took the opportunity to announce the decision to make Basrah a divisional responsibil- ity rather than delegating it to one of the brigades, as British commanders were more likely to do. The UK division would hope to foment popular unrest by conducting "deep operations" through the destruc- tion of key targets while at the same time providing an opportunity for the people to receive humanitar- ian aid.426 What came next, in both Az Zubayr and Basrah, was a series of carefully orchestrated events, aimed as much at the enemy's mind as at his body. One of the prerequisites was the collection of the kind of cit- izen-by-citizen, neighborhood-by-neighborhood in- telligence that can seem more like police work than part of a military operation. This was apparently something that the British government in southern Iraq had been pursuing for years. It was also a skill that the British Army had learned in Northern Ireland and the Balkans. By working with recruited agents, some of whom were reporting by cell phone, and by simply networking, the British were able to create a detailed picture of the life of the city, from the bot- tom up.427 Next came a round of carefully calculated raids, sometimes synchronized with raids by joint di- rect attack munitions, or smart bombs, or other pre- cision munitions, which could lead to sniping or to "lodgements," something like the establishment of patrol bases that ranged in size up to the battalion level. For example, a British unit might stage a night- time raid and then, when withdrawing, leave a sniper team behind to observe the neighborhood for a few days, or to snipe at Ba'ath and Fedayeen leaders.428 At the same time, information operations worked on the minds of the citizenry, by means of leaflets, broadcasts, or even targeted mobile telephone calls by General Brims himself. Then there might be a carefully planned air or artillery raid against a pin- point target, whose effects the division could observe on the live feed from the "Phoenix," the British un- manned aerial vehicle. "The way we did it," General Brims reported to the House of Commons, "was to build up an intelligence picture, focused raids, ground raids, air raids, mind raids...[thepeoplel wanted to be freed but they could not do it them- 'Murray and Scales make a comment to the effect that the British Intelligence Service had established a network in Basrah in the decade after the Gulf War, which if accurate suggests amazing fore- sight on the part of the British. (Williamson Murray,MajGen Robert H. Scales, Jr., The Iraq War [cambridge, MA: Harvard Uni- versity Press, 2003], p. 145) According to Murray and Scales, the regime loyalists were the ones with the cell phones; if you had a cell phone, you could be a target for a British sniper. (Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 149) UvIc DM-SD-04-01770 In Pinzguaer reconnaissance vehicles, British Army soldiers assigned to 2/1 Battery, 16th Air Assault Brigade, move out on patrol in southern Iraq. selves, they needed our support, and therefore actu- ally we had them helping us, and they were feeding us ... accurateintelligence, worthy targets...and we were able to conduct these raids, and they had a very significant effect."429 General Brims made it clear he wanted some op- erations to occur simultaneously even though the focus of main effort would shift. Initially it would be on 7ArmoredBrigade and Az Zubayr. After Az Zubayr was determined to have fallen on 4 April (there was of course no formal surrender ceremony) the lighter 3 Commando Brigade took over in Az Zubayr and 7Armoredmoved on to augment the ef- fort against Basrah, which remained a division-level operation. Resistance was becoming progressively lighter, while the population seemed to become more welcoming of the British.430 As time went on and the British became more successful, they received more information from the citizens of Basrah. On 5 April they received a tip about the whereabouts of Chem- ical Ali, and the Coalition launched a smart bomb at- tack on the building where he was believed to be hiding. Although unsuccessful, it was believed to have been successful at the time and, at the least, a potent demonstration of Coalition power for all on the Iraqi side to see. Chemical Ali was not in fact cap- tured until the summer. 431 Bynow the U.S. Army and Marines were launch- ing probes into Baghdad, and there was little chance that anything that happened in Basrah could disrupt operations in the north. The most recent raids having been deemed "very successful," General Brims or- dered his division to execute "Operation Sinbad," the final push against Basrah, which was to come from a number of directions. It met with "a minimum of re- sistance from individuals with small arms" who were --- Page 5 --- A Marriage of Convenience129 apparently either Ba'athist Party members or Feday- een.432 One objective after another, the sewage plant, the party headquarters, the governor's palace, fell without heavy fighting, something of which Brims was justifiably proud. Each success created the next opportunity, which Brims exploited; he commented later that his intent was to seek the right opportunity to execute each phase of the plan. By twilight on 6 April, most of Basrah was in Coalition hands, if not secure.433 Murray and Scales recount a story about the next day that speaks volumes about the British Army's work in Iraq. On 7 April, the division committed paratroopers to the "old town" quarter of Basrah to finish off any lingering resistance. But the paratroop- ers found there was little for them to do and began to withdraw: "As the paras withdraw, Shia crowds began throwing rocks at British tanks and armored personnel carriers. One of the battle group com- manders immediately sensed what was happening. He ordered his ... crews,as well as the infantry, to get Out of their vehicles, take off their helmets, stow most of their weapons, and walk out into the agitated crowd. Immediately the rock throwing ended and members of the crowd again smiled and clapped hands for the British troops."434 This remarkable story, which begins by reflecting Shia fears of abandonment by the Coalition, conveys something of the British sense for how to handle the transition to Phase IV, post combat operations. With his experience in Northern Ireland and the Balkans, the average British soldier may be one of the world's foremost experts on the three-block war. He could fight a conventional battle, defend himself against a guerrilla or paramilitary threat, and conduct human- itarian operations. He excelled at most of these tasks in southeastern Iraq. As early as 1 April, in Az Zubayr, British soldiers started to shed their helmets and pa- trol in berets. In Az Zubayr, Basrah, and, later, in According to Murray and Scales, The Iraq War, "the initial plan of attack was to punch deep into the city and pull back out at night. [But] the operation on this 'terribly long day' was going so suc- cessfully that Major General Brims decided to finish off the Iraqis with a final stroke." To similar effect, the British liaison officer to I MEF, Maj Simon Plummer, stated that what started out as a probe became a four-pronged, final assault when it became clear there was only minimal Iraqi resistance. While both sources are certainly consistent with the British practice of exploiting opportunities, as opposed to "fighting the plan," the firsthand sources suggest a slightly more deliberate, planned approach. As Gen Brims com- mented on 10 May, the division had developed a plan and waited for the right opportunity to execute it, as opposed to simply re- acting to events. (Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p.151; Sudarsan Raghavan, "British Take Most of Basra," MiamiHerald.com, 6Apr03; MajGen Robin V. Brims intvw, 10May03 [MCHC, Quantico, VA]) Photo courtesy of Field History Branch As British troops, supported by tanks and armored personnel carriers, moved into Basrah, they encoun- tered minimum resistance and the city fell without heavy fighting or loss of 4fe. Maysan province to the north, the same kind of bot- tom-up intelligence gathering that served the British well in combat was very useful in the transition pe- riod. Nevertheless, there was only so much this small force could do among a population of millions. Like their American counterparts, the British did not have a definitive plan for Phase IV other than to be ready to handle a humanitarian crisis which did not develop anywhere in Iraq, and to hand off to the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assis- tance, which had focused much of its planning to- ward the same end. The British government as a whole and the British military in particular were in step with the rest of the Coalition in assuming that "post conflict.., there might be humanitarian or en- vironmental disasters of various sorts, refugee flows, shortage of food...andthose kinds of issues... ORHAwas really designed, as far as we [British] could see, to prepare mainly for humanitarian is- sues."435 Another similarity was their response to the looting that occurred in their zone. Like the Amen- --- Page 6 --- 130Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond cans, the British expected there would be some resid- ual Iraqi police or army structure with which they could cooperate, and they had considered the possi- bility that there might be some looting, but they were taken aback by its scope and breadth.436 As in most other areas in Iraq, once the fighting stopped virtually all levels of Iraqi government in and around Basrah simply ceased to exist. The loot- ers stepped into the resulting power vacuum and went to work with a vengeance in southeast Iraq, "they ransacked schools, hospitals and took away things..beds,chairs, and so on, or they just wrecked things."437 The House of Commons Defence Committee judged that "the impact of this looting on the task of post-conflict reconstruction has been enormous," in terms of testing the goodwill of the people, making it difficult for them to return to work or school, get health care, or even accomplish the mundane tasks that local government performs for its citizens.438 They were not prepared to cope with it; even if they had had the will to do so, they clearly lacked the numbers and, except in a few dramatic cases, did not intervene. The I MEF situation report for 7 April contained the laconic comment about Basrah: "looting ongoing, looters are only engaged if looting arms depots."439 The committee concluded that the scale and shape of the force provided were A soldier from the Royal Logistics Service Battalion, 10th General Service Regiment, aids local Iraqis in the distribution of water. Elements of the battalion made daily water and food runs to Basrah and sur- rounding villages from the port of Umm Qasr. jccc 030415-D-1517P-002 best suited to achieving the Coalition's desired ef- fects in the combat phase, but not to carrying those effects through into the post conflict phase.440' In the spring of 2003, the situation in southeast Iraq did not seem as bad as the House of Commons and others would later say it had been. The forces on the ground were generally upbeat and believed they were making good progress. Examples from the division commander's diary include, on 9 April, the observation that "the mood in the city is still jubilant and...thebuses continue to run"; on 12 April the report that 16 Air Assault Brigade was able to pro- ceed north to Al An1arah in Maysan province for the relief in place with Task Force Tarawa without inci- dent; on 13 April the fact that "joint patrolling with the local police force commenced... inBasrah"; and the conclusion on 21 April that "the local population are becoming increasingly committed to policing themselves and preserving their own resources." Shortly thereafter, on 22 April the United Nations de- clared the British zone permissive, a few days before President Bush made his declaration that major com- bat operations had ended. For the British this was the end of the combat phase; parts of the division, to in- clude General Brims, made preparations to rotate home, with a sense of having accomplished their mission. One of this British general's last official acts be- fore leaving Iraq was to host a farewell reception for I MEF commanders and staff at his headquarters in Basrah International Airport on 10 May to celebrate not just success on the battlefield, but also the bond between the Marine and his division. Feelings that went beyond the usual routine expressions of offi- cial goodwill were on display. Senior Marines took the trouble to fly in from other parts of Iraq on KC- 130s and went into the reception area in the airport's "VIP" quarters, which were opulent beyond belief or good taste, with gilded trimmings, high ceilings, mar- ble floors, and thick carpets, but no working plumb- ing. Apart from the ultramodern Marine pattern desert digital utility uniforms, and the unusual British desert camouflage uniforms, it could have been a scene from the movie Patton, as white-coated stew- ards served gin and tonics to tired but happy officers who felt they had something to celebrate. The divi- sion band, very British and old-school, beat retreat as the sun went down, as if trying to close a chapter in history. This led into a somewhat philosophical discussion of whether the division's actions and effects desired by the division were really in sync. The point was that the division had won the war, but was anyone on the British side set up to win the peace? --- Page 7 --- Chapter 11 Postlude to Combat: Marines and Occupation of Iraq, 2003 Occupation was not a mission that Lieutenant General James T. Conway relished. He wanted his Marines to fight the war and then to "recock," to get ready for the next war. This was the pattern that came naturally to him and to many other Marines; the idea was to assault the beaches, seize the objec- tive, and then move on to prepare for the next as- sault, leaving the occupation duties to others. When he discussed the issue with a journalist before the war, General Conway enumerated some of the issues that an occupier would face in Iraq, including some no-win choices, such as whether to intervene when Iraqis turned on one another after Saddam's fall. He concluded: "If I had a vote, I'would say let us get [I MEFI Out of here." But he was quick to add that the Marines would probably have no choice but to in- volve themselves in the postwar occupation of Iraq in some form.44' There followed the decision for I MEF's future Op- erations and plans officers to think about Phase IV and to draft an operations plan, even before the shooting war started. One of their starting points was liaison with Coalition Forces Land Component Com- mand (CFLCC) planners and their counterparts at 1 (UK) Armored Division. By design or default, Cent- Corn had left much of the responsibility for Phase IV planning to CFLCC, a dramatic change from its ap- proach to Phases I-Ill. The I Marine Expeditionary Force turned to the British because they had some re- cent experience, as well as a useful staff study on the restoration of law and order after combat. The State Department's comprehensive 'Future of Iraq" study, which laid out many of the challenges the United States would face in Phase IV, was considered taboo for military planners, because it was not compatible with Pentagon policy-makers' vision of postwar Iraq. Retired US. Army LtGen Jay M. Garner head 0/the Office 0/Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance greets arriving delegates to the Iraqi Interim Authority Conference in Baghdad. The authority was to govern Iraq until formal elections could be held. JCCC 030428-F-5918G-016 --- Page 8 --- Coalition Forces Land Component Command also had a loosely defined relationship with a group known as Combined Joint Task Force IV (CJTF-IV), so poorly funded that its members had had to attend trade shows to obtain office supplies, and with what was, in effect, CJTF-IV's successor organization, the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance. Both organizations were more or less under the tactical control of Lieutenant General David D. McKiernan, but it was no secret that office's chief, retired Lieu- tenant General Jay M. Garner, had direct lines of his own to the Pentagon.442* Coalition Forces Land Component Command came to assign nine governates (roughly equivalent to provinces) in southern Iraq to I MEF, covering a territory three times the size of Virginia with a popu- lation of 9 to 10 million people, and eventually is- sued a formal plan known as "Eclipse II" to guide its subordinates in Phase IV. ("Eclipse I" had been the plan for the occupation of Germany after World War II.) Land Component Command focused on security and emergency repairs to the infrastructure. The as- sumption was that parts of the Iraqi government would still be in working order when the shooting Gen Tommy Franks wrote that he left it to the Pentagon to plan and run post combat operations and noted that Office of Recon- struction and Humanitarian Assistance lacked the resources it needed to do its job. Franks' decision was later criticized. (Franks, American Soldier, pp. 441, 524, 526) stopped, able to maintain the infrastructure and that the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian As- sistance would be able to step in to take on many tasks, especially those dealing with humanitarian as- sistance. As General McKierrian's special assistant, Terry Moran, commented, CFLCC planned to "lever- age the Iraqi Army and. ..the[Iraqi] bureaucracy."'3 The Pentagon's original assumption was that even re- construction and humanitarian assistanceoffice would not have to conduct operations for more than a few months in Iraq, and that after a relatively brief occupation the Coalition could turn the country over to an Iraqi government. Within the framework of Eclipse II,I MEF had a considerable amount of leeway, and its planners de- veloped their own approach to the matter. First they did an "intelligence preparation of the battlefield," looking at the tribes in the various regions, their in- frastructure, and the various threats Marines were likely to face. They came up with two assumptions: that the first 6to12 weeks would be critical, this was when precedents would be set, and that it was im- portant not to try to do too much. The Marines had to keep from involving themselves too deeply in local affairs and to let the Iraqis solve as many of their own problems as they could. One of the future operations officers, Lieutenant Colonel Brian K. Mc- Crary, remembered the many and varied unknowns that he and his counterparts discussed: how to vet 132Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond DvIc I)F-S1)-05-04667 US. Navy UT1ChyneGreek, left, from Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 7, US. Army LtCol Matthew Gap- inski, of the 358th Civil Affairs Battalion, and Maj Robert V. Cart-, Civil Affairs team leader with the 15th Ma- rine Ez-peditionary Unit, assess damage to the water treatment facility located at An Nasiriyah, Iraq. --- Page 9 --- Postlude to Combat133 Photo courtesy of CFLCC BGen Richard F. Natonski, commanding general of Task Force Tarawa, examines an Al Samut missile that was found at the Amara Soccer Stadium. and pay local police; how to provide routine munic- ipal services (power and water); how to find, secure, and exploit suspected weapons of mass destruction sites; how to secure the many weapons caches from looting; how to secure and process mass grave sites of victims of the regime; even how to run prisons.444 This list did not include searching for Saddam Hus- sein and his sons, along with other prominent mem- bers of the regime; such high-priority tasks were taken for granted. The interim result of the planners' work was a scheme for dividing the various responsibilities among the 1st Marine Division, Task Force Tarawa, and the British division, which declared it did not need much U.S. assistance with Phase IV. During a briefing to General Conway in early March, the plan- ners provided him with options for "transitioning the force" and "enabling" the subordinate commands, es- pecially by way of groups that would be known as "governate support teams," small teams of experts that could deploy to a locality. As plans officer, Lieu- tenant Colonel George W. Smith, remembered think- ing, it was a good beginning; I MEF had defined the problem. But, he felt, the planners had only been able to point in the general direction of a solution hut not to lay one out in detail.445 General Conway announced on 15 April that it would soon take up its postwar stance in southern Iraq. The announcement contained the Marines' trademark tinge of remorse about even having to conduct Phase IV operations. Lieutenant Colonel Smith, who doubled as the I MEF spokesman, ex- plained to the press: "It is a tremendous responsibil- ity and it's very complex. We focus the majority of our efforts on war-fighting. That is what we do. And so post-hostilities introduce a whole new spectrum of challenges.... Wesee that [fighting remnants of the Fedayeen]...asthe number one threat.... We are going to aggressively hunt these guys down and destroy them."446 The next day, General Franks convened a meeting of his senior commanders at Saddam Hussein's Abu Ghraib Palace in Baghdad, "an extravagant amalgam of marble, tile, gold fittings and massive chandeliers, all surrounded by an azure moat," to seal the Coali- tion's victory over the dictator and to ratify the plans for securing the country.447 The Marine expeditionary force apparently held its commander's conference on Phase IV on the same day, and division followed suit shortly thereafter.448 With input from the Army's 358th Civil Affairs Brigade, which remained a welcome adjunct to the Marines during the occupation phase, I MEF pub- lished its order for Phase IV four days later. The plan- ners' assumptions and the Marines' preference for keeping the occupation short and looking to the fu- ture after leaving Iraq, are clear from the text: On order, I MEF transitions to security/stability operations—establishes military authority, de- feats remaining Iraqi combatants, maintains Iraqiterritorialintegrity,secures WMD [weapons of mass destruction] in sectors, and supports humanitarian assistance [and] the restoration of Iraqi civilian administration/in- frastructure JOT [in order to]...enablea rapid transition to follow-on Coalition forces... Aguiding constant, to "enable," will be the basis for all that we do. We must enable IOs/NGOs [international organizations/nongovernmental organizations] and follow-on Coalition partners to support the Iraqi people.... Wemust en- able the Iraqi people to support and govern --- Page 10 --- themselves....Ouroverarching focus will be establishment of a secure environment as we disarm remaining Iraqi forces,. .[re-create] local police forces...anddevelop..[asmall new] Iraqi military. We must clearly communicate to the Iraqi peo- ple the temporary nature of our mission and our desire to quickly transition to Iraqi self-de- termination. ..Whileaccomplishing..Phase IV, I MEF must also look "deep" toward the re- quirement of reconstitution, regeneration and redeployment [of the forcel.449* As planned, there had been a blurred transition to Phase IV. Task Force Tarawa and the British and American divisions were conducting Phase IV oper- ations before the force publisheditsorder,in Nasiriyah, Basrah, Baghdad, and many localities in "I MEF Fires helped to prepare the order; once the need for plan- ning deep fires had passed, both I MEF and CFLCC used their skills as planners of "effects-based operations" for planning and assess- ing Phase IV operations. between. This was partly by design, and partly the re- sult of chance. The rolling transition from Phase III to Phase IV was expected, but the speed and sudden- ness of the regime's collapse had been breathtaking. The shift was perhaps clearest for the wing. From one day to the next, without a great deal of warning, the kill boxes (the targeting control measure in the air war) were simply "closed." This apparently hap- pened on 11 April. There would still be calls for air support of various sorts, but it would no longer he a routine occurrence, and the wing could start thinking about drawing down in theater. On the ground, the violence also tapered off throughout the country, es- pecially in the Marine area of operations in southern Iraq, although the change for an infantryman or the driver of a light armored vehicle was a little less dra- matic. He still went out Ofl patrol, with his weapons loaded, and had to be prepared for a fight at any time.45° While the British division ran its own occupation, with some success, by all accounts, General James Mattis' division set the pace for the occupation in the Marine governates. He already had a distinct vision 134Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond jccc 030511-M-9792P-018 LtCol Daniel O'Donohue, commanding 2d Battalion, 5th Marines, speaks with local officials of An Samawah about what can be provided to rebuild the town. --- Page 11 --- Postlude to Combat 135 I MEF and the Law of War: How Marines Treated Iraqis B efore I MEF crossed the line of departure into Iraq on 20 March, every Marine received clear guidance: the enemy was the Iraqi regime, not the Iraqi people. Starting with General Conway, com­ manders went to considerable lengths to disseminate, down to the frontline Marine, the rules of engagement and the CentCom mandate to limit collateral damage, along with their own views on avoiding "ttiumphal­ ism" or disrespect for the people and customs of Iraq. Marines were to be liberators, not conquerors, and they were to obey the Law of War. This was not an afterthought, an addendum to other kinds of tt-aining, but a theme that ran throughout the expeditionary force's preparations for war. It was especially true for 1st Maline Division, the major subordinate command most likely to encounter the enemy face-to-face.* The force's legal office spent the months before the war working up the rules of engagement and then preparing and disseminating presentations for the major subordinate commands. FollOWing I MEF's lead, General Mattis issued wlitten, detailed guidance on the Law of War on at least two occasions, in addi­ tion to continuously repeating and explaining the di­ vision's motto, "No better fliend, no worse enemy." In one prewar memorandum, he predicted that Marine "discipline will be severely tested by an unscrupu­ lously led enemy who is likely to commit Law of War violations," and went on to outline 11 corrunonsense Law of War "ptinciples."**To the same effect, in late 2002 as he sensed the approach of war, he urged his commanders to prepare their Marines for the proba­ bility of asymmettic attacks and, at the same time, re­ minded them that "both decisive force and chivalry will be clitical to freeing Iraq."*** To drive the message home, General Mattishad his staffjudge advocate, Lieutenant Colonel]ohn R. Ewers, and his deputy, MajorJoseph A. Lore,deliver classeson the Law of War and Rules of Engagement to division units both before and duting the deployment; the gen­ eral wanted the message to come from an independ­ ent expert on the subject, not the unit commander. Mattis went so far as to have Ewers create a team to travel around the battlefield and investigate allegations of wrongdoing before the smoke had cleared. The in­ vestigation involved a report that a media vehicle had been hit by fire from the 1st Tank Battalion. Riding in a soft-skinned humvee, Ewers was doing just that when he was wounded on 23 March 2003 near- the town of A:z. Zubayr in southeastern Iraq. **** It is fair to ask whether the Marines followed this guidance before and after combat. At this stage, the evidence, recorded in situation reports and through contact with Marine lawyers, is lar-gelyanecdotal and may never progress much beyond that. It appears that by and large most Marines did as they were told, sometimes even going the extra mile for Iraqis, but some Marines occasionally departed from the spirit or the letter of the law. Perhaps the best-known example of "triumphal­ ism," which was nipped in the bud, was the incident at Firdos Square in which Corporal Edward Chin placed an American flag over Saddam's statue, but quickly replaced it with an Iraqi flag and left it to the citizens of Baghdad to complete the work of de­ stroying that symbol of the regime. Other, less well­ known examples have to do with the care many Marines took not to kill civilians, even when there were legitimate targets nearby. In one case on 2 Aptil, which illustrates the dilerruuas that conscien­ tious Marines faced in Iraq, Major Peter S. Blake, an AV-8B Harrier pilot, waited for a gap in the civilian traffic,which had, maddeningly, continued to flow in and around the battlefield all over the country, be­ fore launching his attack against an Iraqi multiple rocket launcher with a "guided" bomb. Within the next few seconds, a civilian truck came into view, and Blake decided to "slew" (or misguide) the bomb into the Tigris River to save innocent lives. He waited again for a break in the traffic before launching a second, and final, attack. Even though at the last mo­ ment another civilian truck appeared, he felt this time he had no choice, since 5th Marines was almost literally around the comer. ***** There are numerous other such examples, like the one in early April when Marines held their fire until they knew whether an approaching school bus was filled with enemy fighters or innocent civilians, which turned out to be the case.****** In another, more personal example, on 29 March members of the 1st Force Service Support Group took the trouble to bury a two-year-old Iraqi boy who had stepped on a land­ mine and been evacuated to Charlie Surgical Sup­ port Company, Health Services Battalion, then in the vicinity of Jalibah, where doctors ttied in vain to save his life. The boy had come to the field hospital with­ out identification or relatives, and the Matines and sailors who were present decided to give him a proper Muslim butial. They researched the subject carefully, and then found three Muslims to perform the ceremony in the prescribed tradition, which in- --- Page 12 --- 136 Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond cluded wrapping the body in a shroud and placing it in a grave with the child's face toward Mecca. The chief of staff of the force service support group, Colonel Dan-ell L. Moore, took time out of his busy day to assist in the ceremony. This small act was one of decency, pure and simple; no journalists or anglY townspeople were present to demand that the Marines "do the right thing."******* On the other side of the ledger, a few sources record cases where Marines overstepped the bounds of fire discipline or military law. In December 2003, the Marine Corps Times repOlted on the case of eight Marines charged in the death of a 52-year-old Iraqi detainee who was found dead in his cell in An Nasiriyah in the spring of 2003. The charges included "willfullyfailing to properly safeguard the health" of those in custody, as well as assault and making false official statements.********According to the deputy staff judge advocate of 1st Marine Division, Major Lore, this was one of a handful of similar incidents that was investigated and resulted either in nonjudi­ cial punishment or cOUlt-maltial.In their book The March Up, Major General Ray L. Smith and Bing West tell a st01Y about the time when Brigadier General John F. Kelly, the assistant commander of 1st Marine Division, admonished an unnamed battalion com­ mander on 26 March for letting his troops needlessly shoot at approaching civilians. The Marines had a le­ gitimate concern about suicide bombers in civilian vehicles, but that did not mean every heedless civil­ ian who came within half a mile of a Marine position had to be stopped with deadly force. Although West and Smith go on to discuss their impression that most Marines agonized over the decision to fire or not to fire, two journalists who spent time with dif­ ferent units during the combat phase of the war, Evan Wright and Peter Maas, convey the impression that some young Marines were all too ready to fire at civilians, and that their officers and noncommis­ sioned officers did not always do a good job of re­ straining them. This was especially true after Marines learned about the fighting at An Nasiriyah, where the enemy had worn civilian clothes and Marine casual­ ties were heavy. At that point, the enemy for many, if not most, Marines became any Iraqi with a gun.********* It is important to note that at least five such cases resulted in some form of disciplinary proceedings against the perpetrators. According to Major Lore, these proceedings ran the gamut from nonjudicial punishment to general court-martial. With the pas­ sage of time, there will be more clarity on these events. As of this writing, even basic statistics are dif­ ficult to come by. The I MEF staff judge advocate's command chronology for the first half of 2003 states that during Phase III of Operation Iraqi Freedom its primary focus wasrepOlting and investigating viola­ tions of the laws of armed conflict. The same docu­ ment shows that the I MEF staff judge advocate was involved in some way in one general court-martial, eight special courts-mmtial, and one summary coult­ martial, but without delving into the individual cases it is difficult to interpret the significance of these sta­ tistics. The bottom line? The I MEF commander and his subordinates did the right thing. They told vutually evelYMarine what they expected, and they did so in some detail. During the war, the Marine leadership took measures to enforce the standards it had set. Most Marines appear to have met those standards, while a handful fell short and were disciplined when a case could be made against them. 'For basic data on I MEF-level staff judge advocates, see I MEF SJA ComdC, Jan-Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA). See also Gen Con­ way's talks on the rules of engagement in Chapter 3 and Col William D. Durrett inrvws, llFeb03, 9Jun03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). "MajGen James . Mattis, "Commanding General's Guidance on Law of War," u.d. (2002?)(Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). It is interesting to note that one of the six books on Gen Mattis' reading list for his subordinate com­ manders was Son Tbang: An Ame-rican War Crime, by Galy Solis, which was about how the 1st Marine Division handled a war crime in Vietnam. '''MajGen James N. Mattis, "Memorandum for All Command­ ers," 20Dec02 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan­ tico, VA). The division staff judge advocate, LtColJohn R. Ewers, remembers having "a number of conversations with both Gen Mattis and Gen Kelly [the assistant division commander] .. about law of war ... and the challenges posed in ... asym­ metric warfare with a foe who was expected to . . . break the rules." LtColJohn R. Ewers, e-mails to author, 6, 7Apr04 (Copies in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). .... Ibid.; Maj Joseph Lore, e-mails to author, 5Apr04 (Copies in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). •.... Maj Peter S. Blake inrvw, 15Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). ...... Col Randall W. Holm inrvw, 31May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). ·······Maj Melissa D. Kuo, "Field History Journal," entry for 29Mar03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). ..······Gidget Fuentes, "Hearing SCnItinizesReservists' Handling of Prisoners in Iraq," Marine Corps Times, Dec03, p. 10. ·········Evan Wright, "The Killer Elite," Rolling Stone, 13Jun03, 24Jul03; Peter Maas, "Good Kills," The New York Times Maga­ zine, 20Apr03. Wright's articles pull few punches and tell the StOlY of a slice of the war from the corporals and sergeants per­ spective. They were subsequently expanded into the book Generation Kill (New York, NY: Putnam, 2004), which, while it is well written, has had mixed reviews from Marines. --- Page 13 --- Postlude to Combat137 for the way he wanted to implement the force order. Like I MEF, 1st Marine Division would issue general guidelines. Each of its governates would be run by a reinforced infantry battalion. The reinforcements might consist of a governate support team, a psy- chological operations team, a human intelligence ex- ploitation team, civil affairs elements, and sometimes engineer or naval construction elements. The battal- ion commander would have a great deal of auton- omy, but given the small size of his force, he would have no choice but to rely heavily on the interna- tional and nongovernmental organizations as well as whatever Iraqis he could mobilize. Interestingly, he would work not for his regiment but for division it- self; General Mattis' plan was for the regimental staffs to focus on the retrograde and on preparations for the next contingency, the "recocking" that figured in so many plans and talks, This would enable him to satisfy the twin mandates in the I MEF order, not to mention the spirit of the order. It was a dramatic move. General Mattis began the occupation by sending about 15,000 of his 23,000 Marines home, along with all of his tanks and assault amphibious vehicles, his armored personnel carriers, but not his light armored vehicles, which remained very useful. This was one way to reinforce his mes- sage about how to occupy a country, both to his Marines and to the Iraqis. He still intended for the Marines to patrol on foot and for the two groups to become intimately familiar with each other, even to trust each other. But he did not want "a heavy boot print" or the "sense of oppression" that could come if "everywhere you looked you saw a Marine. If we needed more people...Iwanted to enlist the Iraqis [forl... ourcommon cause."45' The 1st Marine Division had three basic policies. The first was "Do no harm," expressed in the kind of Mattis aphorism that all Marines could understand: "If someone needs shooting, shoot him. If someone does not need shooting, protect him." The second was to win heart and minds through good works. The third and final was to be ready at all times to win the 10-second gunfight.452 The general's statements of policy branched into specific guidance. Because he wanted the Marines and the Iraqis to trust each other, he literally wanted them to look each other in Cpl Michael C. Brown of the 4th Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion patrols the streets of Al Kut with a member of the localpolice force. The purpose of the joint foot patrols was to let the residents see the Marines and police working together in order to put a stop to the looting after the previous government was abolished. Photo courtesy of CFLCC --- Page 14 --- 138Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond the eye; in fact, one of his directives was for Marines to remove their sunglasses when speaking to Iraqis. Another piece of guidance followed from his corn- monsense observation that the Iraqis would cooper- ate more readily if the Marines helped their children, and he sent units into the local schools to clean them up and get them running again. Again like the force, division began its work in each province with a survey, with a view to devel- oping a campaign plan tailored to the needs of each province. Generally speaking, the routine was simi- lar to the one that division had followed in Baghdad before I MEF had published its order for Phase IV. Reestablishing security was paramount. Marines themselves did some of that work, but wanted to vet and train Iraqi police to take over from them as quickly as possible. The Iraqis joined Marine-led pa- trols with a view to gradually switching roles. The division'svariouslocations included Al Muthanna (2d Battalion, 5th Marines); Karbala (3d Battalion, 7th Marines); Al Qadisiyah (3d Battalion, 5th Marines); An Najaf (1st Battalion, 7th Marines); and Babil (1st Battalion, 4th Marines). The provinces of Wasit and Dhi Qar were added when 2d Battal- ion, 25th Marines; 3d Battalion, 23d Marines; and the 4th Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion came over to division from Task Force Tarawa, which was rotating home at the end of May. The 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, was blessed with an unusual Iraqi partner who became the local police chief, Brigadier General Fuad Hani Fans. A wounded veteran of the Iran-Iraq War, he was said to be criti- cal of Saddam and appears to have been one of the many Iraqi soldiers who simply wrote their own travel orders when the war began. Fans moved him- self from Hillah, where he had been assigned, to Ad Diwaniyah, where his wife's family lived. When the postwar looting began, he organized Iraqi soldiers into guard forces and protected some of the facto- ries, ammunition supply points, and government buildings in the city until the U.S. Army appeared. He happily agreed to help rebuild the area and trans- ferred his loyalties to the Marines when they replaced the Army in Ad Diwaniyah.453 The experiences of the Weapons Company, 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, in Ad Diwaniyah in early May illustrate what it was like for junior Marines charged with policing a city. The company was quartered in town in a villa that had belonged to a recently de- parted strongman. Set in a large, pleasant, walled compound next to a stream and including a veg- etable garden and a more formal garden, the airy, two-story villa had been looted in early April, stripped even of doorframes and floor tiles. The Marines had to begin by cleaning it up and restoring it. The idea was to turn it into a police station, com- plete with armory and holding cells. Next the com- pany put out the word that it would be paying local policemen, which quickly attracted them to the small base and allowed the Marines to begin the process of vetting, organizing, training, and equipping them. In the words of one observer: This afternoon the Marines were going to pay the Iraqi [policemeni—and issue weapons. The Marines frisked the Iraqis as they came in [to the compound], confiscated (temporarily) their AK-47s (the small version with the folding stock...) butlet them keep their pistols if they were unloaded. Marines in HMMWVs over- watched the process and armed Marines stood near the Iraqis as they formed themselves up. There were traffic police—dressed in white, with [peaked] hats like those worn by police all over the world—and security police—dressed in green outfits with the [black] Iraqi berets—all worn in different styles from the pillbox (which looks ridiculous) to the usual Iraqi mushroom shape (which is not that snappy either). No one looked hungry—unlike some of the people on the streets. A couple of the. ..[policemen]bor- dered on obesity. There were a few officers among them—[men with more braid who looked like] they were used to being in charge and leading (manipulating?) others. I watched one of them work his wiles on one of the trans- lators used by the Marines. By and large,it seemed like a good-natured crowd. A few of them...[were]a little nervous as I took pho- tographs—but most smiled and waved at me.44 In the meantime Marines continued to patrol the streets, apprehend looters, and hold them for a day or two in a makeshift outdoor prison, performing var- ious kinds of less than pleasant tasks around the compound, such as filling sandbags or burning waste in the latrines. Whether the looters learned their les- son was doubtful. One of the looters claimed he was innocent because he had been hired to loot, saying the man the Marines should arrest was his employer. One thing the Marines learned was that no OflC wanted to be a policeman in Ad Diwaniyah without a weapon, no one seemed to like policemen, who bore the double stigma of having worked for the for- mer regime and now of collaborating with the occu- piers, and so they quickly decided to allow the Iraqis --- Page 15 --- Postlude to Combat139 Base802668A1 (R0067) 12-99 to carry sidearms and AK-47 rifles. While some Marines addressed security, others worked on the infrastructure. At the battalion com- mand post, located on the grounds of a modern but unfinished medical school campus, there was a thriv- ing Civil Affairs section and a chart showing the lines of operation, which included such entriesas "Water/Sewage, Electrical, Medical, Education and Law, Fire, Public Transportation, Food and Distribu- tion." An officer's name was written in next to each entry. For example, Second Lieutenant Glen J. Bayliff, whose main qualification for the ob was that he was --- Page 16 --- 140 Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond the logistics officer, was responsible for transporta­ tion, which meant conducting surveys, remaining abreast of developments, and helping to coordinate indigenous efforts with those of international or nOn­ governmental organizations. Sometimes Marine Re­ servists, described as the Corps' "hidden asset" by one grateful battalion commander, came to the res­ cue with their civilian skill sets as policemen, lawyers, or city managers. Many Marines found that neither the Office of Reconstmction and Humanitarian As­ sistance nor the organization that replaced it, the Coalition Provisional Authority, had enough re­ sources to weigh in at the day-to-day, working level. For the most part, they were left to their own de­ vices. 455 Some national events took place that did have repercussions on the local level. Before the war, Pres­ ident Bush is said to have approved a plan that would have put "several hundred thousand Iraqi sol­ diers On the U.S. payroll and kept them available" for various tasks from providing security to repairing roads. But in a surprise move on 23 May, Ambassa­ dor L. Paul Bremer, head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, issued a decree disbanding the army and canceling pensions. 456 Some three weeks later, on 15 June, CFLCC turned over responsibility for the occu­ pation of Iraq to V Corps, while keeping its respon­ sibilities for supporting the force. This was the last day of the amnesty period under the Coalition de­ cree, which limited the number and types of weapons Iraqis could possess. The predictable result of both policies was an upswing in violence against Coalition forces, especially in the area west of Bagh­ dad around Ar Ramadi and Fallujah, two names that would become all too familiar to Marines in 2004. This was not part of I MEF's area of operations, but it was contiguous to it. Army convoys traveling from Kuwait to Ar Ramadi and Fallujah had to pass through northern Babil Province, which did fall under I MEF. The Marines' future operations staff "began studying and planning to defeat this threat." The result was a plan to set up an armored task force to patrol the area. 457 Built around the Armored Reconnaissance Battal­ ion, under the spirited command of Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Pappas, the task force took the name "Scorpion" and was clearly undeterred either by the challenge or the marginal liVing conditions it faced. A visiting journalist, Pamela Hess of United Press International, captured the spirit of Camp Scor­ pion: Mad Max would turn up his nose .... There is nothing but garbage and dirt and sand as far as the eye can see. Marines live and sleep in the open air of a gravel parking lot, except for the few one-story concrete buildings that are air­ conditioned on the rare occasions the genera­ tors can be coaxed to work. They have no chow hall ... and until ... recently ... [sani­ tary] facilities were a plywood bench with four holes .... Powerful winds sweep the ground'l, kicking up massive dust clouds that coat every­ thing in dull brown powder several times a day. The Marine I n April and May 2003, there was almost universal praise for the young eoli ted Marines who served in Kuwait and Iraq. The hi torians who deployed from Washington, D.C., to the field to conduct in­ terviews during and after the war heard story after story praising the spirit, ingenuity, and "stick-to­ itiveness" of the individual Marine, and they often experienced it themselves. It was the small acts that stood out, whether it was the Marines who sensed, rightly, that spare parts would be in short supply up the road in Iraq and topped to strip them from wrecked vehicles as they moved north, or the am­ phibious assault vehicle mechanics who repaired vehicles while they were moving under tow, or the Marines performing the lonely work of unwinding the hose reel in the desert, or the determination "to get there" of the driver of a seven-ton truck making his way through the sand at night, or caring for chil­ dren under fire. Whatever his assigned task, each of these Marines wa al 0 prepared to fight as a rifle­ man, revalidating one of the basic tenets of the Ma­ rine credo. What truck many officers after the war was how well combat infantrymen adapted to the demands of occupation duty, SWitching from a "weapons free" to a "weapons tight" frame of mind. They marveled at the restraint that these young men and women were now howing. The praise for the enlisted Marine sometimes contrasted with what Marine officer aid about one another, with the friction that often come from having too many sen­ ior officers with trong personalities gathered in one command or staff. --- Page 17 --- Postlude to Combat 141 General Conway Sums Up D uring the turnover to the multinational divi­ ion at Camp Babylon on 3 eptember, Gen­ eral Conway summed up the past five months in a few words: "[A]s we headed south out of Baghdad for the e provinces, we did so with a certain amount of trepidation. Marines do not traditionally do nation-building or ecurity operations. We have no doctrine for it. We were not sure where the re­ sources would come from. And we were not sure how we would be received by the people of south­ ern Iraq, who had seen An1erican troop attack up through their governate .... [But] in some regards, "This is the best we have had it!" laughs Master Gunnery Sergeant Paul D. Clark from Austin, the battalion's operations chief,458 The Marines used their imagination to defeat the enemy. They adopted a Trojan-horse approach, dis­ guising their vehicles as Army supply trucks and then counter-ambushing the locals who had apparently been paid by Ba'athists to take potshots at the con­ voys. They experimented with various other ways to escOrt the convoys, training the Army truck drivers in convoy operations and molding Marines and sol­ diers into one team. Forced to seek cover some dis­ tance from the highway, the insurgents took to using increasingly sophisticated "improvised explosive de­ vices," the small but often deadly bombs that could be rigged to detonate when vehicles passed by. The 1st Marine Division resisted advice to reply to attacks with heavy firepower, which its leaders felt might be counterproductive. Instead they decided to go to the source, that is trying to neutralize the perpetrators be­ fore they struck. This they did by collecting intelli­ gence about them and conducting raids, often on the compounds of the relatively wealthy. It was possible to leverage the various civil affairs initiatives to get in­ formation; locals grateful for a month or two of elec­ tricity or clean water might give the Marines tips about potential insurgents, and the result might be a productive raid at dawn, a time chosen by the divi­ sion to minimize the risk of harm to bystanders. Suc­ cess reinforced success. When locals saw the Marines arrest and remove one perpetrator, other Iraqis were emboldened to pass on a tip that would lead to the next raid. Lieutenant Colonel Pappas commented that even if one of the attackers got away after an am­ bush, often the locals would approach his Marines a negative can become a positive. A lack of doc­ trine allowed us to pass some very simple rules to our Marines and soldiers. They were-treat others a you would like to be treated. Deal with the people with fairness and firmness and dignity. And among other things, we emphasized the children. They are the future of this country. It is hard to be angry with someone when he is doing good things for your children. "* *Sgt Colin Wyers, "I MEF Transfers Authority for Southern Iraq to Polish-led Division," dtd 3Sep03 (Story No. 200395144422 po ted on MarineLink). later on and tell them where to find him. 459 Colonel Pappas' intelligence officer, Major Steven B. Manber, added that even though the task force was rich in technical collection assets, 90 percent of its success­ ful operations stemmed from local contacts. 460 Similar approaches were applied to more exotic locales: guarding the border with Iran in desert forts that looked like the set for a modern-day movie about the French Foreign Legion; defusing tensions in the holy Shia cities of Najaf and Karbala; uncovering and processing mass graves that were filled with the victims of the Saddam regime; patrolling the border with Saudi Arabia. Looking for weapons of mass de­ struction remained high on the Marines' agenda, and on that of other Coalition forces. The results were as frustrating as they were unexpected. General Con­ way commented that "in terms of ... the weapons, we . . . certainly had our best guess . . . [based on what] the intelligence folks were giving us. We were simply wrong .... It remains a surprise to me now that we have not uncovered weapons .... It is not for lack of trying. We have been to virtually every am­ munition supply point between the Kuwaiti border and Baghdad, and they are simply not there."·61 By early summer, Babylon was the scene of turnover preparations. The location encompassed both the ancient city and the site of another sumptu­ ous modern palace built by Saddam, on an artificial hill, where Marines could camp out. There being lit­ tle electricity and no running water, but lots of big rooms with high ceilings and marble floors, it was a relatively cool and clean place to pitch a tent. There was a certain satisfaction to it; Marines were now in Saddam's bedroom and ballroom. Both force and di­ vision had their headquarters in Babylon, which was not far from CFLCC's forward headquarters in Bagh- --- Page 18 --- 142Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond DVIC DM-SD-05-11033 Marines of Company K, 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, carrying their M16A2 rifles and gear, board a KC-130 11cr- cules aircraft at Blair Field in Al Kut, Iraq, for the trip home. By November 2003, all Marines and every piece of their equipment had been withdrawn. dad. It was here that in late June they received the various parts of the Polish-led multinational division, which pitched their tents among the Marine units. There now began a process of turnovers, the first be- ginning in early July. Six more reliefs occurred in fairly rapid succession, not always smoothly. General Kelly reported that it was "an understatement to say that the multinational soldiers were shocked at the unexpected level of danger...in[their] zones," to say nothing of the Spartan living conditions and the 130-degree heat in midsummer, all of which the Marines sometimes seemed to revel in, even though there can be little doubt that many, if not most, were also ready to go home after months, and in a few cases two or three years, in theater.462 There has al- ways been a strange dynamic in Marine deployments. On the one hand, most Marines want very badly to march to the sound of the guns. No one wants to be left behind when the unit goes to war. But as soon as the fight is over, everyone wants to go home. With the exception of the city of An Najaf, General Conway was able to turn over responsibility for the zone to the commander of the multinational division in a ceremony at Babylon on 3 September and send his troops south. After the turnovers, there was a general sense of satisfaction among senior Marines with the force and division's accomplishments. Al- though some civilian experts noted persistent prob- lems, particularly unemployment and inability to communicate with Iraqis, there were some undeni- able statistics. For example, the number of attacks on convoys in northern Babil Province was dramatically "Najaf was the site of a powerful car bomb attack on 29 August. This postponed the turnover, as did a number of issues that the Spanish Brigade raised. The turnover finally occurred in early Oc- tober. Reflecting his general frustration with the process, one I MEF officer cracked that the turnover with the multinational division was like "stuffing cats into a seabag," while another found that many of the foreign soldiers seemed professional and ready to (It) their job. --- Page 19 --- lower, and there were no Marines killed in action during the occupation phase, although some were wounded and, tragically, others killed in various ac- cidents. General Mattis made the claim that since early summer the Iraqis had been "running the things that are most important to people. Are the street lights on? Is the neighborhood safe? These kinds of things are already in their hands with the Marines very much in the background."463 What was leftfor the dwindling number of Marines in Iraq and Kuwait was to complete the ret- rograde process. Through most of the summer, 1st Force Service Support Group Forward conducted re- deployment operations from Kuwait while exercising command and control over Combat Service Support Group 11, which continued to support division. Until mid-October, I MEF Rear was still at Camp Com- mando, and CFLCC continued to lend its resources to support the Marines. With the assistance of the 377th Theater Support Command, Marines went through washdown and the loading onto various kinds of shipping and aircraft. The two amphibious task forces had preceded them, both setting sail in late May with heavy loads of troops and equipment, each going in a different direction. (Amphibious Task Force West had taken the more exotic route, stop- ping for liberty in Australia on the way.) Before fly- ing home, other units left heavy equipment with the 1st Force Service Support Group's "Regeneration Control Element," which in turn consolidated its holdings for turn-in to the special purpose Marine air- ground task force. By 31 October, I MEF was com- pletely gone from theater.464 The Marine Logistics Command morphed into the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force under the new commanding general of 2d Force Service Support Group, Brigadier General Ronald S. Cole- man, who came to Kuwait in June to replace Brigadier General Michael R. Lehnert, who was bound for a new job at Southern Command. General Coleman took up residence in the bleak expanses of Tactical Assembly Area Fox. His original charter was to repatriate and repair the Maritime Prepositioning Force equipment that had been used in Iraq, and the plan was for him to get it done by the spring of 2004. (Maritime Prepositioning Force equipment was the Marine equipment that had been prepositioned on chartered ships that made up the maritime preposi- tioning force.) But Coleman found a way to get the job done much faster. One of the threshold issues was whether it made more sense to do the mainte- nance and repairs in Kuwait and then reload the shipping, or to ship the gear first to the United States and then have it repaired at home. Various factors, in- Postlude to Combat143 DVIC DM-SD-05-1 1370 A multi-national delegation, including LtGen James T Conway, second from right, and LtGen Ricardo S. Sanchez USA, third from left, Commandei Combined and Joint Task Force 7, participate in the relief-in-place ceremony at Camp Babylon, Iraq, as Marines assigned to IMarine Expeditionary Force relinquished author- ity to Polish-led Coalition forces. --- Page 20 --- 144Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond cluding cost and temperatures so high that much of the time his Marines were literally unable to touch anything that was made of metal, made it advisable to choose the second option, and General Coleman was able to get every piece of Marine equipment out of Kuwait, and his Marines home, in time for the Ma- rine Corps Birthday in November.465 General Coleman left Tactical Assembly Area Fox more or less as it had been a year earlier. Now it was almost as if the Marines had never passed through Kuwait on their way to Iraq. But there were already inklings that they would return to theater. After his work was done, General Coleman remem- bered a meeting with General Mattis in the summer of 2003. The division commander was concerned about the gear that was now in the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force's charge, because he thought he would need itagain shortly.466 lie seemed to know there would not be much rest for his Marines. --- Page 21 --- Chapter 1 Notes 1. Col John A. Tempone, e-mail to author, 16Jan04 (Reynolds Working Papers, Marine Corps Historical Center [MCHCI, Quantico, VA). 2. See, for example, Jay E. Hines, "Operation En- during Freedom," 21st Century Defense: US. Joint Command (Clearwater, FL: Belmont International, 2002), pp. 38-46. This is an excellent overview of the operation from the CentCom point of view by that command's historian. 3. For a discussion of the historical context, see Williamson Murray and MajGen Robert H. Scales, Jr., The Iraq War (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003), pp. 48-59. 4. BGen Christian B. Cowdrey intvw, 26Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). For a snapshot of Marine op- erations on and after 11 September, see U.S. Marine Corps, Operation Enduring Freedom Combat Assess- ment Team Summary Report (Quantico, VA: Marine Corps Combat Development Command, 2003), pp. 47-50, hereafter MCCDC, OEF Summary Report. This report, by Marines assigned to MCCDC's Studies and Analysis Division, is a very useful all-around source, as are the thousands of documents and interviews that they collected. 5. Gen James L. Jones, Jr. intvw, 14Jun04 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 6. There are numerous sources on the history of C/JTF-CM. The Cowdrey interview is a good first- hand description of the first few months of its exis- tence. C/JTF-CM also filed an excellent set of command chronologies. 7. Task Force 58 ComdCs, 27Oct01, 26Feb02 (GRC, Quantico, VA), p. 4; hereafter TF 58 ComdC. Al- though it contains some idiosyncrasies, this is an un- usually well-written command chronology and gives the reader an excellent picture of Marine Corps op- erations against the Taliban. 8. MajGen James M. Mattis, "The Professional Edge," Marine Corps Gazette, Feb04, p. 19; Bruce Catton, Grant Takes Command (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, 1969). 9. See, for example, Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 1 16f. 10. MCCDC, OEF Summary Report, p. 62. 11. TF 58 ComdC, p. 14. 12. Ibid., p. 9. 13. Ibid., p. 10. 14. Ibid., pp. 9-16. 15. Ibid. 16. LtCoI Frank G. Hoffman, USMCR, "The U.S. Ma- rine Corps in Review," U.S. Naval Institute Proceed- ings, May02,p.84.Other articles about this operation include BGen Michael E. Ennis, "A New Operating Environment," Marine Corps Gazette, Aug02, p. 46f, and Capt Jay M. Holtermann, "The 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit's Seizure of Camp Rhino," Marine Corps Gazette, Jun02, pp. 41-43. 17. BGen James N. Mattis intvw, 20Jan02 (Naval His- torical Center, Washington, DC); hereafter Mattis intvw no. 1. For background, see U.S. Marine Corps, "Expeditionary Maneuver Warfare," Marine Corps Gazette, Feb02, pp. A-i through A-b. "Seabasing enables forces to move directly from ship to objec- tives deep inland and represents a significant ad- vancefromtraditional,phasedamphibious operations." 18. Col Timothy C. Wells intvw, 27Feb03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). See also MarForPac ComdC, Jul- Dec01 (GRC, Quantico, VA). 19. MarForPac ComdC, Jul-DecOl (GRC, Quantico, VA). 20. LtGen Earl B. Hailston intvw, 19May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Wells intvw. 21. Col Nicholas E. Reynolds, "OIF Field History Journal," 2003 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), entry for 10Apr03; hereafter Reynolds, Journal. 22. TF 58 ComdC, p. 32. 23. For a discussion of this topic, see Charles J. Quil- ter II,With the I Marine Expeditionary Force in Desert Shield and Desert Storm (Washington, D.C.: History and Museums Division, 1993), pp. 8-11. See, also Jones intvw. 24. Zinni intvw. 25. Col Stephen W. Baird intvw, 31May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 26. See LtCol Jeffrey Acosta, "OIF Field History Jour- nal," 2003 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), entry for 31Mar03, hereafter Acosta, Journal. See also Wells and Hail- ston intvws. 27. LtGen James 1. Conway intvw, 7Dec03 (MCHC, --- Page 22 --- 146Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Quantico, VA). 28. See, for example, MCCDC, OEF Summary Report, p. 63. Such comments were made to the authorby various Marines during a visit to Tampa in December 2001. 29. MCCDC, OEF Summary Report, p. 57. 30. See, for example, MCCDC, OEF Summary Report, pp. 9-15, which argues that the operation did not fully validate expeditionary maneuver warfare but showed the utility of some of its tenets. 31. LtGen David D. McKiernan intvw, 30Jun03 (U.S. Army Center of Military History, Washington, D.C.), hereafter McKiernan intvw no. 4. To cite other ex- amples: Gen Hailston also commented on his good relations with Gen Franks; Gen Mattis repeatedly stressed the value of establishing good relations with neighboring commanders of all Services, both joint and combined. (Hailston intvw; Mattis intvw no. 1; TF 58 ComdC) See also Reynolds, Journal, entry for 10Nov03, describing a talk by Williamson Murray and MajGen Robert H. Scales, Jr., during which they contrasted the personalities, and their relationships, in the two wars. 32. See, for example, Zinni intvw. 33. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 47f. 34. See, for example, Bing West and MajGen Ray L. Smith, USMC (Ret.), The March U (New York, NY: Putnam, 2003), p. 221, hereafter West and Smith, March U. The current edition of FMFM 1 is known as MCDP 1. The original edition appeared in 1989. 35. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 36. Ibid. Franks described himself as a maverick. Tommy Franks, American Soldier (New York, NY: Regan Books, 2004), p. 367. For a critical appraisal of Gen Franks, see Andrew Bacevich, "A Modern Major General," New Left Review, Sept-OctO4, pp. 123-134. 37. Zinni intvw. 38. Acosta, Journal. 39. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 60. 40. Kevin Peraino, "Low-Key Leader/LtGen David McKiernan Is the Soft-spoken Soldier with the Hard Job of Commanding U.S. Ground Forces in Iraq," Newsweek web exclusive, 19Mar03. 41. Conway intvw. 42. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 65. 43. See, for example, Col Christopher G. Wright intvw, 4Dec03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 44. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 10May03. 45. Conway intvw. 46. Maj Theodore R. McKeldin, III, "OIF Field History Journal," 2003, entry for 2 April 2003; hereafter McK- eldin, Journal. Chapter 2 47.For a history of the war based largely on report- ing by the New York Times and including coverage of political events, see, for example, Todd S. Purdum, A Time of Our Choosing: America's War in Iraq (New York, NY: Henry Holt, 2003), p. 20. Two other, somewhat more controversial books that cover the political background to the war are Bob Woodward, Plan of Attack (New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, 2004) and Richard A. Clarke, Against All Enemies (New York, NY: Free Press, 2004). Franks, Ameri- can Soldier, esp. p. 315 and pp. 328-33, describes the initial taskings and briefings in late 2001. 48. Gregory Fontenot, E. J. Degen, and David Tohn, On Point: The US. Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom (Fort Leavenworth, KS: Combat Studies Institute Press, 2004), p. 31. This is a very useful and detailed early work on the conflict. On directives in 2001 to prepare for a possible war with Iraq, see, for exam- ple, Purdum, Time of Our Choosing, p. 20. For the point of view of a Marine planner at Headquarters Marine Corps in 2001, see, for example, LtCol James L. Western intvw, 30Dec03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Western intvw. 49. I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO2 (GRC, Quantico, VA), Sec 2, p. 16. 50. Ibid., pp. 28-29, 59. 51. LtCol George W. Smith, Jr. intvw, 8Jun04 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter G.W. Smith intvw no. 2. For general background on the planning process, see also Col Christopher J. Gunther intvw, 24-25May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), and LtCol Gregory M. Dou- quet, 29Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). Although he did not become the I MEF planner until the middle of 2002, Col Gunther describes how the planning for Iraq evolved from February 2002 onward. LtCol Douquet was the senior 3d MAW planner, serving with I MEF future operations from February 2002 to April 2003. 52. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 92. 53. Zinni intvw. 54. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 54. 55. Ibid. 56. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. Franks, American Sol- dier, pp. 382-43 1, describes the evolution of the var- ious plans in 2002 from his point of view, especially his broad-brush briefings to the president and the secretary of defense, which led to general guidance for the planners. 57. LtCol G.W. Smith intvw, 18Mar03 (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA.), hereafter G. W. Smith intvw no. 1. 58. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. --- Page 23 --- Notes147 59. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 1Jul04, based on a conversation with former PP&O current operations officer Col Ronald J. Johnson. 60. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 61. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; I MEF ComdC, Jan-JulO2 (GRC, Quantico, VA). 62. MCCDC, OFF Summary Report, p. 54; Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 42. 63. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 64. Conway intvw; Hailston intvw. 65. See, for example, MajGen Robert R. Blackman intvw, 31May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. On Gen McKiernan's approach to joint operations from a Marine point of view, see Col Marc A. Workman intvw, 30Nov02 (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 66. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 67. See, for example, the comment on this subject in Zinni intvw. 68. Fontenot, et a!., On Point, p. 45. This conclusion assumes that the subordinate commands had the requisite clearances to access highly classified files. 69. Tom Clancy with Gen Anthony Zinni (Ret) and Tony Koltz, Battle Ready (New York, NY: G. P. Put- nam's Sons, 2004), p. 315. 70. Zinni intvw. 71.MCCDC, Operation Iraqi Freedom Combat As- sessment Team Summary Report, spring 2004 (Stud- ies and Analysis Division, Working Draft), p. 40, hereafter MCCDC, OIF Summary Report. 72. There was a complicated set of agreements about this, which are examined in detail in LtCol LeRoy D. Stearns, The 3d Marine Aircraft Wing in Desert Shield and Desert Storm (Washington, D.C.: Marine Corps History and Museums Division, 1999), pp. 45- 49, hereafter Stearns, 3d Marine Aircraft Wing. See also Michael R. Gordon and Gen Bernard E. Trainor, The Generals' War (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, 1995), p. 311. This is a basic source on Desert Shield/Desert Storm. 73. MajGen James F. Amos intvw, 16May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Hailston intvw. 74. Stearns, 3dMarineAircraft Wing, p. 47. 75. See G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; Reynolds, Journal, entry for 29Jul03, describing a postwar briefing by the general officers who commanded I MEF's major subordinate commands. Capt Ryan M. Walker intvw, 22Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). By and large, once the war started, the system worked. See MCCDC, OIF Summary Report, p. 40. 76. Fontenot, et al., On Point, p 13. 77. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 154-183. For a comment on Iraqi exiles in general, see, for exam- ple, Clancy, Battle Ready, p. 345. 78. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 79. The issue of synchronicity is addressed in, among other sources, LtCol Richard T. Johnson intvw, 26Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); McKeldin Journal, entry for 28Feb03; and LtCol Paul J. Kennedy intvw, 6Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). See, for example, G. W. Smith intvw no. 2, and Douquet intvw. 80. There are numerous sources on this topic. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2 contains details of meetings on the subject, including a meeting between Gens McKier- nan and Conway on 29 January 2003 when they dis- cussed, and agreed on, this subject. 81. Quoted in House of Commons Defence Com- mittee, Lessons of Iraq (London, UK: Stationery Of- fice, 2004), vol. 1, pp. 34-35. This is a useful source with many lengthy, and candid, quotations by British officers. It appears to be more candid than the Min- istry of Defence's "lessons learned" publications on the war. 82. Fontenot, et al. On Point, pp. 93-94; Terry Moran intvw, 23Aug03 (U.S. Army Center of Military His- tory, Washington, D.C.); Col Reed R. Bonadonna, "Notes from Address by LtGen Conway, CG I MEF to Officers of Task Force Tarawa," 1Mar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA); I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), "Fu- tOps" (Documents), "I MEF ROC Drill, 10Mar03." 83. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; see also Gunther intvw. 84. Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 74. 85. G. W. Smith intvw no. 1. 86. Maj Evan A. Huelfer intvw, 16Mar03 (U.S. Army Center of Military History, Washington, D.C.); G. W. Smith intvw no 2; Fontenot, et a!., On Point, p. 45. 87. On the neoconservative movement, see James Mann, Rise of the Vulcans: The History of Bush's War Cabinet (New York, NY: Viking, 2004). On some of the neoconservative plans that were presented to Franks, see Franks, American Soldier, p. 373. For a general source on the planning process, see Wood- ward, Plan of Attack. Although Woodward and Franks cover much of the same ground, Woodward describes a slightly different dynamic from Franks, suggesting that the Pentagon, and not CentCom, generally took the lead in proposing various plans. For a more critical view of the development of the administration's policy on Iraq, see W. Patrick Lang, "Drinking the Kool-Aid," Middle East Policy, summer 2004, pp. 39-60. 88. Although Franks said he had a productive rela- tionship with Donald Rumsfeld and liked working with the Secretary of Defense, he also expressed --- Page 24 --- 148Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond reservations about his "centralized management style." See Franks, American Soldier, pp. 313, 333, 362, 373, and 545. Col Kevin Benson, the senior CFLCC planner, reported similar frustrations with the Pentagon during the planning stage. Colonel Kevin Benson, "Brief at Naval War College," 25Aug04 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). See also Anthony H. Cordesman, The Iraq War. Strategy, Tactics, and MilitaryLessons(Wash- ington, D.C.: CSIS, 2003), p. 150, and questions about "alleged meddling...bythe Office of the Secretary of Defense—especially in the planning process" down to the CFLCC/MEF level, in U.S. Naval Institute, "Interview: LtGen James T. Conway, USMC," US. Naval Institute Proceedings (November 2003). Some have suggested that war planning for Iraq needs to be understood in the context of rela- tions between the secretary and the military starting in 2000. See, for example, Elaine M. Grossman, "To Understand Insurgency in Iraq: Read Something Old, Something New," Insider, 2Dec04, containing a com- ment by LtGen Gregory Newbold, who retired in 2002 from a senior position in the J-3 at the Penta- gon, that a cautionary tale about the Pentagon dur- ing the Vietnam years "contains remarkable parallels with today's environment." The book is H. R. Mc- Master, Dereliction of Duty (New York, NY: Harper Collins, 1997). It will be a number of years before the sources are available for anyone to analyze the Iraq War in the same way. 89. Zinni intvw; Jones intvw. 90. See, for example, LtCol Ronald J. Brown, With Marines in Operation Provide Comfort: Humanitar- ian Operations in Northern Iraq (Washington, D.C.: History and Museums Division, 1995); Gordon and Trainor, The Generals' War, p. 459. 91. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; Huelfer intvw; Moran intvw. Moran, a retired Army lieutenant colonel, was General McKiernan's special assistant, privy to a great deal of information about the plan for the war. 92. Huelfer intvw; Benson, "Brief at Naval War Col- lege." Benson and Huelfer cover much the same ground. 93. Huelfer intvw. 94. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 95. There is an excellent discussion of this topic in Fontenot, et a!., On Point, pp. 44-47. Once again, Huelfer and Smith also offer excellent descriptions of the process from the planner's perspective. Huelfer intvw; G. W. Smith intvws nos. 1 and 2. 96. Huelfer intvw; G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 97. Huelfer intvw. 98. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 99. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 100. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; intvw with LtCol Yanni Marok, Royal Marines, 14Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). Marok joined I MEF future operations staff in September and developed an excellent relationship with other planners, including Smith. His interview is particularly useful for the data it contains Ofl Al Faw. 101. Marok intvw. This occurred in the 12-13 I)e- cember time frame at a conference in Bahrain. Cc)! Gunther was acting with the knowledge and ap- proval of his superiors. 102. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2: Franks, American Sol- dier, p. 396, contains his schematic of the various lines of operation. 103. I MEF ComdC, Jul-DecO2 (GRC, Quantico, VA); Col George F. Mi!burn intvw, 1Mar03 (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA); P. J. Kennedy intvw. 104. Reynolds Journal, entry for 19Jul04, quoting from journal kept by one of the officers present. 105. Reynolds Journal, entry for 18Jul04. 106. LtGen David D. McKiernan intvw, 20Jun03 (U.S. Army Center of Military History, Washington, I).C.), hereafter McKiernan intvw no. 3. See also Blackman intvw, Workman intvw, and the television docu- mentary about CFLCC by CNN Presents, "Inside the War Room" (Atlanta, GA: CNN, 2003), hereafter CNN, "The War Room." 107. There are numerous sources about this ap- proach, defined as "a methodology for planning, ex- ecuting, and assessing operations...toattain the effects required to achieve desired ...outcomes." Edward C. Mann Ill, Gary Endersby, Thomas R. Searle, Thinking Effects: Effects-Based Methodology forJoint Operations (Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University Press, 2002), p. 2. 108. Col Gregory J. Plush intvw, 15Apr03 (MCIIC, Quantico, VA); Workman intvw. 109. Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 43; Blackman intvw; CNN, "The War Room." 110. Col Patrick J. Burger intvw, 16Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). There were approximately 12 Marine liaison officers at CFLCC. 111. See MCCDC, OEF Summary Report, p. 11, re- porting its finding that providing adequate numbers of staff officers for such components was a challenge for the Marine Corps. 112. Blackman intvw. See also Workman and Cow- drey intvws. BGen Cowdrey was one of the "Janu- ary" augmentees. In February 2003 there were some 1,300 members of the CFFLC staff. LtCol Terrance J. Johns and Maj Robert F. McTague II intvw, 22Feb03 (CFLCC Military History Group intvw, 322-332). --- Page 25 --- Notes149 113. Huelfer intvw. 114. See, for example, Fontenot, et a!., On Point, p. 41. 115. Jones intvw. 116. Blackman intvw. This tracks with the comments by Gen McKiernan and Moran with respect to the plans that were under discussion in the fall of 2003, but diverges somewhat from two of the lead plan- ners' comments. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; R. T. John- son intvw; I MEF ComdC, Jul-Aug02 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2 narrative summaries for G-3 Future Oper- ations and G-5 Plans. For a more general discussion of planning issues at this time, see Cordesman, Iraq War, pp. 149-159. 117. LtGen David D. McKiernan intvw, 19Dec02 (U.S. Army Center of Military History, Washington, DC), hereafter McKiernan intvw no. 1. See also R. T. Johnson intvw. 118. Intvw with LtGen David D. McKiernan, 1May03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), hereafter McKiernan intvw no. 2. This was a group interview with officers representing both the Military History Group at Camp Doha and various Army lessons-learned initiatives. Much of the same ground is also covered in McKiernan intvw no. 1. 119. Huelfer intvw. 120. Moran intvw. 121. I MEF ComdC, Jan-Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA), "command element," p. 41; Blackman intvw. 122. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 1Jul04. 123. Zinni intvw. 124. I MEF ComdC, lJanO3-30Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA), Future Operations Folder, "Chg Ito I MEF OPLAN 1003V," 16Mar03. 125. McKiernan intvw no. 4; G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 126. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 127. Ibid. 128. BGen Richard F.Natonski intvw, 26Mar04 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Natonski intvw no. 2. 129. See, for example, Huelfer intvw. 130. McKiernan intvw no. 1. 131. Ibid. The phases are nicely laid out in Fontenot, et a!., On Point, p. xxiii. 132. G. W. Smith intvw no. 1; P. J. Kennedy intvw. The Conway quote is from a 7 August 2003 inter- view published in the U.S. Naval Institute Proceed- ings (November 2003), which also appeared on the internet at www.usni.org/proceedings/articles03. See also Reynolds Journal, entry for 1 July 2004. 133. LtCol Jim Hutton intvw, Royal Marines, 4May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 134. Col George F. Milburn intvw, 3Aug03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); hereafter Milburn intvw no. 2. This is another great topic for a paper, if not a disserta- tion. The researcher could compare Marine, Army, and British plans and orders in this conflict and con- sider questions like: Had the British adapted to the information age, or were they simply applying les- Sons long since learned? How has American plan- ning adapted to the information age? In a war of "shock and awe," when do planners reach the point of diminishing returns? 135. Rick Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers (New York, NY: Henry Holt, 2004), p. 26. This is, in my view, one of the best books about the war by an em- bedded journalist, or by anyone else. Atkinson does an excellent job of portraying the frame of mind of the staff of the 101st Airborne Division and of put- ting its accomplishments in context. 136. Bonadonna, "Notes from Address by LtGen Conway." 137. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 138. Huelfer intvw. 139. See, for example, Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers, p. 107. 140. McKiernan intvw no. 2, 1May03 (group inter- view at Camp Doha, KU, copy at MCHC, Washing- ton, DC). Fontenot, et al., On Point, pp. 99,102, offers a summary of the enemy order of battle as it appeared before the campaign. See alsoI MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), especially Future Operations folder containing "Chg 1 to MEF OPLAN 1003V," dated 16Mar03, and containing an assessment of enemy capabilities. 141. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 1Jul04. 142. MajGen James N. Mattis intvw, 23Jan04 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Wright intvw. 143. Bonadonna, "Notes from Address by LtGen Conway." 144. Steve Col, "Hussein Was Sure of Own Survival: Aide Says Confusion Reigned on Eve of War," The Washington Post, 3 Nov03, p. A-i. This would cer- tainly not have been out of character for Saddam Hussein, many of whose past decisions were not thought through, to put it mildly. See also Franks, American Soldier, p. 558, for a comment on the work of a Joint Forces Command lessons-learned team that debriefed Iraqi officers after the war. The team found that while some Iraqi units were well prepared, Iraqi command and control, especially at senior levels, was next to nonexistent. Finally, see various sources on a CIA report made public in 2004, including Douglas Jehl, "Inspector's Report Says Hussein Expected Guerrilla War," The New York --- Page 26 --- 150Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Times, 8Oct04, p. A-6. 145. These issues surfaced repeatedly in oral history interviews. See for example, Blackman intvw; Reynolds, Journal, entry for 1Jul04; G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; Zinni intvw; and Clancy, Battle Ready, pp. 19-20. Chapter3 146.Conway intvw. 147. Capt tara A. Bennett, et al., No Better Friend, No Worse Enemy (Camp Pendleton, CA: 1st Marine Division, 2004), pp. 6-8. This book has pictures and text about the division in Operation Iraqi Freedom and was distributed by the Marine Corps Associa- tion. 148. Wright intvw; Col John A. Toolan intvw, 10Dec03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 149. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-Ju103 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 3, p. 21. There are numerous other sources on the division's preparations for war, in- cluding Toolan intvw; Wright intvw; and Col Joseph F. Dunford intvw, 2May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 150. Jones intvw. 151. BGen Edward G. Usher III intvw, 19Mar03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Usher intvw no. 1; the Commanders and Staff of 1st FSSG, "Brute Force Logistics," Marine Corps Gazette, Aug03, pp. 34-39. A field historian was attached to 1st Force Service Support Group during Operation Iraqi Freedom. She was Maj Melissa D. Kuo, who is preparing a mono- graph on combat service support in OIF I.I am in- debted to her for reviewing my remarks on logistics and making suggestions. 152. Hailston intvw; Usher intvw no.1;LtCol Michael. D. Visconage, "OIF Field History Journal," 2003 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), entry for 15Mar03, hereafter Visconage, Journal; BGen Michael R. Lehn- ert intvw, 8May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). One of the Marine field historians assigned to cover OIF I, CWO-2 William E. Hutson, conducted numerous in- terviews at the Marine Logistics Command that are available at the MCHC. 153. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 29Jul03. This entry contains detailed notes on a set of briefings given by the OIF commanders, including Generals Con- way, Mattis, and Amos, at Quantico. The author worked for General Amos at The Basic School. 154. This is a topic that the U.S. Air Force has ex- plored over the years. See, for example, Robert P. Givens, Turning the Vertical Flank (Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University Press, 2002). Col Givens outlines the criteria for thinking of air as a maneuver force, able to exert influence over enemy units and terrain on its own. 155. These topics are addressed in two excellent in- terviews with the 3d MAW G-3, Col Jonathan G. Mi- clot, on 2OMarO3-l9AprO3 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 156. 3d MAW ComdC, Jan-JulO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, p. 6. 157. See ibid., and, for a discussion of FARPs, LtCol David P. Lobik intvw, 24Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 158. 3d MAW ComdC, Jan-Ju103 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, "G-5 Plans and Exercises." 159. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 29Jul03. 160. MCCDC, OIF Summaiy Report, p. 18. This is a quote from a video teleconference; members of the Combat Assessment Team routinely attended these VTCs and made shorthand notes. 161. R. T. Johnson intvw; I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, p. 6. 162. See, for example, MCCDC, OIF Summary Re- port, pp. 20-21. 163. LtCol James W. Western intvw, 20Dec03 (MCI IC, Quantico, VA). 164. Peraino, "Low-Key Leader." There are other rep- resentative discussions of this issue in Mattis intvw no. 1; Lehnert intvw; and Moran intvw. 165. 2d MEB ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 3, "Significant Events." 166. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 2, p. 28. 167. The offload took about 16 days, a few days less than the allotted time. MCCDC, OIF Summary Re- port, p. 55. 168. Ibid., p. 20. See also Milburn intvw no. 2 for comments by the I MEF G-5 on the process. 169. For a discussion of this topic, see Plush intvw. 170. Maj Grant A. Williams, "A Marine's Eye View of Kuwait," Milinet (an internet service provider that posted news about the military on the web), 27Feb03. This excerpt is from a report originally dated 19Feb03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 171. Peter Baker, "In War, Plans Yield to Improvisa- tion," The Washington Post, 24Mar03, p. A-16. 172. Ibid. 173. Col Steven A. Hummer intvw, 13Feb04 (MCI IC, Quantico, VA). See also McKeldin Journal, entry for 7Feb03. 174. BGen Cornell A. Wilson intvws, 6Mar03, 3Apr03, 17May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). MCIIC holds a number of other interviews on Consequence Management, along with the task force's command chronology. --- Page 27 --- Notes151 175. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 8Apr03. 176. Gen James N. Mattis, "Memorandum for All Commanders," 20Dec02 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 177. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 7Feb03. 178. For additional details see, I MEF ComdC, Jan- Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, "FutOps Narrative Summary"; McKeldin, Journal; CWO-2 William E. Hutson, "OIF Field History Journal," (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), entry for 4 Feb. 2003, hereafter 1-lutson, Journal. There is a discussion of this phase in the intvw of the I MEF's current operations officer, who pointed out all of the work involved in bringing the I MEF staff together and producing the plan. Col Dennis Judge intvws, 11Aug03 and 4Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Judge intvws no. 1 and no. 2. 179. I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), Future Operations Folder, "I MEF ROC Drill, 10 Mar 03"; McKeldin, Journal, entries for 27Feb03 and 10Mar03. For Task Force Tarawa, see Col Reed R. Bonadonna, "Field Historian Journal" (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), entries for 2 and 10Mar03, hereafter Bonadonna, Journal. This journal is very well written and gives the reader a good sense of what it was like to participate in OIF as a member of Task Force Tarawa. I recommend it highly both to the general reader and the reader who wants to learn more about Task Force Tarawa. In the run-up to combat operations, subordinate commanders down to the division level would use the terrain model at Doha again to brief General McKiernan and his staff on their plans. MajGen James D. Thurman intvw, 27May03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 180. Mattis intvw no. 1; Hutson Journal, entry for 27Feb03. See also lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, "Narrative Summary," chap 3. The division has written an unusually com- prehensive narrative summary from its point of view. 181. Bonadonna, Journal, entry for 1Mar03; Conway intvw. 182. Bonadonna, "Notes from Address by LtGen Conway." 183. Mark Mazetti, "Fighting Words: A Marine Com- mander Readies His Troops for Combat," U.S.News and World Report web exclusive, 17Mar03; McKeldin Journal, entry for 16Mar03. 184. Conway intvw; Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 65. 185. Conway intvw; Nick Parker, "Countdown to Conflict," The Mirror, 15Mar03, pp. 6-7; Vanessa Allen, "Great to Have You Aboard' U.S. General Tells Brits," The Press Association (web-based wire service), 14Mar03. 186. Hutson, Journal, entry for 27Feb03. 187, Bonadonna, Journal, entry for 27Feb03. 188. Bennett, et al. No Better Friend, p. 5. 189. Mattis intvw no. 1. 190. Visconage, Journal, entry for 4Mar03. 191. MajGen James F. Amos, e-mail to multiple ad- dressees, "Message from the Wing CG," 20Mar03 (Col Charles J. Quilter II CD-ROM, Reynolds Work- ing Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). See, for example, Bonadonna Journal, and Maj Melissa D. Kuo, "Field History Journal" (MCHC, Quantico, VA), entry for 18Mar03; hereafter Kuo, Journal. 192. Sarah Oliver, "Not the Beginning, It's the End— The Words of LtCol Tim Collins," Mail on Sunday, 16Mar03, pp. 6-7. 193. Representative of other articles in the British press about the affair are Jack Grimston and John El- liott, "First Picture of Man Who Denounced Tim Collins," Sunday Times (London), 25Ma03, p. 1; and "Col Tim: The Making of a Modern Hero," Inde- pendent on Sunday (London), 25May03, Features Section. Even though somewhat condescending to Americans and reservists, the last article is a thought- ful analysis of Collins' participation in the war, from his prewar speech through the investigation. 194. "The Smearing of Col Tim; The Eve of Battle Speech," Daily Mail (London), 22May03, p. 9. 195. See, for example, McKeldin, Journal, entries for 5-6MarO3, and Reynolds, Journal, entry for 1 July 2004, reporting on a talk with the G-3 of Task Force Tarawa. 196. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 18Mar03. Chapter 4 197. McKiernan intvw no. 1. 198. Bonadonna, "Notes from Address by LtGen Conway." 199. Ibid. 200. I MEF Sitrep 181800Z to 191759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 201. Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 93; I MEF Sitrep 171800Z to 181759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Work- ing Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA); McKeldin Journal, entry for 18 March 2003; I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), command element, sec 2, Cur- rent Operations Narrative. 202. See, for examples, Maj Phillip N. Frietze intvw, 14May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), and Maj Daniel E. Longwell intvw, 1May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), Future --- Page 28 --- 152Basrah,Baghdad and Beyond Operations, sec 2. 203. I MEF Sitrep 181800Z to 1981759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 204. I MEF Sitrep 191800Z to 201759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 205. See, for example, Kuo, Journal, entry for 20Mar03. 206. Col John C. Coleman intvw, 11Dec03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 207. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 20Mar03; Kuo, Journal, entry for 20Mar03. Another description of the day can be found in Peter Baker, "Overtaken by Events, the Battle Plans Are Tossed Aside," The Washington Post, 21Mar03, p. A-20. 208. I MEF Sitrep 191800Z to 201759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA); McKeldin, Journal, entry for 20Mar03. 209. Dunford intvw. 210. I MEF Sitrep 191800Z to 201759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA); General Mattis' comment is in the 20-2 1Mar03 Sitrep. 211. I MEF Sitrep l8l800ZMarO3 to 191759Mar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers at MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). On the issue of synchronicity, see lstMar- Div ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 2, p. 12, and chap 3, p. 6. 212. 3d MAW ComdC, Jan-JunO3, sec 3, "Sequential Listing of Significant Events." See also Acosta, Jour- nal, entry for 20May03, containing an excellent overview of the war from the standpoint of the I MEF G-3, Col Larry Brown. 213. See, for example, 3d MAW ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, p. 6; Lobik intvw. 214. GySgt Melba L. Garza intvw, 26May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 215. LtCol Gary Smythe, USA, "1st Marine Division Fire Support Coordination during Operation Iraqi Freedom," Marine Corps Gazette, Jun04, p. 31. 216. I MEF Sitrep 201800Z to 211759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 217.IMEFsitreps201800Z20Mar03to 21 1759ZMar03, 21 l800ZMarO3 to 22 1759ZMar03, and 221800ZMar03 to 231759ZMar03 (Copies in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). See also lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quan- tico, VA), sec 2, chap 4. Chapter 5 218. Christopher Cooper, "How a Marine Lost His Command in the Race to Baghdad," Wall St reet Jour- nal Online. 219. Capt Daniel J. Wittnam intvw, 1May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Bonadonna, Journal, entries for 2 and 10Mar03; 2d MEB ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quan- tico, VA), sec 2. 220. Maj Daniel T. Canfield intvw, 12Dec03; LtCol Rickey L. Grabowski intvw, 6Apr03; LtCol Royal P. Mortenson intvw, 7Nov03; Col Ronald L. Bailey intvw, 8May03, hereafter Bailey intvw (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 221. I MEF Sitrep 2ll800ZMarO3 to 221759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), p. 125. 222. I MEF Sitrep 221800ZMar03 to 231759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 223. See West and Smith, March Lp, pp. 41, 59; Com- pany Commanders, 1st Battalion, 2d Marines, "The Battle of An Nasiriyah," Marine Corps Gazette, Sep03, pp. 40, 46, hereafter Company Commanders, "Battle of An Nasiriyah." This is a good general source on the battle. 224. Bailey intvw. 225. See 2d MEB ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2. 226. Natonski intvw no. 2; BGen Richard F. Natonski intvw, 25Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Na- tonski intvw no. 1; Bailey intvw. 227. See Maj Walker M. Field, "Marine Artillery in the Battle of An Nasiriyah," Marine Corps Gazette, Jun04, pp. 26, 30; Natonski intvw no. 2. The Bonadonna journal entries for 31 March 2003 and 30 April 2003 discuss his conclusion that the "big problems" were scant intelligence and fire support. See also Gary Liv- ingston, An Nasiriyah: The Fight for the Bridges (Ver- non, NY: Caisson Press, 2004), pp. 172-173, hereafter Livingston, An Nasiriyah. This is a useful book with a number of oral histories. 228. Bailey intvw. Col Bailey elaborated on this in- terview in a conversation with Col Bonadonna, which was subsequently relayed to the author. 229. Livingston, An Nasiriyah, p. 70. 230.CompanyCommanders,"BattleofAn Nasiriyah"; Bonadonna Journal, entry for 30Apr03. 231. SSgt Lonnie 0. Parker intvw, 29Mar03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 232. Livingston, An Nasiriyah, p. 91; Wittnam intvw; Natonski intvw no. 2; Parker intvw. 233. lstLt Michael S. Seely intvw, 3May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 234. Wittnam intvw. 235. Ibid. 236. Livingston, An Nasiriyah, p. 101. 237. Parker intvw. 238. Col Reed R. Bonadonna, "A Short History of --- Page 29 --- Notes153 Task Force Tarawa," unpublished manuscript in- cluded with Task Force Tarawa ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA). 239. Natonski intvw no. 2. See, for example, 'Inter- view: Lieutenant General James T. Conway, USMC," U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings (Nov 2003). 240. I MEF Sitrep 241800ZMar03 to 25175ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 241. See, for example, Reynolds, Journal, entries for 1Apr03, 3Apr03; Cordesman, Iraq War, p. 390, quot- ing a report: "Nasiriyah saw the culmination of this confusion over MOUT [military operations in urban terrain]. Commanders were not prepared to go in and clear a town no bigger than Victorville"; Helene Cooper, "U.S. Troops Bypass Cities to Avoid Urban Warfare," Wall Street Journal, 28Mar03; Bonadonna, Journal, entries for 28Mar03, 31Mar03. 242. Natonski intvw no. 2; Maj [first name unknown] Bierman, "Summary of Comments Made by Col Johnson, G-3 Task Force Tarawa," as posted on CFLCC J-2 website 3Apr03 (Copy in Reynolds Work- ing Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 243. McKiernan intvw no. 4. See also West and Smith, March U, pp. 35, 41, 48, and C. Cooper, "How a Marine Lost His Command." Cooper dis- cusses Dowdy's thought process. 244. Natonski intvw no. 2; Reynolds Journal, entry for 1Apr03; Wittnam intvw; CentCom, "News Release 04-03-51—A-bFriendly Fire Investigation Com- pleted," 29Mar03, hereafter CentCom News Release. See also Hector Becerra, Robert J. Lopez, and Rich Connell, "Report Details 'Friendly Fire' Casualties in Deadly Battle," Los Angeles Times, 28Mar03. The re- port itself was placed online by Globalsecurity.org. Its title is M.S. Central Command, "Investigation of Suspected Friendly Fire Incident Near An Nasiriyah, Iraq, 23 March 03," dtd 6Mar03. For a thoughtful overview of friendly fire incidents during OIF-I, see Peter Pae, "Friendly Fire' Still a Problem," Los Ange- les Times, 16May03. 245. Bonadonna, "Short History"; Bonadonna, Jour- nal, entry for 23-24Mar03; West and Smith, March up, pp. 47, 52. 246. CentCom News Release. 247. West and Smith, March Up, p. 47; LtCol Willard A. Buhl intvw, 4Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 248. Conway intvw; BuhI intvw; Natonski intvw no. 2; West and Smith, March U, p. 45. 249. Bonadonna, Journal, entry for 23Mar03. For ad- ditional impressions of an officer in theater, see Kuo, Journal, entries for 23-24Mar03. For a relatively mild example of press commentary, see Peter Baker, "In War, Plans Lead to Improvisation," The Washington Post, 24Mar03, p. A-16. 250. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 251. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 23Mar03. 252. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 253. Quoted in Bennett, et al., No Better Friend, p. 51. What appears to be the original quote appears in Peter Baker, "Arab Volunteers Draw U.S. Scrutiny; Marine Commander Outraged by Willingness to Hide Behind Women'," The Washington Post, 9Apr03, p. A-31. 254. Amos intvw. 255. Mattis intvw no. 1; I MEF Sitrep 241800ZMar03 to 251759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 256. BGen Edward G. Usher III intvw, 11May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Usher intvw no. 2. 257. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3, sec 2, chap 5. 258. Bonadonna, Journal, entry for 25Mar03. 259. Hummer intvw. 260. Judge intvw no. 1. 261. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 26Mar03; I MEF Sitrep 261800ZMar03 to 271759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA), which contains a reference to the suspension of air operations at the Jalibah airfield until 0300Z on that day. Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers, reports that the skies finally cleared on the morning of 27 March. 262. Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers,pp. 171- 172. 263. McKiernan intvw no. 3. Chapter 6 264. Text of Navy Cross citation, approximate date March 2004. See Cpl Jeremy Vought, "Rochester, N.Y., Marine Receives Navy Cross," 6May04. Avail- able at http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/look upstoryref/200456162723. See also lstLt Brian R. Chontosh intvw, 4May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 265. Mattis intvw no. 1. 266. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, executive summary, p. 2. 267. Kuo, Journal, entry for 24Mar03. 268. Usher intvw no. 2; I MEF Sitrep 241800ZMar03 to 251759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 269. BGen Michael R. Lehnert and Col John E. Wissler, "Marine Logistics Command, Sustaining Tempo on the 21st Century Battlefield," Marine Corps Gazette, Aug03, pp. 30, 33. --- Page 30 --- 154Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond 270. BGen Michael R. Lehnert, 7May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). The division G-3 commented on shortages from his perspective in interview with LtCol Clarke R. Lethin, 6Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). For a frank discussion of the MLC and praise for General Lehnert's innovative leadership, see Hut- son, Journal, entry for 25Apr03. 271. Usher intvw no. 2. 272. Commanders and Staff of 1st FSSG, "Brute Force Combat Service Support: 1st Force Service Support Group in Operation Iraqi Freedom," Marine Coi7's Gazette, Aug03, p. 37. 273. Mattis intvw no. 1. The stop order is reported in I MEF Sitrep 261800ZMar03 to 271759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 274. See, for example, comments by the I MEF G-3, Larry K. Brown, in Acosta, Journal, entry for 20May03 (describingapostwar symposium in Bahrain and Brown's comment to the effect that the Army had wanted a 30-day pause), and G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers, pp. 168, 171, 177, offers a good reflection of think- ing by some senior army officers. They had a com- bination of concerns over supply shortages and the Fedayeen, leading to a natural inclination to wait on reinforcements. 275. I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), future operations folder, "CG Guidance/discussion with OPT 25 March 03." See also Elaine Grossman, "Marine General: Iraq War Pause 'Could Not Have Come at Worse Time'," Inside the Pentagon, 2Oct03; Conway intvw. 276. Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 245, relies on two basic kinds of sources, Army note takers who were present at the meeting, and his interview with Gen- eral McKiernan on 8Dec03. The note takers' records are the only firsthand, contemporary, and currently available, source on the meeting. 277. Quoted in Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 245; see also Conway intvw. 278. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 28Mar03. The source for the "several days" quote is "CFLCC Up- date, 26 Mar 03" (OIF CD No. 65, GRC, Quantico, VA). 279. I MEF Sitrep 271800ZMar03 to 281759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 280. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 29Mar03. 281. "Lt GenJ Conway Holds Defense News Briefing via Teleconference from Iraq," Federal Document Clearing House Political Transcript of Interview, 30May03, hereafter "Lt Gen J Conway Holds Defense News Briefing." 282. 1 MEF Sitrep 271800ZMar03 to 281759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 283. I MEF Sitrep 281800ZMar03 to 291759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 284. "Lt Gen J Conway Holds Defense News Brief- ing." 285. I MEF Sitrep 271800ZMar03 to 281759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). See also lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6. 286. 2d MEB ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA). 287. Mattis intvw no. 1. 288. Col Charles J.Quilter II,e-mail to author, 19Feb04 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). See also I MEF Sitrep 3Ol800ZMarO3 to 311759Z Mar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA), containing a brief ac- count of the Amos-Mattis meeting: "True to form, 3rd MAW pledged its utmost support to theI)iv's planned scheme of maneuver against the Baghdad Div, to include addressing critical resupply needs." 289. Col Charles J.Quilter II,e-mail to author, 21Feb04 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA); Stu Saffer, "Col Charlie Quilter, USMC, The Oldest Marine in Iraq," Laguna Life and People (Laguna Beach, CA: Mar04), p. 18. 290. The concept of operations is clearly outlined in I MEF Sitrep Ol800ZMarO3 to 311759ZMar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). See also lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (MCIIC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 5. 291. Mattis intvw no. 1. 292. Ibid.; Toolan intvw; Conway intvw. It was re- ported in the press at the time. See, for example, Tony Perry, "Marine Commander Relieved of I)u- ties," Los Angeles Times, 5Apr03, p. A-15. A later ar- ticle offered a comprehensive picture of the affair: C. Cooper, "How a Marine Lost His Command." The History and Museums Division conducted an inter- view with Col Dowdy in December 2003. chapter 7 293. Fontenot, et al., On Point, pp. 49-50, provides an excellent discussion of this topic, which is the basis for this paragraph. 294. See Blackman intvw; lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan- Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 3. 295. McKiernan intvw no. 1. For further discussion, see for example, lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, --- Page 31 --- Notes155 Quantico, VA), chap 3, p. 13; and Atkinson, In the Company ofSoldiers,p. 26, quoting Army Brig. Gen- eral Benjamin C. Freakley, the assistant division com- mander foroperationsof the101st Airborne Division; West and Smith, March Up, p. 186, also dis- cuss urban tactics. 296. See Reynolds, Journal, entries for 3-4AprO3; Col Thomas C. Latsko intvw, 22Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 297. Paul Martin, "British Tactics in Basra Praised," Washington Times, 3Apr03, p. 1; Peter Baker, "Tac- tics Turn Unconventional; Commanders Draw Les- sonsofBelfastinCounteringAttacks,"The Washington Post, 20Mar03, p. A-23. 298. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 3, pp. 19-20. For information on Urban Warrior, see Randolph Gangle intvw, 18Oct02 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Gangle intvw. 299. Gangle intvw. 300. Mattis intvw no. 1. 301. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6; West and Smith, March U, p. 207. 302. McKiernan intvws no.1 and no.4;Capt Matthew H. Bazarian intvw, 12Apr03 (MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), containing the comment that during Inter- nal Look, General McKiernan made it clear he did not want to have two commands splitting Baghdad. 303. I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, future operations command chronology and future operations folder, "CG Guidance/discussion with OPT 25 Mar 03"; Buhl intvw. 304. McKiernan intvw no. 4. 305. McKiernan intvw no. 1. For a slightly different view, see Acosta, Journal, entry for 20May03, re- porting a briefing by the I MEF G-3 and his state- ment that "about a week before the war began, COMCFLCC gave I MEF the mission to secure east- ern Baghdad." This is probably a slightly garbled ref- erence to the branch plan. 306. I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA) sec 2, future operations; Fontenot, et al., On Point, p. 331. Fontenot makes the point that flexibility was intentionally built into the plan. 307. "CFLCC Update for 3 Apr 03" (Disk 65, OIF-I Document Collection, GRC, Quantico, VA); CFLCC Briefings (Disks 55 and 56, OIF-I Document Collec- tion, GRC, Quantico, VA), entries for 3-4AprO3. 308. Amos intvw. 309. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6. 310. The "digital divide" is explored in some detail in MCCDC, OIF Summary Report. 311. Milburn intvw no. 2. 312. For an excellent discussion of the BUA, see Maj Robert K. Casey intvw, 27Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). There is an equally good description of how the CFLCC staff worked in R. T. Johnson intvw. The author attended numerous BUAs in March and April 2003 and heard Generals McKiernan and Blackman talk about how they wanted them to work. See also Blackman intvw. 313. Judge intvws no. 1 and 2. 314. There are already numerous books and articles that address the subject of embedding. An excellent example is Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers. On the Marine Corps side, thereis Capt Dan Mc- Sweeney, "Clowns to the Left of Me," U.S. Naval In- stitute Proceedings, Nov03, pp. 46-48 315. I MEF Sitrep O5l800ZAprO3 to 061759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 316. West and Smith, March U, p. 207. This was cer- tainly consistent with General McKiernan's com- mand style, which was to tell commanders what he wanted them to do and then leave the rest up to them. 317. McKiernan intvw no. 4; Fontenot, et al., On Point, chapter 6 offers a detailed discussion of the Army's movements. 318. P. J. Kennedy intvw. 319. I MEF Sitrep O5l800ZAprO3 to 061759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 320. I MEF Sitrep O6l800ZAprO3 to 071759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 321. I MEF Sitrep O7l800ZAprO3 to 081759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 322. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 41. 323. Ibid. 324. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 6Apr03; Judge intvw no. 1; Hummer intvw. 325. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 49; I MEF Sitrep O6l800ZAprO3 to 071759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 326. I MEF Sitrep O7l800ZAprO3 to 081759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 327. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 51. 328. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 9Apr03. 329. Peter Baker, "Marines' Orders: Ready, Set, --- Page 32 --- 156Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Switch," The Washington Post, 10Apr03, p. A-35, hereafter Baker, "Marines' Orders." Baker's report tracks closely with the I MEF sitrep for the same time period. 330. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 9Apr03. 331. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 50. 332. Capt Brian B. Smalley intvw, 3May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 333. Quoted in Mark Mazzetti, "Lt General James Conway, Commander of the 1st Marine Expedi- tionary Force," US. News and World Report web ex- clusive, 9Apr03, p. 1. 334. Baker, "Marines' Orders." 335. Ibid.; Conway intvw; West and Smith, March Up, pp. 226-227, 233-234. 336. I MEF Sitrep O8l800ZAprO3 to 091759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA); Hummer intvw. 337. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 53; McKeldin, Journal, entry for 9Apr03; Fontenot, et a!., On Point, pp. 337-338, quotes a good firsthand account. 338. Reynolds journal, entry for 9Apr03. 339. Dunford intvw; lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6. 340. McKiernan intvw no. 4. See also G. W. Smith intvw no. 1, especially the comment that the Coali- tion spent a lot of time and effort working Out how it would break things but not a lot on how it would put things back together. 341. Mazetti, "Lt General James Conway." See also Atkinson, In the Company of Soldiers, p. 287. 342. William Branigin and Anthony Shadid, "Author- ity Melts in Baghdad," The Washington Post, 9Apr03, p. A-i. 343. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 10Apr03; I MEF Sitrep O9l800ZAprO3 to iOl759ZAprO3 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 344. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 65. 345. I MEF Sitrep O9l800ZAprO3 to 101759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 346. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 6, p. 65. 347. See, for example, Jehl, "Inspector's Report Says Hussein Expected Guerrilla War." This does not mean a guerrilla war was carefully planned. 348. 2d MEB ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2; Text of Cmdr, MarForPac, "I MEF (Rein) Unit Award Recommendation for Presidential Unit Citation," covering the period 2lMar-24Apr03. chapter 8 349.Mazetti, "Lt General James Conway." See also Conway intvw for a report of his discussions with CFLCC on the north. For an excellent discussion of the strategic dimension, see McKiernan intvw no. 1. 350. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 14Apr03. 351. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 10Apr03; I MEF SitrepsO8l800ZAprO3to091759ZApr03and O9l800ZAprO3 to 101759ZApr03 (Copies in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 352. I MEF Sitrep 071800ZApr03 to 081759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 353. West and Smith, March U, p. 247, report that in September 2002, General Mattis ordered a contin- gency plan for a quick-moving task force to assist the Kurds if Turkey did not agree to open a north- ern front. 354. I MEF Sitrep O9l800ZAprO3 to 101759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCIIC, Quan- tico, VA); lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quan- tico, VA), sec 2, chap 7. Except where indicated, the rest of this chapter is based on these two sources. The oral histories at MCHC offer additional detail, such as that of Capt Brian B. Smalley on 3 May 2003, who provides a vivid description of this operation from a company commander's point of view. 355. Amos intvw. 356. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 12Apr03; Conway intvw. 357. I MEF Sitrep l2l800ZAprO3 to 131759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 358. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 7, p. 21. 359. McKeldin, Journal, entry for 12Apr03. 360. I MEF Sitreps l2l800ZAprO3 to 131759ZApr03, l4l800ZAprO3 to 151759ZApr03 (Copies in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 361. I MEF Sitrep l8l800ZAprO3 to 191759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCFIC, Quan- tico, VA). 362. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 8, pp. 4, 6, discuss this phase of the operation. 363. Ibid.; and Reynolds, Journal, entry for 4May03. Col Christopher C. Conlin came to much the same conclusion in his article, "What do you do for an en- core?" Marine Corps Gazette, Sep04, pp. 74, 80. 364. lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 8, p. 6. 365. Taken from the I MEF Casualty Report as of --- Page 33 --- Notes157 14May03, reported in Acosta, Journal, entry for 20May03. These statistics include the casualties from the British division (20 KIA, 36 WIA). For the other MSCs, the breakdown was lstMarDiv (22 KIA, 188 WIA); 1st FSSG (2 KIA, 2 WIA); 3d MAW (11 KIA, 8 WIA); Task Force Tarawa (19 KIA, 58 WIA). Chapter 9 366. Karl Vick and Daniel Williams, "U.S. Troops Ar- rive in Kurd Area to Open Front," The Washington Post, 24Mar03, p. A-15. 367. MajGen Henry P. Osman intvw, 19Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 368. Ibid. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, pp. 186, 195, is an excellent potted history of this campaign within a campaign. For information on Provide Comfort, as well as general background, see LtCol Ronald J. Brown, Humanitarian Operations in Northern Iraq, 1991: With Marines in Operation Provide Comfort (Washington, DC: History and Museums Division, 1995). 369. Jones intvw. 370. Col Robert L. Hayes III intvw, 19Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Osman intvw; Zinni intvw. 371. Hayes intvw; LtCol James E. Bacchus intvw, 20Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Bacchus intvw. 372. David Josar, "Marines, Army to Coordinate Hu- manitarianAid,"European Stars and Stripes, 30Mar03. 373. Bacchus intvw; Notes on meeting with Col Keith A. Lawless, 25Nov03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA), hereafter Lawless notes. For the MCLC, reach back worked well, validating a 21st century model for staffing. 374. Lawless notes. 375. Gen H. P. Osman sitrep to Gen J. P. Abizaid, 7Apr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 376. Bacchus intvw. 377. Osman sitrep for 24Mar03. 378. Dan Williams and Philip P. Pan, "U.S. Plans to Create Military Command in Northern Iraq," The Washington Post, 25Mar03, p. 20. 379. Lawless notes. 380. Osman intvw. 381. Osman sitreps for 12, 13Apr03. 382. See Col John P. Holden intvw, 9Jun03 (Naval Historical Center, Washington, DC). At the time, Col Holden was serving as the deputy chief of staff for plans for the Sixth Fleet. 383. Col Andrew P. Frick intvw, 12Sep03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 384. Capt Arnaldo L. Colon, ed., "U.S. Marines in North Iraq, A Certain Force," n.d. (filed with 26th MEU ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA). 385. Frick intvw. Colon, "A Certain Force," describes the command arrangement in some detail and is generally a very good source like a command chronology narrative. It tracks closely with my other basic source on 26th MEU, the narrative summary in the command chronology, lJanO3-30Jun03, but in- cludes more detail. 386. lstLt Sunny-James M. Risler intvw, 15Oct03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 387. Sgt Bryan L. Gilstrap intvw, 16Oct03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 388. For a general reference with mentions of the in- cident, the allegations, and the general mood of the city, see David Rohde, "Deadly Unrest Leaves a Town Bitter at U.S.," The New York Times, 20Apr03, p. A-i. 389. Colon, "A Certain Force." 390. Frick intvw. 391. Osman sitrep for 22Apr03. 392. Jones intvw. Chapter 10 393. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, v. 1, p. 45. As noted, this is a great source, full of direct quota- tions, without the "happy" feel of many British and American lessons-learned reports. 394. McKiernan intvw no. 1. See Huelfer intvw for evidence of early consideration of this option by CFLCC planners. 395. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, v, 1,p. 45. 396. R. T. Johnson intvw; Col Jeremy M. F. Robbins RM, intvw, 16Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Murray and Scales, Iraq War, pp. 135-136. Murray and Scales place the relationship between the British and the Americans in the Gulf in a larger context, discussing developments over the preceding decade. A recent arrival on the bookshelves, John Keegan's The Iraq War (New York, NY: Knopf, 2004) is said to contain useful data on the British division. Excerpts from the book on I MEF, however, contain inaccuracies and add little to the literature. 397."MajorGeneralR.V.BrimsCBE," www.nato.int/sfor/comssfor/commndsw/t000121a.htm (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 398. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 22Apr03. 399. GOC Directive 1, 3Feb03 (Copy in Reynolds --- Page 34 --- 158Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Working Papers, (MCHC, Quantico, VA). House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, v. 1, p. 195, describes the British "manoeuverist" approach in much the same terms as FMFM 1: "long at the heart of British de- fense doctrine itis 'one in which shattering the enemy's cohesion and will to fight, rather than his materiel, is paramount." 400. See, for examples, G. W. Smith intvw no. 2 and Hummer intvw. 401. Cmdr 1(UK) Armd Div's Diary, entry for 7Mar03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), hereafter Commander's Diary. 402. Conway intvw; Ministry of Defence, Operations in Iraq: First Reflections (London, UK: 7Jul03), p. 8. 403. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, v. 1, p. 92. 404. Ibid., p. 93. 405. Ibid., p. 94. 406. MajGen Robin V. Brims intvw, 10May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). To be sure, there were one or two instances of friction between British and American officers. 407. For an excellent discussion of this topic from the British point of view, see House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, v. 1, pp. 193, 195. This report points out that the distance from being a maneuverist to es- pousing effects-based planning is not far, they are certainly consistent. 408. See, for example, Capt Tracey A. Morris intvw, 30Mar03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 409. Latsko intvw; LtCol Edward C. Quinonez intvw, 12May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). See also Ministry of Defence, Operations in Iraq: Lessons for the Future (London, UK: 11Dec03), p. 34: "the implications of maintaining contact and congruence with US tech- nological and doctrinal advances should continue to be assessed." 410. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 22Apr03. 411. Jones intvw. 412. Col Nicholas E. Reynolds, "Brief by Maj Chris Parker," 11May03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Pa- pers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 413. Ibid.; Walker intvw; Maj. CaiyJ. Schorsch, "UK ASE Chronology,"n.d.(lOMay 03?) (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 414. Commander's Diary, entry for 20Mar03. The im- plication was that the Iraqi missiles were fired in re- taliation for the U.S. missile strikes against Baghdad the night before. 415. Ministry of Defense, Lessons for the Future, p. 12. 416. Commander's Diary, entry for 22Mar03. 417. Ministry of Defence, Lessons for the Future, p. 25. 418. Commander's Diary, entry for 23Mar03. 419. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, p. 97. 420. Ibid. 421. Latsko intvw. 422. Max Hastings, "The real story is how we won," Sunday Telegraph (London), 7Sep03, p. 4; Murray and Scales, Iraq War, pp. 144, 153, gives a good overview of the situation in Basrah. 423. Hastings, "The real story." 424. Ibid.; Commander's Diary, entry for 26Mar03 425. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, p. 99. 426. Commander's Diary, entry for 26Mar03. 427. LtCol I)onald C. Wilson intvw, 22Apr03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA), described the working of British in- telligence. 428. See also Latsko intvw. 429. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, p. 98. 430. Commander's Diary, entry for 4Apr03. 431. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, pp. 150-151; Com- mander's Diary, entry for 5Apr03. See K. L. Vantran, "CentCom Officials Announce Capture of 'Chemical Ali'," Armed Forces Information Service, 21Aug03. 432. Commander's Diary, entry for 6Apr03. See also I MEF sitrep O6l800ZAprO3 to 071759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 433. Brims intvw; Latsko intvw. 434. Murray and Scales, Iraq War, p. 152. 435. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, pp. 149- 150. 436. Ibid., p. 62. 437. Ibid., p. 153. 438. Ibid. 439. I MEF sitrep 061800ZApr03 to 071759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 440. House of Commons, Lessons of Iraq, p. 156. This led into a somewhat philosophical discussion of whether the division's actions and effects desired by the division were really in sync. The point was that the division had won the war, but was anyone on the British side set up to win the peace? Chapter 11 441. Peter Baker, "Top Officers Fear Wide Civil Un- rest; Bloodshed among Iraqis Could Create Chal- lenge for Invading Troops," The Washington Post, 19Mar03, p. A-18. 442. Benson, "Brief at Naval War College." Benson was the senior planner at CFCCC. See, for example, Bacevich, "Modern Major General," p. 129. 443. Moran intvw. See also G. W. Smith intvw no. 2; BGen Stephen Hawkins, USA (CG of CJTF-IV) intvw, --- Page 35 --- Notes159 14Mar03 (U.S. Army Center of Military History, Wash- ington, DC); Benson, "Brief at Naval War College." 444. LtCol Brian K. McCrary intvw, 6Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 445. G. W. Smith intvw no. 2. 446. Peter Baker, "U.S. Forces Will Redeploy into 3 Zones," The Washington Post, 16Apr03, p. A-31. 447. Michael R. Gordon and John Kifner, "U.S. Gen- erals Meet in Palace, Sealing Victory," The New York Times, 17Apr03. 448. I MEF sitrep l4l800ZAprO3 to 151759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA), announcing the upcoming meeting. 449. I MEF ComdC, Jan-Jun03 (GRC, Quantico, VA) "I MEF Sequel ("Post Hostility Operations" to I MEF OpOrd 1003V "Basic Order" and "FutOps Command Chronology," Jan-JunO3. 450. I MEF sitrep lll800ZAprO3 to i21759ZApr03 (Copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quan- tico, VA). 451. Margaret Warner, "A Marine's View," Public Broadcasting System Online News Hour, 26Sep03. Good sources on the division during this period are lstMarDiv ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, chap 8; BGen John F. Kelly, "Tikrit, South to Babylon," Marine Corps Gazette, Feb-AprO4. 452. Max Boot, "Reconstructing Iraq," Weekly Stan- dard, 15Sep03. 453. LtCol Patrick J. Malay intvw, 23Aug03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 454. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 4May03. 455. See, for example, 2dLt Glen J. Bayliff intvw, 4May03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); LtCol Christopher C. Conlin intvw, 24Aug03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); LtCol Andrew Pappas intvw, 20Aug03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); Maj Joseph A. Cabell intvw, 28Aug03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). LtCol Conlin, "mayor" of An Najaf, described his experiences in that city, while LtCol Pappas, head of a counter-insurgency task force, ex- pressed considerable frustration at the lack of sup- port from CPA inrestoringtheinfrastructure. Criticism of ORHA and CPA was almost universal among Marines interviewed by field historians. See, for additional examples, Maj David P. Holahan intvw, 6Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA); LtCol Robert 0. Sin- clair intvw, 7Nov03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). Both LtCol Conlin and Maj Cabell commented on how useful the reservists' skills, and temperament, were. 456. For a balanced discussion of this policy, see Peter Slevin, "Wrong Turn at a Postwar Crossroads?" The Washington Post, 20Nov03, p. A-i. This was a Pentagon decision, opposed by many in the field, including General Franks. Franks, American Soldier, p. 441. 457. I MEF ComdC, Jan-JunO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec 2, "FutOps Command Chronology." 458. Pamela Hess, "Raid in Iraq's 'Indian Country'," 5Aug03, United Press International. Journalist Max Boot visited the same unit shortly after Ms. Hess. See Boot, "Reconstructing Iraq." LtCol Pappas has de- scribed his experiences in a comprehensive inter- view. Pappas intvw. 459. Pappas intvw. 460. Maj Steven B. Manber intvw, 21Aug03 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 461. Pamela Hess, "General: Iraq Chem-Bio Arms Intel Wrong," United Press International, 30May03. 462. BGen John F. Kelly, "Part III: Tikrit, South to Babylon," Marine Coips Gazette, Apr04, p. 46. 463. M. Warner, "Marine's View." See also Kelly, "Part III: Tikrit," p. 43, who notes: "[O]ur efforts with the local population assisted us in all but eliminating vi- olence by midsummer." Max Boot shared this view. Boot, "Reconstructing Iraq." For the dissenting civil- ian view, see Neil MacFarquhar, "In Najaf, A Sudden Anti-U.S. Storm," The New York Times, 21Jul03, who notes: "The lack of Iraqis involved in the recon- struction at all levels, widespread unemployment, and woefully inadequate means of communicating [with U.S. forcesi...havecombined to fuel an ever- higher level of frustration and anger about the Amer- ican presence." 464. 1st FSSG ComdC, Jul-DecO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec. 2, "Current Ops Narrative Summary"; I MEF ComdC, Jul-DecO3 (GRC, Quantico, VA), sec. 2, "S-3 Operations and Training Narrative Summary"; Sgt Matthew Miller, "1st FSSG Goes Home," 1Oct03 (Story No. 20031015350, posted on MarineLink). 465. BGen Ronald S. Coleman intvw, 20Apr04 (MCHC, Quantico, VA). 466. Ibid. --- Page 37 --- Appendix A Data Collection and Lessons Learned Process Although history is not about lessons learned, even an overview of the first phase of the Iraq War would be incomplete without a few words about data collection. Not only did various teams collect a great deal of material that may be of use to future histori- ans, but the process itself has an interesting devel- opment, not to mention some of the lessons learned themselves. There was a time, especially after the combat phase, when it seemed that not enough tent space and computer terminals existed for all of the lessons- learned teams in theater. The senior lessons-learned team was from Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, tasked by the Pentagon to produce the official joint report. The Army had at least two lessons-learned groups in theater, including one whose officers pro- duced the admirable preliminary Army history of op- eration Iraqi Freedom, titled On Point (published by the Combat Studies Institute at Fort Leavenworth in 2004). The Marine Corps had the combat assessment team from the Marine Corps Combat Development Command at Quantico, Virginia. Then there were the various groups of field historians, embedded with "supported" commands. Once deployed, Marine his- torians worked closely with historians from other branches, especially their counterparts from the Army and the joint history staffs, as well as the Marine as- sessors and, to a lesser extent, other Services. Though there was a distinct pecking order among these var- ious groups, with historians generally coming from organizations with relatively little bureaucratic clout, most got along well. Data was usually shared freely across the board. There has probably never been so much available, retrievable, and useful historical data.1 The recent history of the Marine assessors goes back to Desert Storm, when battle assessment teams deployed from the Marine Corps Combat Develop- ment Command to theater to conduct interviews and generally gather data to drive postwar analyses and complement the young Marine Corps Lessons Learned System, described as "a passive system," which relied on units to report their observations. Most of their interviews were anonymous, which lim- ited their usefulness to historians. Their reports tended to go into established "channels," that is, they did not necessarily turn into front-burner action items. Today, more than 250 four-inch binders of Desert Storm material sit quietly on the shelves of the Gray Research Center at Quantico, and Marine Corps Lessons Learned System is largely unknown to many parts of the Marine Corps public. After 11 Septem- ber, Lieutenant General Edward Hanlon, Jr., com- manding MarineCorpsCombat Development Command, ordered the creation of a combat assess- ment team that deployed to theater for Afghanistan to conduct data during, not after, combat operations and to turn it around quickly, in useful form, to the advocates, that is, representatives of the various com- munitiesofoperatorsintheMarineCorps. Afghanistan was a useful opportunity to discover good and bad ways to learn lessons, and the result, less than a year later, was a sophisticated operation for the Iraq War led by Colonel Philip J. Exner, a dy- namic thinker and operator out of the Combat De- velopment Command's Studies and Analysis Division. He began by surveying the process: We ...lookedat past "lessons learned" efforts. Both authors and audiences were somewhat skeptical of the value of traditional approaches, which usually involved publication of a large tome or collection of documents.... Oneof the other services published an after action for a more recent operations that consisted of a 5,000-page main report with an 800-page exec- utive summary and nearly 100,000 pages of ap- pendices. Such monumental efforts often miss the very change agents who are essential to converting lessons into lessons learned because the action officers and decision-makers are often overwhelmed with information and chronically short of time.2 With the support of the Commandant of the Ma- rine Corps, Exner worked to embed his assessors in the operating forces for the duration, in much the same way that journalists and historians were em- bedded, so that they could develop better access and understanding and collect better data. The data, in the form of interviews and surveys, went into a mas- sive database in Quantico that was searchable and, to --- Page 38 --- 162Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond some extent, linked with data collected by historians working alongside the assessors. The assessment teams gave briefings to general officers, posted their findings on Web sites, and produced timely, reader- friendly reports for the advocates. For the more gen- eral Marine Corps public, Combat Development Command published the teams' findings in mercifully brief summary reports that initially were limited to of- ficial use but will no doubt find their ways into li- braries and research centers before long. This is not to say that the operators themselves neglected the after-action process. What was proba- bly the first comprehensive "hot wash" took place in Bahrain at MarCent headquarters on 20 May 2003. The highlight was a blow-by-blow, chronological re- view of the operation by the I MEF operations officer, Colonel Larry K. Brown.3 The next major evolution was sponsored by the Marine Corps Association at Quantico on 29 July 2003 and featured briefings by Generals James Conway, James Mattis, James Amos, and Richard Natonski.4 General Conway's brief was a very good "executive summary" of the operation. Some of the specific objectives learned, covered on that day, were: The utility of the medical surgical units at the front; the use of SAPI, or small arms protective inserts, for the flak jackets; the positive impact of the embedded media; the concept of combat maintenance being performed with units on the fly; and the merit in organizing large, flexible combat battalions....Challenges[that is, prob- lem areas] included...[havingtwo] Marine Corps supply systems (ATLASS I and ATLASS II), integration with special operations forces, casualty reporting, combat identification to pre- vent fratricide, and the need to sharpen Coali- tion intelligence sharing.5 A few weeks later, on 4 September 2003 there was another conference along the same lines, the Marine Corps Association and U.S. Naval Institute Forum 2003, which featured talks by General Mattis and re- tired Marine General Anthony Zinni, who was not afraid to strike out on his own and offer some pithy comments about how he saw the situation in Iraq. On 4 September, and then again in May 2004, Zinni criticized the Bush Administration's policy in lan- guage a drill instructor might have used; he said he remembered the official "garbage and lies" during the Vietnam era and asked if it was happening again. Zinni also offered a thoughtful analysis of what had gone wrong, the "10 mistakes" that "history is going to record." He attacked the reasons for going to war, arguing that the United States had successfully con- tained Saddam and that it needed first to resolve the conflict between Israel and Palestine. "I could not be- lieve what I was hearing about the benefits of this strategic move. That the road to Jerusalem led through Baghdad, when just the opposite is true." lie went on to make a number of points about Phase IV, citing the inadequate planning at both the Pentagon and CentCom levels, the inadequate number of troops for occupation duties, and the, to him amaz- ing, decision to disband the Iraqi Army.6 Marines are likely to remember the observations about Phase III that emerged from these sessions. The first had to do with maneuver warfare and the Marine air-ground task force concept. There was gen- eral agreement that the Iraq War had revalidated Ma- rine doctrine in at least two respects, speed and organization. The I Marine Expeditionary Force was organized and equipped for speed. It had moved much faster than the enemy; the enemy never had time to visualize the outlines of our "observation/ori- entation/decision/action" loop, let alone get inside it. The 3d Marine Aircraft Wing had remarkable new precision technologies (and new doctrines to go with them) to enable it to fight with unprecedented effec- tiveness. The wing and the 1st Force Service Support Group had not just supported division, which was it- self organized into mobile, independent combat teams; they also had been maneuver elements in their own right, integrated into the overall scheme of maneuver. With the Marine Logistics Command's and the 1st Force Service Support Group's contributions, and the wing's willingness to switch from the deep battle to close air support to cargo missions on short notice, the division had been able to go the distance, to project Marine power on the ground far from salt- water. This was another way of saying that Opera- tion Iraqi Freedom had revalidated the concept of the "MEF single battle." The I Marine Expeditionary Force had demonstrated, yet again, that the whole was greater than the sum of its parts, whether the issue was deep fires, rear area security, or keeping the sup- plies flowing to the front.7 Conclusions about Phase IV were more cautious. No one contradicted General Zinni and claimed there had been elaborate preparations for Phase IV. Nowhere in CentCom or Coalition Forces Land Con3- ponent Command had there been a plan for Phase IV that was like the plan for Phase III, let alone all of the preparations that accompanied it, including the cross talk during its development, the many rehearsal of concept drills, and the exchange of liaison officers. --- Page 39 --- Appendix A163 There were the arguments, like General Zinni's, for bringing many more American troops to theater for occupation service. He wanted them to be on hand before anyone crossed the line of departure, avail- able to stabilize the country as soon as the fighting ended. A corollary advanced by some was that the Coalition could have moved more slowly from Kuwait to Baghdad in order to secure the objectives that had just been seized. Still, General Mattis re- peated his assertion that he had had the right force mix on the ground in the summer of 2003: a battal- ion for each province, some aviation, and not much by way of mechanized assets. It was not necessarily how many troops there were on the ground, but what their skills were and what they were being told to do. That was why he had sent his mechanized Marines home in May. The mostly infantry Marines who stayed through the summer quickly proved their ability to shift and learn on the fly, and they did a more than creditable job as interim occupiers in the southern half of Iraq during the relatively brief pe- riod between the end of combat operations and their return home. Like General Mattis, at least one other senior I MEF officer stressed that one of the keys to success was getting the timing right, the longer the occupiers stayed, the greater the challenges would become. The implication was that the Marines suc- ceeded in the short term but that any occupier would face problems in the medium and long term.8 Generals Earl Hailston, James Conway, James Mat- tis, and Anthony Zinni made one overarching point that will find favor with historians. It was that since the Iraqi military was comparatively weak, and since every contingency is unique in its own way, it is dan- gerous to over generalize from the Iraq War, to imag- ine that the next war will necessarily be like the last. 1. Two excellent sources about the overall lessons-learned process are James Jay Carafano, "After Iraq: Learning the War's Lessons," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder, No. 1664, 3Jul03, and Col Mark Cancian, "Learning the Lessons of War," 2004, unpublished article (copy in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). On the Marines in particular, see LtGen Edward Hanlon, Jr., "Lean- ing Into the 21st Century," Marine Corps Gazette, Oct03, pp. 15, 17. 2. MccDc, OJF Summary Report, p. 5. For further information, see MCCDC, "Memorandum for the Commandant of the Marine corps/Battle Assessment Proposal," 19Jan91, and Officer-in- charge, MarCent Assessment Team, "Letter of Instruction (Draft)," 3Dec01 (Copies in Reynolds Working Papers, MCHC, Quantico, VA). 3. Acosta, Journal, entry for 20May03. 4. Reynolds, Journal, entry for 29Jul03; Col John P. Glasgow, Jr., (Ret), "Editorial," Marine Corps Gazette, Sep03, p. 2. 5. Glasgow, "Editorial." 6. Thomas E. Ricks, "Ex-Envoy Criticizes Bush's Postwar Policy," The Washin.gton Post, 5Sep03, p. A-13; Reynolds, Journal, entry for 5Sep03. For a more comprehensive look at lessons learned by Gen Zinni, see Anthony Zinni, "Ten Mistakes History Will Record about War in Iraq," Def en.se Monitor, v. XXXIII, No. 3 (May/JunO4), p. 1. 7. The focus here is on Marine lessons learned. The report of the Joint Forces Command's Joint Center for Lessons Learned high- lighted achievements in the joint arena and, except for the issue of fratricide, was generally complimentary about the "jointness" of OIF. See, for example, Vernon Loeb, "Pentagon Credits Success in Iraq War to Joint Operations," The Washington Post, 3Oct03, p. A- 15. 8. This is not necessarily an argument against medium- or long- term occupations. See, for example, Gunther intvw. With respect to troop strengths, some lessons-learned analysts disagreed with Gen Mattis' point of view and argued that especially for Phase IV the force had to be much heavier than it had been; the Army Chief of Staff, Gen Eric Shinseki, made the famous comment that it would take some 400,000 troops to occupy Iraq, and that it would have been better to sacrifice some speed in order to have de- ployed more force. A slower, heavier force might have gotten the job done better than the fast, light force that conquered Iraq in 21 days; the argument, which is generally inconsistent with current Marine thinking about how to fight the Marine air-ground task force, is that since the Iraqis were unable to put up much of a fight, it would have been better to proceed more methodically, se- curing and occupying terrain as the Coalition moved forward. This is one of the general implications of Fontenot, et al., On Point, and of the 3d Infantry Division's after-action report. See, for ex- ample, John L. Lumpkin and Dafna Linzer, "Army: Plan for Iraq Flawed," Hartford Journal, 28Nov03, p. A-i. Two thoughtful arti- cles that explore the background to Phase IV in more depth are George Packer, "Letter from Baghdad: War after the War; What Washington Doesn't See in Iraq," New Yorker, 24Nov03, pp. 59, 85; Tom Donnelly and Gary Schmitt, "The Right Fight Now," The Washington Post, 26Oct03, p. B-i. Packer's article addresses the general topic of postwar reconstructions in the 21st century, and concludes that (a) it is lengthy process, (b) it is better when inter- nationalized, and (c) the foundation of success is security. He then goes on to discuss the Pentagon's initial decision not to plan for a long-term occupation. Donnelly and Schmitt highlight the Marines' Small Wars Manual, which they say is as good a guide as any to postwar reconstruction. --- Page 41 --- Appendix B Command List U.S. Marine Forces, Central Command March—November 2003* Commanding General: LtGen Earl B. Hailston Chief of Staff: Col Peter T. Miller G-1: Col Richard B. Harris G-2: Col William E. Rizzio G-3: Col Timothy C. Wells G-4: Col Philip N. Yff G-5: Col Timothy L. Hunter G-6: Col Kevin B. Jordan SJA: LtCol Robert E. Pinder Comptroller: Col Robert J. Herkenham Combined/Joint Task Force-Consequence Management Commanding General: BGen Cornell A. Wilson Marine Logistics Command Commanding General: BGen Michael R. Lehnert Special Purpose MAGTF Commanding General: BGen Ronald S. Coleman I Marine Expeditionary Force (Reinforced) Commanding General: LtGen James T. Conway Deputy: MajGen Keith J. Stalder Chief of Staff: Cal John C. Coleman G-1: Cal William J. Hartig G-2: Col Alan R. Baldwin Col James R. Howcroft G-3: Col Larry K. Brown G-4: Col Matthew W. Blackledge G-5: Col Christopher J. Gunther Col Anthony L. Jackson G-6: Col George J. Allen (to 15 June) Col Marshall I. Considine (after 30 June) SJA: Col William D. Durrett Surgeon: Captain Joel A. Lees, USN Chaplain: Captain John S. Gwudz, USN I MEF Headquarters Group: Col John T. Cunnings 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit (SOC) Commanding Officer: Col Thomas D. Waidhauser 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit (SOC) Commanding Officer: Col Richard P. Mills (to 6 June) Col Ronald J. Johnson (after 6 June) 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, Command Element (-) --- Page 42 --- 166Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Commanding Officer: Col Anthony M. Haslam Marine Ground Combat Element 1st Marine Division (Reinforced) Commanding General: MajGen James N. Mattis Assistant Division Commander: BGen John F. Kelly Chief of Staff: Col Bennett W. Saylor Cot Joseph F. Dunford 1st Marine Regiment (-)(Reinforced) (Regimental Combat Team 1) Commanding Officer: Col Joseph D. Dowdy (to 4 April) Col John A. Toolan (after 4 April) 5th Marine Regiment (-)(Reinforced)(Regimental Combat Team 5) CommandingOfficer: Col Joseph F. Dunford (to 23 May) Col R. Stewart Navarre (after 23 May) 7th Marine Regiment (-)(Reinforced)(Regimental Combat Team 7) Commanding Officer: Col Steven A. Hummer 11th Marine Regiment (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Col Michael P. Marletto 2d Marine Expeditionary Brigade (Task Force Tarawa) Commanding General: BGen Richard F. Natonski Chief of Staff: Col James W. Smoot 2d Marine Regiment (-)(Reinforced)(Regimental Combat Team 2) Commanding Officer: Col Ronald L. Bailey Marine Aviation Combat Element 3d Marine Aircraft Wing Commanding General: MajGen James F. Amos Assistant Wing Commander: BGen Terry G. Robling Chief of Staff: Cot Gerald A. Yingling, Jr. Marine Aircraft Group 11 (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Col Randolph D. Alles Marine Aircraft Group 13 (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Cal Mark R. Saverese Marine Aircraft Group 16 (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Cal Stuart L. Knoll Marine Aircraft Group 29 (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Cal Robert E. Milstead, Jr. Marine Wing Support Group 37 (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Cal Michael C. Anderson Marine Air Control Group 38 (-)(Reinforced) Commanding Officer: Col Ronnell R. McFarland --- Page 43 --- Appendix B167 Marine Aircraft Group 39 (-)(Reinforced Commanding Officer: Col Richard W. Spender Col Kenneth P. Gardiner Marine Combat Service Support Element 1st Force Service Support Group Commanding General: BGen Edward G. Usher III BGen Richard S. Kramlich Deputy Commander: Col John L. Sweeney, Jr. Chief of Staff: Col Darrell L. Moore Combat Service Support Group 16 (Headquarters Elements) Commanding Officer: LtCol Michael J. Taylor Combat Service Support Group 11 (Brigade Service Support Group G 1) Commanding Officer: Col John J. Pomfret Col Charles L. Hudson Combat Service Support Battalion 13 (4th Landing Support Battalion) Commanding Officer: LtCol Michael D. Malone Combat Service Support Group 14 (4th Supply Battalion) Commanding Officer: Col John T. Larson Combat Service Support Group 15 (1st Supply Battalion) Commanding Officer: Col Bruce E. Bissett Transportation Support Group Commanding Officer: Col David G. Reist I Marine Expeditionary Force Engineer Group Commanding Officer: RAdm (UH) Charles R. Kubic, USN United Kingdom Forces 1 Armoured Division (UK) (-)(Reinforced) Commanding General: MajGen Robin V. Brims Chief of Staff: Col Patrick Marriott 7ArmoredBrigade (British Army) Commanding Officer: Brig Graham Binns 16 Air Assault Brigade (British Army) Commanding Officer: Brig Jacko Page 3 Commando Brigade, Royal Marines (-) Commanding Officer: Brig Jim Dutton Inc1udes billets in units which served in theater for part but not all of the period covered. Basic sources are MarAdmin 507/03, various versions, Oct-DecO3, with 'Modifications to the J MEF Presidential Unit Citation Unit Listing," and unit command chronologies. --- Page 45 --- Appendix C: Unit List U.S. Marines In Operation Iraqi Freedom March-November 2003* U.S. Marine Forces, Central Command [USMarCent] Command Element Combined Joint Task Force-Consequence Management [CJTF-CMI Marine Corps Logistics Command [MarLogComl Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force [SPMAGTFI I Marine Expeditionary Force (Reinforced) [I MEF] Command Element 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable) [15th MEU (SOC)] Battalion Landing Team 2d Battalion, 1st Marines [BLT 2/11 Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 161 (Reinforced) [HMM-1611 Marine Expeditionary Unit Service Support Group 15 [MSSG-151 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable) [24th MEU (SOC)] Battalion Landing Team 2d Battalion, 2d Marines [BLT 2/2] Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 263 (Reinforced) [HMIvI-2631 Marine Expeditionary Unit Service Support Group 24 [MSSG-241 Task Force Yankee [TF Yankee] 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, Command Element (-)FilthMEU, CmdElel 2d Battalion, 6th Marines (-)(Reinforced)[2d Bn, 6th Marl Sensitive Site Team Number 3, U.S. Army [SenSiteTm #3, USA] 75th Exploitation Task Force, U.S. Army [75th ExpTF, USA] Company C, 478th Engineer Battalion, U.S. Army [Co C, 478th EngrBn, USAI I Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Group [I MEF HqGru] 6th Communications Battalion (-)[6thCommBnl 9th Communications Battalion (-)[9thCommBnl 1st Radio Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[1st RadBn] 1st Intelligence Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[1st IntelBnl 1st Force Reconnaissance Company (-)(Reinforced)[1st ForReconCol I Marine Expeditionary Force Liaison Element [I MEF LsnEle] 3d Air Naval Gunfire Liaison Company [3d ANGLICO] 4th Air Naval Gunfire Liaison Company [4th ANGLICO] 3d Civil Affairs Group [3d CAGI 4th Civil Affairs Group [4th CAGI --- Page 46 --- 170Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Marine Ground Combat Element 1st Marine Division (Reinforced) [1st MarDiv] Headquarters Battalion [HqBn] 1st Marines (-)(Reinforced)/RegimentalCombat Team 1 [1st Mar/RCT-1l Headquarters Company [HqCo] 3d Battalion, 1st Marines [3d Bn, 1st Marl 1st Battalion, 4th Marines [1st Bn, 1st Marl 2d Battalion, 23d Marines [2d Bn, 23d Mar] 2d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion (-)[2dLARBn] 5th Marines (-)(Reinforced)/RegimentalCombat Team 5 [5th Mar/RCT-51 Headquarters Company [HqCo] 1st Battalion, 5th Marines [1st Bn, 5th Marl 2d Battalion, 5th Marines [2d Bn, 5th Marl 3d Battalion, 5th Marines [3d Bn, 5th Marl 2d Tank Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[2d TkBn] 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion (-)[1stLAIRBn] Company C, 4th Combat Engineer Battalion [Co C, 4th CbtEngrBnl 7th Marines (-)(Reinforced)/RegimentalCombat Team 7 [7th Mar/RCT-7] Headquarters Company [HqCo] 1st Battalion, 7th Marines [1st Bn, 7th Marl 3d Battalion, 7th Marines [3d Bn, 7th Marl 3d Battalion, 4th Marines [3d Bn, 4th Marl 1st Tank Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[1st TkBn] 3d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, (-)(Reinforced)[3d LARBn] 11th Marines (-)(Reinforced)[11th Marl Headquarters Battery (-)[HqBtiy] Detachment, Headquarters Battery, 10th Marines [Det, HqBtry, 10th Mar] 1st Battalion, 11th Marines (-)[1stBn, 11th Marl 2d Battalion, 11th Marines (-)[2dBn, 11th Marl 3d Battalion, 11th Marines (-)[3dBn, 11th Mar] 5th Battalion, 11th Marines (-)[5thBn, 11th Marl 1st Combat Engineer Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[1st CbtEngrBn] 2d Combat Engineer Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[2d CbtEngrBnl 1st Reconnaissance Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[1st ReconBn] 2d Assault Amphibian Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[2d AABnI 3d Assault Amphibian Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[3d AABn] 4th Assault Amphibian Battalion [4th AABn] 2d Radio Battalion [2d RadBn] Military Police Company, 4th Marine Division [MPCo, 4th MarDivl Communications Company, 4th Marine Division [CommCo, 4th MarDivl Battery I, 3d Battalion, 10th Marines [Btry I, 3d Bn, 10th Mar] Battery R, 5th Battalion, 10th Marines FBtry R, 5th Bn, 10th Mar] --- Page 47 --- Appendix C171 2d Marine Expeditionary Brigade (Task Force Tarawa) [2d MEB TF Tarawa] CommandElement Detachment, II Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Group [Det, II MEF HqGrul II Marine Expeditionary Force Liaison Element [II MEF LsnElel 2d Battalion, 6th Marines (Originally with Task Force Yankee) [2d Bn, 6th Mar] Company C, 4th Reconnaissance Battalion [Co C, 4th ReconBnl 2d Force Reconnaissance Company [2d ForReconCol 2d Intelligence Battalion (-)[2dIntelBnl 2d Marines (-)(Reinforced)/RegimentalCombat Team 2 [2d Mar/RCT-2] Headquarters Company [HqCol 1st Battalion, 2d Marines List Bn, 2d Marl 3d Battalion, 2d Marines [3d Bn, 2d Marl 2d Battalion, 8th Marines [2d Bn, 8th Marl 1st Battalion, 10th Marines [1st Bn, 10th Marl Battery F, 2d Battalion, 10th Marines [Btry F, 2d Bn, 10th Marl Company A, 2d Combat Engineer Battalion [Co A, 2d CbtEngrBnl Company A, 8th Tank Battalion [Co A, 8th TkBnl Company C, 2d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion [Co C, 2d LARBn] Company A, 2d Assault Amphibious Battalion [Co A, 2d AABnI Company A, 2d Reconnaissance Battalion (Reinforced) [Co A, 2d ReconBn] Marine Aviation Combat Element 3d Marine Aircraft Wing [3d MAW] Marine Wing Headquarters Squadron 3 [MWHS-3] Detachment, Marine Wing Headquarters Squadron 2 [Det, MWI-IS-2] Marine Aircraft Group 11 (-)(Reinforced)[MAG-i 11 Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 11 (-)(Reinforced)LMALS-1 11 Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 14 (-)[MALS-14l Detachment, Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 31 IDet, MALS-31] Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron 352 (-)(Reinforced)[VMGR-352l Detachment, Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron 234 [Det, VMGR-2341 Detachment, Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron 452 [Det, VMGR-452l Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 232 [VMFA-2321 Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 251 [VMFA-25 11 Marine AU Weather Fighter Attack Squadron 121 [VMFA(AW)-121l Marine All Weather Fighter Attack Squadron 225 [VMFA(AW)-2251 Marine All Weather Fighter Attack Squadron 533 [VMFA(AW)-5331 Marine Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 1 [VMAQ-1l Marine Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 2 [VMAQ-21 Marine Aircraft Group 13 (-)(Reinforced)[MAG-131 Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 13 (-)[MALS-131 Marine Attack Squadron 211 (-)[VMA-2111 Marine Attack Squadron 214 [VMA-2 141 Marine Attack Squadron 223 (-)[VMA-2231 --- Page 48 --- 172Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Marine Attack Squadron 311 [VMA-311l Marine Attack Squadron 542[VMA-5421 Marine Aircraft Group 16 (-)(Reinforced)[MAG-161 Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 16 (-)[MALS-161 Detachment, Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 26 [Det, MALS-26] Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 163 [HMM-1631 Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 462 [I-IMH-4621 Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 465 [HMH-4651 Marine Aircraft Group 29 (-)(Reinforced)[MAG-291 Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 29 (-)[MALS-29] Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 162 [HIvIM-1621 Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 365 (-)[HMM-3651 Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 464 [1-1MH-4641 Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 269 [I-IMLA-269] Marine Wing Support Group 37 (-)(Reinforced)[MWSG-371 Marine Wing Support Squadron 271 [MWSS-2711 Marine Wing Support Squadron 272 [MWSS-2721 Marine Wing Support Squadron 371 [MWSS-3711 Marine Wing Support Squadron 372 [MWSS-3721 Marine Wing Support Squadron 373 [MWSS-3731 Company C, 1st Battalion, 24th Marines [Co C, 1st Bn, 24th Marl Detachment, Military Police, 4th Marine Air Wing [Det, MP, 4th MAW] Marine Air Control Group 38 (-)(Reinforced)[MACG-381 Air Traffic Control Detachment B, Marine Tactical Air Control Squadron 2 [ATCDet B, MTACS-2] Marine Air Control Squadron 1 (Reinforced) [MACS-il Detachment, Marine Air Control Squadron 2 [Det, MACS-2] Marine Wing Communications Squadron 28 (-)[MWCS-28} Marine Wing Communications Squadron 38 (Reinforced) [MWCS-381 Detachment, Marine Tactical Air Control Squadron 28 [Det, MTACS-28] Marine Tactical Air Control Squadron 38 (Reinforced) [MTACS-381 Detachment, Marine Tactical Air Control Squadron 48 [Det, MTACS-481 Marine Air Support Squadron 1 [MASS-lI Marine Air Support Squadron 3 (Reinforced) [MASS-31 Battery B, 2d Low Altitude Air Defense Battalion [Btry B, 2d LAADBnI 3d Low Altitude Air Defense Battalion [3d LAADBn] Detachments, Marine Air Support Squadron 6 [CA, MA Dets, MASS-61 Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 1 [VMU-1I Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 2 EVMU-21 Marine Aircraft Group 39 (-)(Reinforced)[MAG-39I Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 39 (-)[MALS-39] Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 169 [HMLA-1691 Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 267 [HMLA-267] Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 268 [HMM-2681 --- Page 49 --- Appendix C173 Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 364 [HMM-3641 MarineLight Attack Helicopter Squadron 369 [I-IMLA-3691 Atlantic Ordnance, Command Expeditionary Force [LantOrd, CmdExpedForl Detachment, Headquarters and Headquarters Squadron, Marine Corps Air Station, Miramar [Det, HHS, MCAS Miramarl Marine Combat Service Support Element 1st Force Service Support Group [1st FSSGJ** Detachment, Headquarters and Service Battalion [Det, H&SBnl Combat Service Support Group 11 (Brigade Service Support Group 1) [CSSG 111 Headquarters [Hql Combat Service Support Battalion 10 (Combat Service Support Group 1) [CSSB 101 Combat Service Support Company ill [CSSC 1111 Combat Service Support Company 115 [CSSC 1151 Combat Service Support Company 117 [CSSC 1171 Combat Service Support Group 13 (4th Landing Support Battalion) [CSSG 131 Headquarters, 4th Landing Support Battalion [Hq, 4th LdgSptBnl Combat Service Support Company 133 [CSSC 1331 Combat Service Support Company 134 [CSSC 1341 Combat Service Support Company 135 [CSSC 1351 Combat Service Support Group 14 (4th Supply Battalion) [CSSG 141 4th Supply Battalion (-)[4thSupBn} Combat Service Support Group 15 (1st Supply Battalion) [CSSG 151 1st Supply Battalion (-)[1stSupBn] Combat Service Support Battalion 12 (1st Maintenance Battalion) [CSSB 121 Combat Service Support Battalion 18 (Headquarters and Service Battalion, 1st Force Service Support Group) [CSSB 181 Combat Service Support Battalion 22 [CSSB 221 Combat Service Support Company 151 [CSSC 1511 Transportation Support Group [TransSuptGrul 1st Transportation Support Battalion (-)[1stTSptBnI 6th Motor Transport Battalion [6th MTBn} 7th Engineer Support Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[7th EngrSptBn] 6th Engineer Support Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[6th EngrSptBn] 8th Engineer Support Battalion (-)(Reinforced)[8th EngrSptBnl Communications Company, 4th Force Service Support Group [CommCo, 4th FSSG] Mortuary Affairs Company, 4th Force Service Support Group [MortAffairsCo, 4th FSSGI Company A, Military Police, 4th Force Service Support Group [Co A, MP, 4th FSSGI Company B, Military Police, 4th Force Service Support Group [Co B, MP, 4th FSSGI Company C, Military Police, 4th Force Service Support Group [Co C, MP, 4th FSSGI Combat Service Support Battalion 16 (Combat Service Support Detachment 16) [CSSB 161 Combat Service Support Battalion 19 (Marine Expeditionary Unit Service Support Group-il) [CSSB 191 --- Page 50 --- 174Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond 1st Dental Battalion (-) list DentBnl Fleet Hospital Three, U.S. Navy [FH 3, USNI Fleet Hospital Fifteen, U.S. Navy [FH 15, USN] Preventive Medicine Unit, Navy Environmental Health Center [PM-MMART-5] Preventive Medicine Unit, Navy Environmental Health Center [PM-MMART-21 Health Services Battalion (1st Medical Battalion) [Health ServBnllst MedBn] Company A [Co A] Company B [Co B] Company C [Co C] Company E [Co E] Company F [Co F] I Marine Expeditionary Force Engineer Group [I MEFEngrGru] Command Element: 30th Naval Construction Regiment [30th NCR] Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 5 ENMCB 51 Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 7 [NMCB 7] Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 74 [NMCB 741 Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 133 [NMCB 133] Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 4 [NMCB 4] Naval Construction Force Support Unit 2 (-) [NCFSU 2] Air Detachment, Underwater Construction Team 2 [AirDet, UCT 2] 22d Naval Construction Regiment [22d NCR] Air Detachment, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 15 [AirDet, NMCB 15] Air Detachment, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 21 [AirDet, NMCB 21] Air Detachment, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 25 [AirDet, NMCB 25] Detachment, Construction Battalion Maintenance Unit 303 [Det, CBMU 303] United Kingdom (UK) Forces 1 Armoured Division (UK) (-) (Reinforced) [1 ArmdDiv (UK)1 7 Armoured Brigade (UK) [7 ArmdBde (UK)] 1st Battalion, The Black Watch [1st Bn, BlackWatch] 1st Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers [1st Bn, RoyalFusiliers] The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards [RoyalScotsDragoons] 2d Royal Tank Regiment [2d Royal TkRegt] 3d Regiment, Royal Horse Artillery [3d Regt, RoyalHorseArtyl 32 Engineer Regiment [32 EngrRegtl 16 Air Assault Brigade (UK) [16 AirAsltBde (UK)] 1st Battalion, The Parachute Regiment [1st Bn, ParaRegt] 3d Battalion, The Parachute Regiment [3d Bn, ParaRegtl 1st Battalion, The Royal Irish Regiment [1st Bn, RoyallrishRgt] 7th Regiment, Royal Horse Artillery (Parachute) [7th Regt, RoyalHorseArty (Para)] 3 Commando Brigade, Royal Marines (-) [3 CdoBde, RM] 40 Commando Group [40 Cdo, RMI 42 Commando Group [42 Cdo, RM] 29 Commando Regiment, Royal Artillery [29 Cdo, RoyalArty] U.S. Army Reinforcing Units Detachment, 9th Psychological Operations Battalion [Det, 9th PsyOpsBn] --- Page 51 --- Appendix C175 354th Public Affairs Detachment [354th PADet] Detachment, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 468th Chemical Battalion [Det, HHCo, 468th ChemBnl U.S. Army Space Support Team [USASpaceSptTml 86th Signal Battalion [86th SigBnl 208th Signal Company [208th SigCo] Company C, 40th Signal Battalion [Co C, 40th SigBnl 3d Battalion, 27th Field Artillery [3d Bn, 27th FIdArtyl 1st Field Artillery Detachment [1st FldArtyDetl 498th Medical Company [498th MedCoI Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 108th Air Defense Artillery Brigade [HHBtry, 108th AirDefArtyBdel 2d Battalion, 43rd Air Defense Artillery [2d Bn, 43d AirDefArtyl 3d Battalion, 124th Infantry [3d Bn, 124th InfI 555th Maintenance Company [555th MaintCo] Detachment, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 378th Support Battalion [Det, HHCo, 378th SptBnl 777th Maintenance Company [777th MaintCol 727th Transportation Company [727th TransCol 3 19th Transportation Company [3 19th TransCol 319th Transportation Detachment [319th TransDetl 299th Engineer Company [299th EngrCol 459th Engineer Company [459th EngrCol Detachment, Headquarters and Headquarters Co., 716th Military Police Battalion [Det, HHCo, 716th MPBnI Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 265th Engineer Group [HHCo, 265th EngrGrul 130th Engineer Battalion [130th EngrBnl 478th Engineer Battalion [478th EngrBn] Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 358th Civil Affairs Brigade [HHCo, 358th CABdeI 304th Civil Affairs Brigade [304th CABdeI 402d Civil Affairs Brigade [402d CABde) 432d Civil Affairs Battalion [432d CABn] 367th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment [367th MOPADetI 305th Tactical Psychological Operations Company [305th TacPsyOpsCol 307th Tactical Psychological Operations Company [307th TacPsyOpsCol 312th Tactical Psychological Operations Company [312th TacPsyOpsCol 1092d Engineer Battalion [1092d EngrBn] Marine Follow-on Forces 3d Battalion, 23d Marines [3d Bn, 23d Marl 4th Combat Engineer Battalion (-)[4thCbtEngrBnl 4th Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion (-)[4thLARBn] 2d Battalion 25th Marines [2d Bn, 25th Marl Truck Company, 4th Marine Division [TkCo, 4th MarDivl Marine Forces with Fifth and Sixth Fleets 26thMarine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable) [26th MEU (SOC)l Battalion Landing Team 1st Battalion, 8th Marines [BLT 1/81 Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 264 [HMM-2641 Marine Expeditionary Unit Service Support Group 26 [MSSG 261 --- Page 52 --- 176Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 115 (USS Harry S. Truman CVN75)[VMFA-1 151 Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 312 (USS Enterprise CVN65)[VMFA-3121 Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323 (USS Constellation CV 64) [VMFA-323] *Unit list based on I Marine Expeditionary Force Presidential Unit Citation Award Recommendation, 7Aug03; MarAdmin 507/03,various versions, Oct-DecO3; "Modifications to the I MEF Presidential Unit citation Unit Listing," with additions and/or corrections provided by Ms. Annette Amerman, Historian, Reference Branch; and Col Nicholas E. Reynolds' troop list of Oct04. Unit abbreviations are provided in brackets. "1st Force Service Support Group reorganized shortly before deployment; previous unit designations are shown in parentheses after the unit's designation in Operation Iraqi Freedom. The 1st Force Service Support Group's headquarters elements were reorganized into Combat Service Support Group 16 [CSSG 16] in April 2003. --- Page 53 --- Appendix D Selected Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations AA—Assault Amphibian AAA—Antiaircraft Artillery AAOE—Arrival and Assembly Operations Echelon AAV—Amphibious Assault Vehicle ACE—Aviation Combat Element ADC—Assistant Division Commander ADOCS—Automated Deep Operations Coordination System APOD-Air Port of Debarkation APOE—Air Port of Embarkation ASLT—Air Support Liaison Team ASOC—Air Support Operations Center ASP—Ammunition Supply Point ATARS—Advanced Tactical Air Reconnaissance System ATO—Air Tasking Order BCL—Battlefield Coordination Line BCT—Brigade Combat Team BDA—Battle Damage Assessment BFT—Blue Force Tracker BSSG—Brigade Service Support Group C2PC—Command and Control Personal Computer CBR—Counter Battery Radar CE—Command Element CEB—Combat Engineering Battalion CENTCOM—U.S. Central Command CFACC—Coalition Forces Air Component Commander CFLCC—Coalition Forces Land Component Commander CG—Commanding General CGS—Common Ground Station CIP—Combat Identification Panel Class Il—Batteries Class Vill—Medical Supplies Class TX—Repair Parts CMOC—Civil-Military Operations Center CPAO—Consolidated Public Affairs Office CP-Command Post CPX—Command Post Exercise CRAF—Civil Reserve Air Fleet CSS—Combat Service Support CSSB—Combat Service Support Battalion --- Page 54 --- 178 Basrah,Baghdadand Beyond CSSC-Combat Service Support Company CONPLAN-Contingency Plan CONUS-Continental United States COP-Common Operational Picture DA-Dispersal Area DAC-Division Administration Center DASC-Direct Air Support Center DIA-Defense Intelligence Agency DOC-Deployment Operations Center DS-Direct Support DSA-Division Support Area EMCON-Emissions Control EOD-Explosive Ordnance Disposal EPW-Enemy Prisoner of War FAC-Forward Air Controller FAD-Field Artillery Detachment FARP-Forward Arming and Refueling Point FOB-Forward Operating Base FOE-Follow on Echelon FPOL-Forward Passage of Lines FRAGO-Fragmented Order FRSS-Forward Resuscitative Surgery System FSCC-Fire Support Coordination Center FSS-Fast Sealift Ships FSSG-Force Service Support Group GBS-Global Broadcasting System GCE-Ground Combat Element GOSP-Gas-Oil Separation Plant HDR-Humanitarian Daily Ration HET-Human Exploitation Team HF-High Frequency HHA-Hand Held Assay HUMINT-Human Intelligence IC-Intelligence Community IMINT-Image Intelligence IMO-Information Management Officer IO-Information Officer IPSA-Intermediate Pumping Stations ]DAM-]oint Direct Attack Munition ]MEM-]oint Munitions Effectiveness Manual ]STARS-]oint Surveillance and Target Attack Radar System KAF-Kuwaiti Armed Forces KI-Killbox Interdiction KLF-Kuwaiti Land Forces KMOD-Kuwaiti Ministry of Defense --- Page 55 --- Appendix D 179 LAR-Light Armored Reconnaissance LASER-LightAmplification through Stimulated Emission of Radiation LAV-LightArmored Vehicle LD-Line of Departure LOC-Line of Communication LSA-Life Support Area; Logistical Support Area LTO-Logistics Tasking Order LZ-Landing Zone MACCS-Marine Air Command and Control Squadron MAG-Marine Air Group MAGTF-Marine Air-Ground Task Force MANPAD-Man-Portable Air Defense MARCORSYSCOM-Marine Corps Systems Command MAW-Marine Aircraft Wing MCIA-Marine Corps Intelligence Activity MCRE-Marine Corps Readiness Evaluation MCWL-Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory MDACT-Mobile Data Automated Communication Terminal MEB-Marine Expeditionary Brigade MEF-Marine Expeditionary Force MEFEX-Marine Expeditionary Force Exercise MEG-MEF (Marine Expeditionary Force) Engineer Group MEWSS-Mobile Electronic Warfare Support System MLC-Marine Logistics Command MOD-Ministry of Defense (Kuwait) MOl-Ministry of the Interior (Kuwait) MOPP-Mission Oriented Protective Posture MOS-Military Occupational Specialty MOUT-Military Operations on Urban Terrain MP-Military Policy MPF-Maritime Prepositional Force MPSRON-Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron MRLS-Multiply Rocket Launcher System MSC-Major Subordinate Command MSTP-MAGTF Staff Training Program MWSG-Marine Wing Support Squadron MWSS-Marine Wing Support Squadron NBC-Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical NBCRS-Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Reconnaissance System OCD-Obstacle Clearing Detachment OMC-K Office of Military Cooperation-Kuwait OPCON-Operation Control OPLAN-Operations Plan Opp-offload Preparation Party OPT-Operational Planning Team --- Page 56 --- 180Basrah, BaghdadandBeyond ORCON—Originator Controlled OSW—Operation Southern Watch PA—Public Affairs PALT—Public Affairs Liaison Team PIR—Priority Intelligence Requirement PU—Position Location Information POL—Passage of Lines POW—Prisoner of War PRR—Personal Role Radio QRF—Quick Reaction Force RA—Regular Army RCT—Regimental Combat Team RFF—Requested for Forces RG—Republican Guard RGFC—Republican Guard Forces Command RIP—Relief in Place ROC—Rehearsal of Concept ROZ—Restrical Operation Zone RRP—Refueling and Replenishment Point RSO&I—Reception, Staging, Onward Movement and Integration RUC—Reporting Unit Code SAPOE—Sea and Aerial Ports of Embarkation SAM—Surface-to-Air-Missile SASO—Security and Stabilization Operations SIGINT—Signal Intelligence SIPRNET—Secret Internet Protocol Routed Network SLTLP—Survey, Liaison, and Reconnaissance Party SMART-T—Secure Mobile Antijam Reliable Tactcal Terminal SOP—Standing Operating Procedure SRG—Special Republican Guard SPINS—Special Instructions SPOD—Sea Port of Debarkation SPOE—Sea Port of Embarkation SSE—Sensitive Site Exploitation SSM—Surface-to-Surface Missile TAA—Tactical Assembly Areas TACON—Tactical Control T/E—Table of Equipment TEWr—Tactical Exercise Without Troops 110—Target Information Officer TIP—Thermal Identification Officer T/O—Table of Organization TPC—Target Procesing Center TPFDD—Time-Phased Force Deployment Data --- Page 57 --- Appendix E Chronology of Events 2001 11SeptemberAl Qaeda terrorists attack the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. 25NovemberMarines of Task Force 58landin Afghanistan as part of operations to deprive Al Qaeda of its base in that country. 2002 JanuaryMarine Forces, Pacific, orders I Marine Expeditionary Force (I MEF) to focus on preparing for contingencies in the U.S. CentCom theater; I MEF planners begin more than a year of work on plans to invade Iraq. 2 AugustMajGen James N. Mattis becomes Commanding General, 1st Marine Division, and puts the division on a virtual war footing. 11 OctoberThe Pentagon orders I MEF to deploy its headquarters staff to Kuwait for service with Coalition Forces Land Component Command (CFLCC) under U.S. Army LtGen David D. McKiernan. 15 NovemberI MEF headquarters deploys to Kuwait; newly appointed I MEF commander LtGen James T. Conway deploys with his headquarters. 16 November3d Marine Aircraft Wing (3d MAW) forward command post, under MajGen James F. Amos, arrives in Kuwait. 18 November1st Marine Division forward command post arrives in Kuwait. 24 NovemberCFLCC exercise to test command and control links with I MEF and other commands, "Lucky Warrior 03-1 ,"begins. 9 DecemberCentCom exercise "Internal Look," based on the current version of the plan for the invasion of Iraq, begins. 2003 JanuaryIntense preparations to integrate 1st Armoured Division (UK) into I MEF occur; this division assumes responsibility for securing southeast Iraq. 2 JanuaryPentagon issues Deployment Order 177A, soon to be followed by 177B, which orders the wholesale deployment of I MEF forces to theater. --- Page 58 --- 182Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond 6 JanuaryRehearsal of Concept (ROC) drill occurs at 3d MAW in Miramar, California; many ROC drills at various levels follow in the coming weeks. 13 JanuaryGen Michael W. Hagee becomes the 33d Commandant of the Marine Corps. 15 JanuaryAmphibious Task Force (ATF) East departs Morehead City, North Carolina, for Kuwait with 2d Marine Expeditionary Brigade (2d MEB). 17 JanuaryAmphibious Task Force (ATE) West departs San Diego, California, for Kuwait carrying elements of I MEF. 8 FebruaryWith I MEF, participation, CFLCC exercise "Lucky Warrior 03-2," labeled "a dress rehearsal" for war, begins. 16 February2d MEB begins to go ashore in Kuwait to reinforce I MEF; its aviation elements transfer to 3d MAW control and the ground elements are redesignated Task Force Tarawa. 24 FebruaryAmphibious Task Force West begins offloading its West Coast Marine units in Kuwait; most other Marines follow by air. 9 MarchFirst leaflets dropped on Baghdad urging noninterference with Coalition operations and soliciting support from Iraqi people. 17 MarchPresident Bush issues an ultimatum to Saddam Hussein to leave Iraq within 48 hours. 18 MarchOperation Southern Watch aircraft conduct air strikes against Iraqi early warning radars and command-and-control capabili- ties; Marine forces are ordered to staging areas. Night of 19-20 MarchU.S. Air Force aircraft and Navy vessels conduct unplanned attack against Saddam Hussein and other Iraqi leadership targets in what becomes popularly known as the "decapitation strike," which does not succeed but does initiate hostilities 20 MarchIraq retaliates by firing surface-to-surface missiles against Coalition troops in Kuwait; ground combat operations begin at night; I MEF is supporting attack to Army's V Corps; Regimental Combat Team (RCT 5) is leading Marine unit. 21 MarchMarines capture the Rumaylah oil fields, a key CentCom objective; Marines and British forces secure the port of Umm Qasr before moving on the city of Basrah, the most important British objective. 23 MarchTask Force Tarawa begins to secure the city of An Nasiriyah and its key bridges over the Euphrates River and the Saddam Canal; heavy fighting ensues; friendly fire incident occurs at bridge over canal; II Marine Expeditionary Force commander MGen Henry P. Osman deploys to northern Iraq to establish the Military Coordination and Liaison --- Page 59 --- AppendixE183 Command (MCLC) under operational control of CentCom in order to maintain political stability. Night of 24—25 March"Mother of all sandstorms" begins, slowing operations' tempo for approximately two days. 24—27 March1st Marine Division continues to advance up Routes 1 and 7 towards Baghdad. 27 MarchOperational pause begins to consolidate supply lines and address threats by irregular Iraqi formations on the ground; 3d MAW air offensive continues unimpeded, rendering many Iraqi units combat ineffective. 1 April1st Marine Division resumes progress towards Baghdad; 1st Force Service Support Group performs herculean feats of resupply with cooperation of wing and Marine Logistics Command. 3 AprilU.S. Army troops move on Saddam International Airport, key terrain outside Baghdad. 5 AprilU.S. Army conducts first "Thunder Run," armored raid, into Baghdad. 6 AprilMost of Basrah, Iraq's "second city," is in British hands. 7 AprilRegimental Combat Team 7 (RCT 7) crosses the Diyala River and moves on outskirts of Baghdad from the east; U.S. Army conducts second "Thunder Run" into capital. 9 AprilMarines of 3d Battalion, 4th Marines, part of RCT 7, assist Iraqi civilians in toppling a large statue of Saddam Hussein in Firdos Square in Marine area of operations, eastern Baghdad. 10 AprilRCT 5 engaged in heavy fighting at Al Azimilyah Palace and Abu Hanifah mosque in Baghdad; looting begins as fighting tapers off; Marines begin post-combat operations. 11—12 AprilAfter the collapse of Iraqi authority in northern cities of Mosul and Kirkuk, Kurdish forces fill the resulting power vacuum, followed by U.S. forces over succeeding days, including Marines from 26th MEU (SOC). 13-14 AprilTask Force Tripoli, out of 1st Marine Division, takes control of Tiksit, Saddam Hussein's hometown. 20 AprilThe relief in place with U.S. Army in eastern Baghdad is complete; I MEF redeploys its forces to the southern third of Iraq; mission is now security, humanitarian assistance, and reconstruction; focus of effort is seven infantry battalions from 1st Marine Division in seven governates or districts. 22 April24th MEU (SOC), which had supported Task Force Tarawa, begins --- Page 60 --- 184Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond redeploying to its ships; other Marine units soon follow suit as part of drawn-down to reduced manning levels that are maintained throughout the summer. 1 MayUnder a banner reading "Mission Accomplished," President George W. Bush announces that major combat operations are over; 26th MEU (SOC) departs Mosul and returns to its ships in the Mediterranean. 12 MayAmbassador L. Paul Bremer takes over as civil administrator in Iraq, replacing Jay M. Garner; Bremer's Coalition Provisional Authority soon replaces Garner's Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance. 22 JulySaddam Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay are killed in firefight with U.S. Army in Mosul. 19 AugustA truck bomb explodes at the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad, killing 20 people, including the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights. 3 SeptemberIn Babylon, I MEF conducts a transfer of authority to a Polish-led international Coalition force; most remaining Marines return to Continental United States. 10 NovemberMarines of Special Purpose MAGTF celebrate the Marine Corps birthday in Continental United States after completing the work of repatriating all Marine Corps equipment from theater. --- Page 61 --- Appendix F Presidential Unit Citation ThePresident of the United States takes pleasure in presenting the PRESIDENTIALUNIT CITATION to for service as set forth in the following CITATION: For extraordinary heroism and outstanding performancein action against enemy forces in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM from 21 March to 24 April 2003.During this period,I Marine Expeditionary Force(MEF) (REIN) conducted the1onest sequence of coordinated combined arms overland attacks in the historyoftheMarine Corps. From the border between Kuwait and Iraq, to the culmination ofhostilities north ofBaghdad,INEF advanced nearly 800 kilometers under sustained and heavy combat. Utilizing the devastating combat power of organic aviation assets, coupled with the awesome power resident in the ground combat elements, and maintaining momentum through the herculean efforts of combat service support elements,I MEF destroyed nine Iraqi Divisions. Thisawesome display ofcombat power wasaccomplished while simultaneously freeing the Iraqi people from more than 30 years of oppression and reestablishing basicinfrastructure in the country.Duringthe33days of combat,to the transition to civil-military operations,I NEF sustained a tempo of operations never before seen on the modern battlefield,conducting four major river crossings, maintaining the initiative, and sustaining forces.Theferocity and duration ofthe campaign was made possible through the skills and determination of the Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines, and Coalition Partners comprising I MEF at all levels, all echelons, and in all occupational fields. By theiroutstandingcourage,aggressivefightingspirit,and untiring devotion to duty, the officers and enlisted personnel of I Marine Expeditionary Force (REIN) reflected great credit upon themselves and upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and the United States Naval Service. I MARINE EXPEDITIONARYFORCE For SecretaryNavy --- Page 63 --- Index Abizaid, General John P., 115 Abu Ghraib Palace, 133 Acosta, Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey, 12 Ad Diwaniyah, 79-81, 86, 106, 112, 138 Afghanistan, 1, 3-4, 7-8, 10-11, 15, 25, 43 Aircraft, Bell AR-lW Super Cobra, 43 Bell UH-1H Huey, 43 Boeing CH-46E Sea Knight, 43, 86 Fairchild-Republic A-bWarthog, 72 Lockheed KC-130 Hercules, 43, 87, 107, 118, 120 Lockheed P-3 Orions, 71, 86, 125 McDonnell Douglas AV-8 Harrier, 43 McDonnell Douglas FA-18 Hornet, 43 Sikorsky CH-53 Sea Stallion, 44 Air Forces, Central Command, 9 Al Amarah, 38, 80, 85-86, 106, 123, 130 Al Aziziyah, 94 A] Faw, 63, 121-122 Al Faw Peninsula, 57, 123, 125 Al Hamsha, 106 Al Hayy, 106 Al Jaber, 47-48, 58 Al Kut, 26, 38, 57-58, 65, 77, 86-89, 94, 100, 106, 123 Al Muthanna, 138 Al Nida, 39, 77 Al Qadisiyah, 138 Al Qaeda, 1, 3, 5, 15, 43 Al-Majid, Au Hassan, 126 Al-Zibari, General Babekir, 115-116 Ali Al Salem Air Base, 47, 58 Almilyah Palace, 102 Ambush Alley, 70, 75-76 Amos, Major General James F., 20-22, 30, 43, 52, 55, 58, 63, 77, 86-87, 93, 107, 150 Amphibious Task Force West, 46, 143 Amphibious Task Force East, 46 An Najaf, 138, 142 An Nasiriyah, 27, 36-38, 64-69, 73-74, 76-77, 80, 84, 86-87, 90, 106, 109, 134, 136 An Numaniyah, 96, 106, 112 An Numaniyah, Airfield 82 Ar Ramadi, 140 Army Forces, Central Command, 9, 12 Army Units, V Corps, 18-20, 26-27, 34-35, 78, 81, 83-84, 89, 92-93, 99, 114, 140 3d Infantry Division (Mechanized), 28, 33, 65, 67, 90, 92, 94, 98, 111-112 4th Infantry Division (Mechanized), 32, 92, 107, 111- 113, 120-121 82d Airborne Division, 112 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), 94, 120 108th Air Defense Artillery Brigade, 49 358th Civil Affairs Brigade, 112, 133 377th Theater Support Command, 42-43, 81, 143 507th Maintenance Company, 67, 72-73 Army Special Forces, 119, 120 Operational Detachment-Alpha, 106 As Samawah, 38, 94 Ash Shatrah, 106 Ashmore, Lieutenant Colonel Nicholas D., 124 Atlantic Command, 17 Atkinson, Rick, 38 Az Zubayr, 127-129, 135 Ba'ath Party, 39, 106, 119 Babil Province, 138, 140, 142 Babylon, 141-142 Bacchus, Lieutenant Colonel James E., 116 Baghdad, 26, 28, 32-36, 38-39, 41, 44, 50, 54, 57-58, 61, 64, 78-80, 83-84, 86-87, 89-94, 96-100, 103, 105-107, 109- 114, 126, 134 Baghdad International Airport, 94 Bahrain, 3-4, 7-8, 47 Bailey, Colonel Ronald L., 67-68 Baird, Colonel Stephen W., 10 Baker, Peter, 84, 100, 150, 152-153, 155, 158-159 Barzani, Massoud, 117 Basrah, 28, 33-37, 47, 57, 84, 90, 117, 121-122, 126-130, 134 Basrah International Airport, 28, 130 Bataan (LHD 5), 5, 55 Bayliff, Second Lieutenant Glen J., 139 Bedard, Lieutenant General Emil R., 18-19 Bell, Major Bruce, 71 Benson, Colonel Kevin, 23, 89 Berndt, Lieutenant General Martin R., 114 Bin Laden, Osama, 1 Binns, Brigadier Graham J., 123, 127 Blackman, Major General Robert L., Jr., 31-32, 94, 97 Blair, British Prime Minister Tony, 121 Blake, Major Peter 5., 135 Blume, Captain Charles J., 71 Boaz, First Lieutenant Nathan M., 109 Bonadonna, Colonel Reed R., 55 Boomer, Lieutenant General Walter E., 10 Bremer, Ambassador L. Paul, 140 Brims, Major General Robin V., 52, 122-123, 125-130 --- Page 64 --- 188Basrah,Baghdad and Beyond Babylon, 141 Commando, 28-30, 46-49, 59, 61, 95, 143 Doha, 2, 8, 19, 29, 48, 51-52, 82, 94, 114 Camp H.M. Smith, I Lejeune, 27, 33, 45, 113-114 Matilda, 49-50 Pendleton, 3, 20, 26, 30, 41 Ryan, 53 Scorpion, 140 British Units, 1 Armored Division (United Kingdom), 35, 47, 122, 131 3 Commando Brigade, 122, 125, 128 7 Armored Brigade, 54, 122-128 16 Air Assault Brigade, 54, 122, 125, 130 1st Battalion, Royal Irish Regiment, 56 Black Watch, 54, 127 Royal Marines, 28, 37, 50, 121, 123 Brown, Colonel Larry K., Jr., 46 Burger, Colonel Patrick J., 31 Bush, President George H.W., 114 Bush, President George W., 1, 28, 53, 56, 58, 130, 140, 182 Camps, Conway, General James T., 10, 12-14, 19-21, 23, 27, 29, 33-34, 37-39, 41, 43-45, 48, 52-55, 57-59, 61, 68, 76-77, 81, 83-88, 92, 95-96, 100-101, 104, 107, 109, 121-123, 126, 131, 133, 135, 141-142, 150, 153, 156, 162 Crawford, Danny J., 34 Czech Republic, 3 Davis, Richard Harding, 7 Diyala River, 98-99, 100, 107 Dora Farms, 61 Dowdy, Colonel Joseph D., 19, 74-76, 84 Dunford, Colonel Joseph F., 61, 95, 103 Edney, Admiral Leon A., 17 El Alamein, 127 Euphrates River, 34, 37, 47, 65 European Command, 32, 114-115 Ewers, Lieutenant Colonel John R., 135 Exercises, Bright Star, 3 Internal Look 03, 32 Lucky Sentinel, 16-17 Lucky Warrior 03-1, 32 Lucky Warrior 03-2, 52 Fallujah, 140 Fans, Brigadier General Fuad Hani, 138 Fedayeen, Saddam, 39, 71, 76-78, 80, 83, 94, 101, 110, 125-126, 128-129 Firdos Square, 101, 135 Fleet Marine Force Manual 1: Warfighting, 12 Fort Campbell, 28 Fort Leavenworth, 20, 23-24 Forward Operating Base Rhino, 7 Franks, Frederick M., Jr., 17 Franks, General Tommy R., 1, 8-9, 12, 15, 18, 23, 25, 28, 32-33, 38, 45, 102, 116, 133, 159 Frick, Colonel Andrew P., 117-120 Gardner, Brigadier General Emerson N., Jr., 8 Garner, Lieutenant General Jay M., 120, 132 Garza, Gunnery Sergeant Melba L., 63 Germany, 3 Gilstrap, Sergeant Bryan L., 119 Grabowski, Lieutenant Colonel Ricky L., 67-70 Gray, General Alfred M., 12-13 Guantanamo Bay, 43 Gunther, Colonel Christopher J., 28-29 Hagee, Lieutenant General Michael W., 2, 4, 17, 19-21 Hailston, Lieutenant General Earl B., 7, 9-10, 12, 14-15, 17-18, 20-21, 33, 42 Hantush, 80, 83, 87 Hayes, Colonel Robert L. III, 115 Headquarters Marine Corps, 27, 31 Hess, Pamela, 140, 159 Highways, Highway 1, 65, 67, 86, 106 Highway 2, 99 Highway 7, 65, 67, 77, 80, 84, 86, 106 Highway 17, 80 Highway 27, 80, 87 Hillah, 36, 138 CARE, 112 Castellaw, Brigadier General John G., 3 Central Command, 1, 3, 7, 12, 15, 17, 21-22, 24-29, 32-33, 35, 57-58, 61, 74-75, 89, 113-114, 117, 121-122, 135 Center for Naval Analyses, 43 Central Washington State College, 4 Charlie Surgical Support Company, Health Services Battal- ion, 135 Chalabi, Ahmed, 22, 24 Chechnya, 126 Chemical Mi, 128 Childers, Second Lieutenant Therrel S., 64 Chin, Corporal Edward, 101, 135 Chontosh, First Lieutenant Brian R., 79-80 Clardy, Lieutenant Colonel Herman S. III, 71, 109 Clark, Master Gunnery Sergeant Paul D., 141 Cleveland, Colonel Charles T., 113, 116, 118 Coalition Forces Air Component Command, 9, 15, 20-23, 44, 47, 63, 95, 108, 113 Coalition Forces Land Component Command, 8-12, 15, 19-20, 22, 25-29, 31-35, 38-39, 49, 52, 57-59, 61, 64, 74, 82-83, 85, 89-90, 92-96, 98, 107, 109, 112-114, 121-122, 126, 131, 140-141, 143 Coalition Forces Maritime Component Command, 9, 15 Coalition Forces Special Operations Command, 8, 15, 113 Coalition Provisional Authority, 140 Coleman, Brigadier General Ronald S., 143-144 Coleman, Colonel John C., 48 Collins, Lieutenant Colonel Tim, 56 Colon, Captain Arnaldo L., 118-119 Combined/Joint Task Force-Consequence Management, 2, 4, 10, 49-51, 82 Combined Joint Task Force W, 132 Conlin, Lieutenant Colonel Christopher C., 103 --- Page 65 --- Index189 Homer, General Charles A., 17 Hough, Colonel David K., 118 House of Commons, 121, 128, 130 Huelfer, Major Evan A., 32, 38 Hummer, Colonel Steven A., 49, 77, 97 Hussein, Saddam, 15, 17-18, 22, 25, 32, 38-40, 48-50, 55, 57-58, 61, 76, 86, 89, 100-103, 109, 110-112, 114, 117, 121, 126, 133, 149, 182-184 Hussein, Uday, 101 Hutton, Lieutenant Colonel James, 37 Imam Abu Hanifah Mosque, 103 International Red Cross, 105 Iraq, 1, 15, 25, 40, 46 Ministry of Intelligence, 101 Ministry of Oil, 101 Iraqi Units, ICorps, 114 Baghdad Division, 77, 87, 94 6th Armored Division, 38, 126 10th Armored Division, 38, 80, 85, 86, 106 11th Infantry Division, 38 51st Mechanized Division, 38, 41, 64 Republican Guard, 38-39, 44, 85, 89, 94, 109 Special Republican Guard, 38-39 Irbil, 118 Iwo Jima (LHD 7), 118 Jalibah, 68, 76, 81, 84, 86, 96 Jalibah Air Base, 64 Johnson, Colonel Ronald J., 39, 96 Johnson, Lieutenant Colonel Richard T., 35 Joint Special Operations Command, 37 Joint Special Operations Task Force North, 28, 113, 115- 116, 118, 120 Joint Special Operations Task Force South, 28 Joint Task Force Kuwait, 19, 21 Jones, General James L.,Jr., 2,4, 13, 32, 114-115, 117, 124 Jubouri, Abed Mutlaq, 39 Judge, Colonel Dennis, 97 Kabul, Afghanistan, 6 Kandahar Airfield, 7 Karbala, 36, 89, 94, 138, 141 Kelly, Brigadier General John F., 76, 88, 107-108, 111, 136, 142 Kennedy, Lieutenant Colonel Paul J., 22, 95 King, Captain Troy K., 67 Kirkuk, 32, 107-109, 113, 115, 117 Kiser, Colonel John B., 3, 8 Korea, 1 Kosovo, 22 Kurdish Democratic Party, 113, 116-117 Kurds, 17, 25 Kuwait, 3, 16, 18, 21, 25, 28-29, 32, 35, 38, 41, 45-46, 49- 50, 57-58, 65, 76, 82-84, 89, 112 Kuwait City, 28, 46-48, 51, 121 Latsko, Colonel Thomas C., 123-124 Lawless, Colonel Keith A., 115 Lehnert, Brigadier General Michael R., 42, 81, 143 Lethin, Lieutenant Colonel Clarke R., 95 144 114 Lore, Major Joseph A., 135-136 Lynch, Private First Class Jessica, 67, 73, 109 Maas, Peter, 136 MacDill Air Force Base, 1 Manber, Major Steven B., 141 Marine Corps University, 12, 89 Marine Forces, Central Command, 1, 8, 9, 10, 13, 17, 19, 25, 46, 47 Marine Forces, Europe, 114 Marine Forces, Pacific, 1, 3, 15 Marine Logistics Command, 10, 19, 42, 47, 51, 81, 143 Marine Units, I Marine Expeditionary Force, 2, 4, 10, 12-15, 17-22, 25-29, 31-39, 41-42, 44-50, 52-54, 56-59, 61-64, 68, 73-74, 76-77, 81, 83-87, 89, 91-94, 96-98, 100, 105-107, 110, 112- 113, 121, 123, 125, 130-131- 138, 140 I Marine Expeditionary Force Augmentation Com- mand Element, 2 I Marine Expeditionary Force Engineer Group, 34, 47 I Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Group, 30 I Marine Expeditionary Force Rear, 143 II Marine Expeditionary Force, 26, 113-114 Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force, 143- 1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade, 4 2d Marine Expeditionary Brigade, 33-34, 46-47, 113- 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), 5, 7, 35, 47, 57, 86, 122-123, 125 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), 85, 114 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), 5, 7, 11, 117-118, 120 3d Marine Aircraft Wing, 3, 17-18, 20, 26, 34, 42-44, 46-47, 62-63, 71, 85-86, 91 Marine Aircraft Group, 39, 41 Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron, 91 Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 264, 118 Marine Wing Support Squadron 271, 63 Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 365, 118 1st Marine Division, 3, 20, 26, 34, 39, 41-42, 47, 54, 65, 76-77, 80, 86, 90, 94-95, 107, 111, 123, 133, 135-137, 141 2d Marine Division, 31 Regimental Combat Team 1, 46, 65, 74-75, 77, 80, 84, 87, 99 Regimental Combat Team 2, 53, 67-68, 75, 86 Regimental Combat Team 5, 63, 65, 79-80, 87, 95, 99, 103, 125 Regimental Combat Team 7, 41, 49, 63-64, 79, 87, 101, 125 1st Marines, 46, 76, 80, 88, 96 2d Marines, 34 5th Marines, 41, 83, 87, 99, 104 7th Marines, 77, 96, 98-99, 101, 105 11th Marines, 92, 105, 107, 112 1st Battalion, 2d Marines, 67, 73, 85 --- Page 66 --- 190Basrah, Baghdad and Beyond 138 3d Battalion, 2d Marines, 73 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, 138 3d Battalion, 4th Marines, 101 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, 64, 102 2d Battalion, 5th Marines, 138 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, 77, 79, 112, 138 Weapons Company, 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, 101, 103, 138 3d Battalion, 7th Marines, 138 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, 118 1st Battalion, 10th Marines, 68, 72 5th Battalion, 11th Marines, 107 3d Battalion, 23d Marines, 138 Company G, 2d Battalion, 23d Marines, 107 2d Battalion, 25th Marines, 86, 138 1st Tank Battalion, 135 Company B, 1st Tank Battalion, 101 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 107, 111 2d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 107, 111 Company C, 2d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 67 3d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 101, 107, 109-111 4th Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 138 1st Air-Naval Gunfire Liaison Company, 124 3d Air-Naval Gunfire Liaison Company, 124 1st Force Service Support Group, 26, 34, 42, 47, 77, 80-81, 87, 135, 143 2d Force Service Support Group, 19, 42, 143 Combat Service Support Group 11, 42, 143 Combat Service Support Group 15, 42 Combat Service Support Group 13, 42 Combat Service Support Battalion 22, 42 8th Engineer Support Battalion, 99 Maritime Prepositioning Force, 46, 143 Mattis, Major General James N., 3-5, 7, 20, 22, 29-30, 39, 41, 43-45, 49-50, 53, 55, 58, 61, 64, 71, 76-77, 80, 83, 86- 88, 92, 96, 98, 100-102, 104-105, 107 109, 111-112, 122, 134-135, 137,143-144, 152, 156, 162-163 McCrary, Lieutenant Colonel Brian K., 132 McKeldin, Major Theodore R. McKeldin III, 100 McKiernan, Lieutenant General David D., 8, 12, 32, 89, 95, 114, 121, 132 McPherson, Master Gunnery Sergeant Richard C., 115 Meyer, Staff Sergeant Randy, 109 Miclot, Colonel Jonathan G., 17-19 Mikolashek, Lieutenant General Paul T., 8, 20, 25, 29, 32, 34 Milburn, Colonel George F., 37 Military Coordination and Liaison Command, 113, 115, 116, 118, 120 Montgomery, Bernard Law, 4 Moore, Colonel Darrell L., 136 Moore, Vice Admiral Charles W., 4-5, 9 Moran, Terry, 32-33, 132, 147 Morehead City, North Carolina, 27 Morris, Major Jason L., 112 Moseley, Lieutenant General T. Michael, 12, 20-21 Mosul, 113, 115, 117, 119-120 Munch, Edvard, 46 Murray, Williamson, 12, 18, 39, 128-129, 145-146 Mutla Ridge, 30 Najaf, 36, 90, 94, 141 National Defense University, 17 Natonski, Brigadier General Richard F., 34-36, 45, 52, 66- 68, 73, 76-77, 85, 96, 113 Naval Air Station, Souda Bay, 118 Naval Forces, Central Command, 3, 5, 9, 10 Naval Support Activity, 3, 9 Naval War College, 7 Nave, Major Kevin G., 77 North Atlantic Treaty Organization, 1, 22, 114 O'Bannon, Lieutenant Presley N., 107 Odierno, Major General Raymond, 120 Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance, 120, 129, 132, 140 Operations, Desert Scimitar, 17 Desert Shield/Desert Storm, 1, 4, 9, 10-12, 18, 21-22, 24-26, 34, 38, 51, 114, 121 Enduring Freedom, 1, 7, 15, 41, 50, 118 Iraqi Freedom, 14-15, 17, 20, 24, 44 Just Cause, 18 Northern Watch, 1,12,22,25,114 Provide Comfort, 25, 114-115, 120 Sinbad, 128 Southern Watch, 1, 12, 20, 22, 25, 44 Operations Plan Cobra II, 37 Operations Plan 1003V, 25-26, 28, 32, 45, 103 Osman, Major General Henry P., 113-118, 120 Pakistan, 1 Palestine Hotel (Baghdad), 101, 105 Panama, 18 Pappas, Lieutenant Colonel Andrew, 140-141 Parker, Staff Sergeant Lonnie 0., 71-73 Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, 113, 116 Pelelieu (LHA 5), 5 Pentagon, 15, 24, 27, 33, 45 Petraeus, Major General David H., 120 Philippines, 1 Plush, Gregory J., 29, 31 Polanco, Corporal Jason J., 70 Pokorney, First Lieutenant Frederick E., Jr., 72 Powell Doctrine, 17 Qalat Sikar, 26, 100, 106 Qattar, 115 Quilter, Colonel Charles J. II, 87 Quinonez, Lieutenant Colonel Edward J., 124 Rashid MilitaryComplex, Iraq, 99 Red Crescent, 112 Red Cross, 112 Red Zone, 89 Risler, First Lieutenant Sunny-James M., 118 Rommel, General Erwin, 4 Royal Air Force, 123 --- Page 67 --- Index191 Rumaylah Oil Fields, 57, 125 Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense Donald H., 1, 24-25, 27, 104 Saddam Canal, 65, 70, 87 Saddam City, 101 Saddam International Airport, 94 Sadr City, 101 Safwan Hill, 63 Salaheddin, 116 Salman Pak Airfield, 100 Saudi Arabia, 25, 141 Scales, Major General Robert, 12, 18, 129 School of Advanced Military Studies, 89 Schwarzkopf, General H. Norman, 8, 10, 25, 33 Sea-Air-Land (SEALs), 37 Seabees, 34 Seely, First Lieutenant Michael S., 72 Serbia, 22 Shatt al Arab, 121 Shatt al Arab Waterway, 36 Sheikh Issa Air Base, 8 Sir Galahad (L3005), Royal Fleet Auxillery, 125 Sixth Fleet, 117 Slovakia, 3 Smalley, Captain Brian B., 101 Smith, Lieutenant Colonel George W., 17-19, 22-23, 30, 36, 133 Smith, Major General Ray L., 76, 136 Southern Command, 143 Special Forces, 108, 113, 115-116 Stalder, Major General Keith J., 17, 50 Stratman, Major General Henry W., 15 Support Areas, Chesty, 82 Coyote, 82 Sweeney, Colonel John L., 81 Syria, 118 Tactical Assembly Area Fox, 51, 81, 144 Taliban, 1, 5-6, 15 Talibani, Jalal, 117 Task Forces, Chaos, 5 58, 4-6, 10-11, 15, 41 South, 26-27, 33-34 Tarawa, 27, 34, 36, 39, 42, 45, 47, 52-53, 64-65, 67, 73, 75-76, 85-86, 94, 96, 106, 109, 123, 130, 133, 138 Tripoli, 110-113 Tempone, Colonel John A., 1 The Basic School, 12, 43 Tigris River, 34, 37, 50, 93 Tikrit, 32, 109, 110-112 Toolan, Colonel John A., 88 Torpy, Air Vice Marshall Glenn L., 22 Transportation Command, 19, 23 Turkey, 32, 35, 107, 111, 114, 116, 121 Twentynine Palms, California, 29 Ullman, Harlan K., 17 Urnrn Qasr, 33, 57, 121-123, 125 Usher, Brigadier General Edward G. III, 42, 52, 77, 80-81 Wade, James P., 17 Waldhauser, Colonel Thomas D., 125 Wallace, Lieutenant General William S., 78, 84, 98 Warfighting Laboratory, 89, 91, 127 West, Bing, 136 Whitley, Brigadier General Albert E., 121 Williams, Major Grant A., 46-47 Wilson, Brigadier General Cornell A., 50 Wittnam, Captain Daniel J., 70, 73 Workman, Colonel Marc A., 29, 31 World Food Program, 112 World Trade Center, 15 Wright, Evan, 136 Zinni, General Anthony C., 4, 8, 10, 12, 18, 21, 34, 114, 162-163