|
| ON PATROL | |
January 2, 2004 | |
|
A reporter follows Charlie Company of the U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division as it patrols the Sunni Triangle of central Iraq. Following the report, two military experts discuss how the soldiers' tactics address U.S. objectives in the war-torn country. |
|
SOLDIER: Lay it down. Lay it down. SOLDIER: Down. Get down.
SOLDIER: What's your name? MAN: Hadnan. SOLDIER: What's your name? SOLDIER: His name is Ahmed. I don't know if we need it... SOLDIER: Okay. MARTIN ADLER: The man in the balaclava is a local informant.
MARTIN ADLER: You don't think it's a risk going into people's houses like that, that it might make them more scared of you and sort of more, you know, anti-American? UNIDENTIFIED SOLDIER: (pause) Not really. MARTIN ADLER: It turns out the men arrested are not resistance fighters at all. They're just cousins of the man the soldiers were looking for. But they were bound, hooded, and taken away, all the same. A wife asks the soldiers to let her husband at least to take his shoes. (Speaking Arabic)
SOLDIER: What's that? SOLDIER: I'm right behind that. SOLDIER: He's probably laughing at me. MARTIN ADLER: I spent ten days with Charlie Company. These men are all professional soldiers and have been in Iraq since April. Their job is making highway one safe. It's become the most dangerous road in the world. It links Baghdad to Tikrit. Today the soldiers are dealing with the now familiar problem of a roadside booby trap bomb. SOLDIER: Yep, it's a bomb. MARTIN ADLER: It's a live bomb? SOLDIER: Yeah, a live bomb. He needs to pull one.
MARTIN ADLER: Incredibly, the captain of the company picks up the live bomb and carries it to a safe place to be exploded. ( Explosion ) SOLDIER: Whoo! CAPT. KARL FITTSI: He comes to work or he's fired. I'll talk to him. MARTIN ADLER: This is the man who picked up that bomb. Meet Capt. Karl Fittsi, commander of Charlie Company. He's partial to the odd cigar, and now finds himself as de facto governor of the area. Today he's having a meeting with the newly recruited Iraqi police force in the area. The Iraqi policemen are complaining that too many of their colleagues have been killed recently. CAPT. KARL FITTSI: You're correct. Tell Mohammed I want to see him tomorrow morning. Okay? Tell Mohammed I want to see him tomorrow morning. I want to see you. I want to see Mohammed. He, you and me, we need to sit down tomorrow morning and we need to iron this out. I love the Iraqi way of firing weapons in the air.
SOLDIER: We're here. We're not leaving for a while. Come pay us a visit. ( Gunfire ) SOLDIER: Hey, get back... MARTIN ADLER: Mortar attack: The soldiers scramble into their vehicles and charge into Samarra in search of the man who fired at them. SOLDIER: Okay, shut it off! Shut it off!
SOLDIER: Look down! Get down! Sit down! (Speaking Arabic ) ( indistinct conversation ) SOLDIER: Get down! Get down! (Indistinct conversation) MARTIN ADLER: First Sergeant Mikel can speak Arabic. He can cross the language divide that hampers so many of the missions in Iraq. (Speaking Arabic) SOLDIER (Translated): Give them your hands! DETAINEE (Translated): I swear I had nothing to do with it!
SOLDIER (Translated): I'll take you over there and shoot you in the head! SOLDIER (Translated): Do you understand me? MARTIN ADLER: The suspect, bound and hooded, was left in a waste ground for hours before being taken away into detention. Back at the base, "The Rock," as the men call it, it's all about camaraderie ( laughter ) ...and the overwhelming conviction that their cause is just. For others with their own children, the routine of raiding Iraqi homes is wearing them down.
MARTIN ADLER: Corporal Turpin hasn't seen his own family since July last. ( Singing ) CAPT. KARL FITTSI: My job is to go in, find the bad guys and kill them. I'm trained for that. They want to see a burning Bradley downtown. That's what they want. They want them jumping up and down, saying, you know, "God is with us. Allah akbar, God is great." And they hunt you. They hunt you. They used to say they would park at this southern OP ... and the average time for the first incoming RPG was 120 seconds. MARTIN ADLER: The campfire has become a place of reflection for the men. PFC Little has reservations about his time in Iraq.
MARTIN ADLER: When on leave recently, Little went to a shopping mall with his wife. PRIVATE FIRST CLASS LITTLE: I started to realize that, hey, you know, I'm looking at all the exits as I'm walking by. I'm seeing what every person has in their hands. And it's, you know, they're 50 meters away from me. I'm like looking at every store while I'm walking down here. Now I wasn't even trying to do it. It was like, you know, second nature. It was just coming. And I felt naked. I didn't have any weapons. I didn't have any gear. I didn't have my squad with me. And I seriously felt naked. I was like, "oh, my God, you know, what the hell is going on? This is not cool." I'm a little bit scared that it's going to be like this throughout the rest of my life I think. MARTIN ADLER: Another night, another raid in Samarra. And this is happening every night until the end of December. ( Speaking Arabic )
MARTIN ADLER: "You're all occupiers," the woman cries, as the soldiers burst into her home. ( Crying ) SOLDIER: Let's start going through everything. MARTIN ADLER: As dawn breaks, the soldiers and their prisoners are back at their camp. For the Charlie Company it was a successful night's work. A few of the soldiers pause to take photo souvenirs. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour...Become a member of your local PBS station. | ||
| PBS Online Privacy Policy Copyright ©1996- MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. All Rights Reserved. | ||