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Subject: Rules to Live By in Iraq
James Dunnigan    12/20/2004 11:39:56 PM

The marines have long maintained that ?every marine is a rifleman.? This means that everyone, no matter what their regular job, keeps their infantry skills up to date. Now the army is adopting the same attitude because of the way operations played out in Iraq. That is, anyone traveling outside a base has to be combat ready. And those in bases have to be prepared for combat emergencies. As a result, there are a lot of things everyone in Iraq (and to a lesser extent in Afghanistan), have to get down cold if they want to get out in one piece.

· Emergency Action Drills. These are the things you do when there is an emergency. You must practice them with the people in your unit, to make sure everyone understands and does it the same way. When someone new comes into your unit, you have to go through all the drills for them. The drills are varied, ranging from what to do during various situations while on the road, to where the bomb shelters (or trenches) are in your camp. For combat units, these drills are no great shock, as most combat operations are a succession of drills (which are practiced regularly). But for non-combat support troops, these drills are a new experience, and more practice is always useful. Drills save lives.


· Practice changing tires, and doing it quickly. This does two things. First, you learn how long it takes, even when you are in a hurry. This can be a useful bit of information if you are under fire while changing the flat. Second, practicing it forces you to make sure the spare tire is in good shape, and can quickly be reached (along with any tools needed.)


· Mister Grenade can be your friend, even on the crowded streets of Baghdad. If your vehicle has a glove compartment, re-label it as the ?grenade compartment.? Carry one smoke, one fragmentation and one tear gas grenade. If you?re stuck in traffic and the situation outside it starting to look dicey, then drop a smoke grenade out the window and try to get moving. You MUST be moving if you drop the tear gas grenade, because you cannot drive through the tears. Most other drivers will give you a wide berth when they see the smoke or tear gas grenade go off. For those who keep coming, with evil intent, the fragmentation grenade may come in handy (it is good for getting at bad people hiding behind something.) Remember, when using grenades, do not touch the pin until the grenade is outside the window. Accidents happen, and having a smoke grenade go off in your vehicle will ruin your day, at the very least. 


· Carefully plan each trip on the roads, especially in areas where the bad guys are particularly active. Remember, the most frequent targets are large convoys of big trucks. So stay off the MSR (Main Supply Route) used by those guys. Give everyone in your convoy a strip map of the coming trip, and make sure the ?assistant driver? (the one who takes over if the primary driver is hit) studies the plan as well. Select a route that you feel is least likely to be watched, and attacked by gunmen. 

· Especially when outside your base, always have your weapon (usually an assault rifle or pistol, or both) with you at all times. Carry as much ammo as you can. In an emergency it will not be enough, but the more the better (14 or more magazines is not unreasonable). Only the stuff you have on you counts, as you may have to get out of your vehicle in a real emergency. Look around, the troops in Iraq have discovered many clever ways to carry all these magazines.

· Always wear you Kevlar helmet, and your armored vest when outside the compound. When in the compound, always know where your vest and helmet (and weapon) is. Keep the weapon clean.

· Practice basic combat operations, like changing magazines (you take cover when you do this, people who don?t, often get shot). Practice aiming and shooting. Lots of firing ranges have been set up in Iraq, and lots of ammo has been provided for practice. 


· Practice shooting at long range (800 meters.) While it?s true that most combat is at shorter ranges (under 100-150 meters), you will sometimes find yourselves being shot at by people farther away. In a situation like this, a little practice before hand will pay big dividends. Might even say your life. Think about it.


· Make sure your first aid gear, and skills, are always up to snuff. Get extra medical gear if you can, and learn how to use it. The Special Forces medics always get the latest and greatest stuff, so find out what they are using and see if you can scrounge some of it up.


· Always be ready to return fire when on the road. Nothing discourages ambushers more, and ruins their aim, than lots of return fire. You might even kill a few of them.

· Don?t throw candy to the kids while

 
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Pantz    RE:Rules to Live By in Iraq    6/8/2005 12:39:01 AM
To whoever wrote this...I honestly do not know who or what or where your sources came from and you can delete this shortly after reading it if you choose to and ban me from ever accessing your web page again...quite frankly i'd be fine with that...Unfortunately your web page was emailed to me while I was over there...Although myself and everyone else in my battalion got a good laugh...It disturbed me so much that I waited until I got home and a reliable web connection to take the time to find out where it came from. What follows is an email that I sent to the person who forwarded your page to me while i was over there...please forgive the name calling as it stems mainly from the anger that this misinformation would be posted for any new soldier who didn't know anything about combat to find and could be easily mistaken for a valid and reliable source from someone who has combat experience or even military experience for that matter. Being mobilized for war is a terrifying experience during which one sits and questions whether or not they have all the proper training and knowledge to keep themselves and their battle buddies alive perhaps they might find your page in a desperate attempt to better their skills...perhaps you need to think about that. And like I said you can delete all of this in one indignant motion but I hope that in the future you take the time to check your sources or at least post only information in which you know you're talking about...because posting something like this can very quickly and easily get some wet-behind-the-ears 17 year old soldier thrown in jail or killed...point being perpetuating this crap...IS PUTTING A SOLDIERS LIFE IN JEOPARDY...and I hope you think long and hard about that next time. Sincerely, SPC Pantz 91W (Combat Medic) NYARNG 2-108 INF, 1st IN DIV Operation Iraqi Freedom II just FYI and maybe you can send this back to wherever you got it from....Whoever wrote this is an idiot. He (based on the "Infantry" heading) has either never been in combat, never been in Iraq or Afghanistan, or has possibly been here but has never left the safety of his camp but for maybe to go on R and R. He is most assuredly NOT Infantry. I am attached to an Infantry unit and have been in Iraq for the last 10 months. I have done my fair share of missions including route clearing, raids, FOB (foward operating base {base camp}) security, cache guard, and even delt with a few incidences of chemical warfare. I have treated casualties, been shot at by both enemy and friendly and have been almost blown up one too many times by IED's (Improvised explosive devices or roadside bombs for the layman). I have been a line medic for a mortar platoon we have traveled across most of Iraq while on missions. I have passed through or been in Baghdad, Balad, Samarra, Falushia, and Tikrit just to name a few. I have passed over the Samarra bypass no less then once a week ... you know that pass lovingly nick-named IED alley? Yeah...been there and this individual who wrote that horse doesn't know what the hell he is talking about. I'll take it paragraph by paragraph... Number one...The Army long since has adopted that very same theory...everyone is an infantry man first...it is the root of Initial Entry Training (basic) and has always been. This is not a new idea. If anything that ideal is changing because of the new needs of the military is not infantrymen as we knew them in WW II, Vietnam, and before. The light infantry days of rucking kilometer after kilometer are over and we have moved on to motorized operations and more of a military police-like way of breaching and clearing buildings, handeling detainees, and operating in urban areas of combat. "As a result" even the finest infantry man can know all of the things he needs to know and unfortunatly still "not get out in one piece"...sadly many of the deaths and wounded is just being in the wrong place at the wrong time and are most often a result of a carefully place IED. (To which there is little defense and all the training in the world isn't gonna help you see a soda can wired with C4 and a radio transmitter while traveling at 55-65 miles an hour down the MSR's in the dark) The only and best defense is well armored vehicles and the lack of available materials have been a point of contention for the Bush administration. "Emergency Action Drills"... This maybe the only intelligent thing in his incessent idiotic rambling. While I've never heard them referred to as an EAD each unit has their own specific jargon. However, drills although the responsibility of each individual soldier, are most often coordinated by the leadership. The collective understanding of what to do in a bad situation is limited to the effectiveness of the leadership...still, I personally like to know what the alarms sound like and generally keep an eye open for the nearest bunker in the event I just might need it. (again the responsibility of the individual soldier
 
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