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02.04.2003 03:05:19
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Как были потеряны 2 Abrams.а
Приветствую
![](https://vif2ne.org/nvk/forum/files/Foreigner/M1_Golfo-2_-Impactado2.jpg)
March 28, 2003
Внимание, рассказ по английский (фото не имеет отношение к истории):
Quick-thinking NCOs rescue soldiers from burning tank
CENTRAL IRAQ (Army Times, by Sean D. Naylor)
- For a few long, terrifying minutes, Pfc. Adam Small faced every armor soldier's nightmare: the prospect of burning to death while trapped in his
own disabled tank.
He was saved, like so many soldiers before him, by a couple of squared-away, quick-thinking NCOs.
Small's ordeal began just after 5 p.m. March 25, on an evening when a
sandstorm at sunset had suffused the air with an unearthly red glow.
As the sky darkened rapidly and rain began to fall, a column of Abrams tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles from B, or "Bonecrusher," Troop, of 3rd
Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized), was
pushing forward toward a bridge they were supposed to seize.
The column was still two miles from the bridge, and bunched up more tightly
than doctrine would usually call for, when incoming tracer rounds heralded
the start of another in a series of ambushes the unit had endured. The
troopers shrugged it off - they were getting used to being fired at.
But then something happened that none of them had experienced - something,
in fact, that no American soldier had ever experienced. And it happened
twice in the space of a few seconds.
A projectile, now thought to be a rocket-propelled grenade, hurtled with the
force of a freight train into the back of the tank commanded by Sgt. 1st
Class Curtis Anderson, 38, of Sacramento, Calif
Almost simultaneously, a similar jolt rocked Small's tank, 35 yards behind
Anderson's.
"It felt like the tank bounced," said tank driver Small, 19, of Greensboro,
N.C.
The force of the blast knocked out the tank's loader, Spc. Brian French, 23,
of Billings, Mont., who was climbing down into his seat from his turret
hatch at the moment of impact.
"We got hit! We're getting hit! We're getting hit!" yelled Staff Sgt.
Charles Kilgore, the tank commander.
Small, seated in the driver's compartment in front of the turret, tried to
push his hatch up to escape. But it was jammed, and only opened a few
inches. He could see flames, and let it slam shut.
The other three crewmembers were getting themselves together, and getting
out. But because of the angle the turret was at when it was hit, Small
couldn't escape through the turret either. He was trapped by fire and the
jammed hatch above him, and by the jammed turret behind him. The tank's
120mm ammunition started to cook off, exploding in the flames.
Tears of fear ran down his cheeks.
Sgt. 1st. Class Javier Camacho, 35, of Bayamon, Puerto Rico, the platoon
sergeant for B Troop's 4th Platoon, was commanding a tank half a mile behind
Small's at the time the two tanks were knocked out. "Somebody got hit," said
his gunner, Sgt. Jeremiah Gallegos.
Within a couple of minutes, Camacho's tank came to the scene. Anderson's
tank was knocked out, but its engine was still running. Its crew had
abandoned it and jumped into a Bradley. Small's tank was burning fiercely.
The three soldiers who had escaped asked for Camacho's help in rescuing
Small. "When they told me he was still there, my heart stopped," Camacho
said. "He's not one of my soldiers, but I could just imagine burning to
death in a tank. I wouldn't leave nobody like that."
Camacho, the squadron's master gunner and a veteran of the 1991 Gulf War,
leaped into action. With help from Gallegos and Sgt. 1st Class Steven Newby,
he doused the propellant that was burning on top of Small's hatch, then set
about dislodging the jammed hatch.
Meanwhile, fighting continued around them. It was hard to tell which bullets
were fired by the enemy, and which were the .50-caliber rounds cooking off.
Finally, the hatch popped open, and they pulled Small out.
"When he came out of the tank he was hyperventilating," Camacho said.
Camacho and Newby brought Small to a ditch next to the road, and then to the
relative safety of a Bradley. As the column pulled away, all thoughts of the
securing the bridge shelved for the time being, another RPG bounced off the
road in front of Camacho's tank.
"All you could hear was the sound of bullets going by," Camacho said. "It
was an exciting night."
Looking back, Camacho said he didn't assess the danger inherent in what he
did. "I didn't think about being afraid," he said. "I just wanted to get
that kid out."
The two tanks were total losses - the first Abrams tanks ever destroyed in their 20 years of service by enemy fire.
С уважением, Рубен http://www.geocities.com/urrib2000/
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