On the very next mission, he found a path to a village that he was
sure would be dry. I had my doubts. In fact, I pointed them out to
him.
“Oh, no, no,” he insisted, “it’s good, it’s good.”
Once
we were out in the field, we followed him across some
farmland on a narrow path that led to a pipe across a path of mud. I
was
at the back at the group, one of the last to come across the
pipe. As I stepped off, I sunk right through the mud and into crap
up to my knee. The mud was actually just a thin crust atop a deep
pool of sewage.
It stunk even worse than Iraq usually stunk.
“Tommy,” I yelled, “I’m going to whip your ass as soon as we
get to the house.”
We pushed on to the house. I was still in the rear. We cleared
the
house and, once all the snipers were deployed,
I went to find
Tommy and give him the thrashing I’d promised.
Tommy was already paying for his sins: when I found him
downstairs, he was hooked up to an IV and puking his brains out.
He had fallen into the muck and was completely covered with shit.
He was sick for a day, and he smelled for a week.
Every article of clothing he’d
been wearing was disposed of,
probably by a hazmat unit.
Served him right.
I
spent somewhere between two and three months in the villages. I
had roughly twenty confirmed kills while I was there. The action on
any particular op could be fierce; it could also be slow. There was
no predicting.
Most of the houses we took over belonged to families who at
least
pretended to be neutral; I’d guess that the majority of them
hated the insurgents for causing trouble and would have been even
happier than we were to have the bad guys leave. But there were
exceptions, and we were plenty frustrated when we couldn’t do
anything about it.
We went into one house and saw police uniforms.
We knew
instantly that the owner was muj—the insurgents were stealing
uniforms and using them to disguise themselves in attacks.
Of course he gave us a BS line about having just gotten a job as
a part-time police officer—something he’d mysteriously forgotten to
mention when we first interrogated him.
We called it back
to the Army, gave them the information, and
asked what to do.
They had no intelligence on the guy. In the end, they decided the
uniforms weren’t evidence of anything.
We were told to turn him loose. So we did.
It gave us something to think about every time we heard of an
attack by insurgents dressed as policemen, over the next few
weeks.