2 US Soldiers Stranded in Desert for Seven Days: Props to these Guys

justint

Banned
Dec 6, 1999
1,429
0
0
I would find whoever forgot about me and punch him in the face.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

March 30, 2003
Two U.S. Soldiers Stranded in Desert for Seven Days
By JUDITH MILLER


ITH THE 75th EXPLOITATION TASK FORCE, Northern Kuwait, March 30 ? Two young American soldiers have been rescued by marines after being stranded in the southern Iraqi desert for seven days.

Specialist Jeffrey Klein, 20, and Sgt. Matthew Koppi, 22, both mechanics with the Army's Third Infantry Division, were in good spirits, if thirsty, hungry and tired, after their rescue on Friday, when marines in Chinook helicopters spotted them dug into trenches in the flat sand.

No one was quite sure today whether or why their unit had failed to notice their absence or that of an officer's Humvee.

Asked about the incident, officers at the headquarters of the coalition's land forces said they were trying to find out what had happened.

In interviews, the soldiers said they were stranded after being sent out to tow an officer's Humvee that had broken down as the division was traveling north toward Baghdad. When their own truck's clutch failed, one of their unit's staff sergeants ordered them to stay put, saying he would send for them as the convoy moved on.

As days passed without rescue, the soldiers dug trenches to defend their position, alternated night watch, and drew S O S in the sand. They said they gave away much of their food to hungry Iraqi civilians who approached their truck.

Sergeant Klein, of Independence, Ky., said suspicious white vehicles with passengers in Arab dress slowed down to get a better look, but did not stop. President Saddam Hussein's fedayeen, whom Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld now insists be called "regime death squads," have been cruising the sandy roads of southern Iraq in such vehicles looking for vulnerable Americans and trying to ensure loyalty to the government among the populace of the largely Shiite Muslim towns of southern Iraq.

"Some of those rogue guys may have passed us," Specialist Klein said. "But when they saw that we were armed and really dug in, they may have been discouraged."

During the day, Sergeant Koppi, of Asheville, N.C., wrote poems to his wife, who had their first child 10 days before his deployment.


It has been weeks since we have spoken,

I know her heart is close to broken,

Defending our nation isn't always fun,

There are only a few who can get the job done.

It strains our honor and our lives,

It hurts our children and our wives.

Often the people of the nation can't see

That we sacrifice so that they may be free.

But ribbons and medals can't compare

To the love of home waiting there.

Specialist Klein's wife is four months pregnant with their first child. He said it took him time to calm her down when he called on a satellite phone from an airfield in northern Kuwait to assure her he was safe.

The soldiers were found by an unidentified Marine unit. But the marines left them at a maintenance shed in a battle outpost in the desert. They were taken to Camp Udairi in northern Kuwait by Col. Richard R. McPhee, who commands the 75th Exploitation Task Force, during a mission in southern Iraq. That unit is hunting for evidence of weapons of mass destruction.

After a medical checkup, the soldiers were given new uniforms, a hot meal and a full night of sleep. Meanwhile, officers sent word to their unit of their rescue, and sought information about why they had been stranded.

Some soldiers attributed the mishap to the "fog of war." But others were dumbfounded.

Colonel McPhee said he was hugely impressed with their resourcefulness and dedication. "When we found them," he said, "they just kept saying they that wanted to return to their unit as soon as possible to be part of the battle." Offering his highest accolade, he said, "Those guys are warriors."



Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company | Privacy Policy
 

Grey

Platinum Member
Oct 14, 1999
2,737
2
81
Wow, nice job. The guts it took to stay there and face possible roving Iraqi troops. And to top it off they gave their food to hungry Citizens when they didn't know when they would get relieved! Very good job.
 

mastertech01

Moderator Emeritus Elite Member
Nov 13, 1999
11,875
282
126
High Five for my fellow maintenance soldiers. :D

I bet they just wanted to get back to the unit ASAP so they could beat the living sh!t out of that SSG! :|
 

burnedout

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 1999
6,249
2
0
A wonderful outcome to what could easily have been a horrible ending.

Now, after someone puts a boot up that SSG's ass because of a total disregard for his soldiers, he's got some explaining to do.
 

Bartman39

Elite Member | For Sale/Trade
Jul 4, 2000
8,878
51
91
Just wonder what those guys were thinking around day 3 or so...? WTF....!!!!!!!! :confused:

Anything one of those passing trucks could have been potential death... (however it is possible the Iraq`s that saw them feared a possible ambush and just stayed away...?)

I say hats off to some cool headed soldiers... (with a lotta luck...) ;)



And bust a SSgt down for ignorance...

 

Grey

Platinum Member
Oct 14, 1999
2,737
2
81
I bet they saw two trucks and only could view 2 soldiers. I am sure they were thinking there are 10 others hiding in the sand or something.
 

dahunan

Lifer
Jan 10, 2002
18,191
3
0
This is the type of intelligence that inhabits America these days.

The commanding officer needs to be sent home - possibly discharged if he didn't even know the boys were missing
 

HillbillyHab

Member
Mar 18, 2001
50
0
0
I wonder if word of the friendly and lost Americans handing out food rations could have saved their a**es from the roving "death squads":)
 

Wag

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2000
8,286
4
81
What I find truly amazing about this story is, even though these guys were stranded in the desert, with no idea of if or when they'ld be rescued, they still gave away almost all their food to starving Iraqi civilians. You think any of Sadaam's troops would do this?

Gee, I wonder if Al-Jazeera is going to pick up this story?