The real story from that incident continues to go mainly uncovered -- the high percentage of jammed weapons, lack of basic CTT training and lack of solid leadership and soldier skills when it counted. It's not the soldiers fault, it is the fault of their senior commanders and command policy.
- It's telling that Pvt. Miller hadn't shot a weapon in about a year before the ambush. You're in a combat support unit granted, but obviously you are operating in a hostile envoronment and no range time before deployment? No opportunity to zero a weapon or knock the rust off markmanship? Anybody's who has been in the Army or Marines please tell me that this is not an outrage.
- The M2 .50 jammed. I wonder if there was range time to set headspace and timing? A reliable weapon once it's adjusted.
- Aside from NBC, how solid were these soldiers on CTT? How many could perfrom immediate action automatically?
- Who was riding their bellybutton to make sure the weapons were clean, dustcovers closed, barrel end capped and ready for action? Was that a priority?
- Who taught the immediate leadeship NCOs and Officers in the convoy (hell the troops of course too) how to react to an ambush? What was their security posture? How much had they trained for such events?
Here a take on our current "Two Armies of One" coddled support soldiers atmosphere.
March of the Porcelain Soldiers It does heroic soldiers who did the best with what they had to work with (training wise) no favor to ignore what appears to be serious lapses in focus. This wasn't a victory, but it does represent a chance to promote change.
Charon