US troops sheltered in
Saddam-era bunkers during Iran missile attack
Al-Asad air
base, Iraq Akeem Ferguson was in a bunker when his team
received the bone-chilling radio transmission: Six Iranian ballistic missiles were headed in their direction.
The concrete slab they had taken cover under offered little
protection from projectiles that US troops in Iraq were being attacked with.
"I held on to my gun and put my head down and I tried to
find a happy place, so I started singing to my daughters in my head," said
the six-foot tall US staff sergeant. "And I just waited. I hoped that
whatever happened, that it was quick."
"I was 100% ready to die," he added.
Ferguson survived unscathed along with other US troops and
civilian contractors on Iraq's
al-Asad base, after a barrage of
Iranian ballistic missiles on the morning of January 8.
The strike was the widest scale attack on a base housing US troops in decades. Troops said the
absence of casualties was nothing short of a "miracle."
A closer look at the site reveals a base
vulnerable to this type of assault. Personnel received advance warning of the
strike several hours before it took place, enabling them to take cover. Still
they lacked the surface-to-air defenses to fend off a ballistic missile assault
-- US military did not build structures on the base, one of the oldest and
largest in Iraq, to protect against an attack of this kind. They were at the
mercy of the downpour of missiles.
Near the airfield, shards of metal crack
underfoot as two military personnel take measurements of the gaping crater left
behind by one of the missiles. It is around 2 meters deep and roughly 3 meters
in diameter -- a burned copy of "Beauty and the Beast" teeters on the
edge of the hole. A flip-flop, an Uno card, and a military jacket stick out
from the charred wreckage left in the wake of the missile.
This was a housing unit for drone pilots and
operators on the base. They evacuated the unit before the strike. Incidentally,
the they had nicknamed the living quarters "chaos."
US troops sheltered in Saddam-era bunkers during Iran missile attack
Reviewed by Muhammad Umar
on
January 16, 2020
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