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She Was Fighting to the Death (MY Hero, My New Avatar)

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What ever the real story is, that girl has guts!

Details Emerging of W. Va. Soldier's Capture and Rescue

By Susan Schmidt and Vernon Loeb
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, April 3, 2003;


Pfc. Jessica Lynch, rescued Tuesday from an Iraqi hospital, fought fiercely and shot several enemy soldiers after Iraqi forces ambushed the Army's 507th Ordnance Maintenance Company, firing her weapon until she ran out of ammunition, U.S. officials said yesterday.

Lynch, a 19-year-old supply clerk, continued firing at the Iraqis even after she sustained multiple gunshot wounds and watched several other soldiers in her unit die around her in fighting March 23, one official said. The ambush took place after a 507th convoy, supporting the advancing 3rd Infantry Division, took a wrong turn near the southern city of Nasiriyah.

"She was fighting to the death," the official said. "She did not want to be taken alive."

Lynch was also stabbed when Iraqi forces closed in on her position, the official said, noting that initial intelligence reports indicated that she had been stabbed to death. No official gave any indication yesterday, however, that Lynch's wounds had been life-threatening.

Several officials cautioned that the precise sequence of events is still being determined, and that further information will emerge as Lynch is debriefed. Reports thus far are based on battlefield intelligence, they said, which comes from monitored communications and from Iraqi sources in Nasiriyah whose reliability has yet to be assessed. Pentagon officials said they had heard "rumors" of Lynch's heroics but had no confirmation.

There was no immediate indication whether Lynch's fellow soldiers killed in the ambush were among the 11 bodies found by the Special Operations commandos who rescued Lynch at Saddam Hussein Hospital in Nasiriyah. U.S. officials said that at least some of the bodies are believed to be those of U.S. servicemen. Two were found in the hospital's morgue, and nine were found in shallow graves on the grounds outside.

Seven soldiers from the 507th are still listed as missing in action following the ambush. Five others, four men and a woman, were taken captive after the attack. Video footage of the five has been shown on Iraqi television, along with grisly pictures of at least four soldiers killed in the battle.

Lynch, of Palestine, W.Va., arrived yesterday at a U.S. military hospital in Germany. She was in "stable" condition, with broken arms and a broken leg in addition to the gunshot and stab wounds, sources said. Other sources said both legs and one arm were broken. Victoria Clarke, a Pentagon spokeswoman, gave no specifics of Lynch's condition, telling reporters only that she is "in good spirits and being treated for injuries."

But one military officer briefed on her condition said that while Lynch was conscious and able to communicate with the U.S. commandos who rescued her, "she was pretty messed up." Last night Lynch spoke by telephone with her parents, who said she was in good spirits, but hungry and in pain.

"Talk about spunk!" said Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), whom military officials had briefed on the rescue. "She just persevered. It takes that and a tremendous faith that your country is going to come and get you."

One Army official said that it could be some time before Lynch is reunited with her family, since experience with those taken prisoner since the Vietnam War indicates that soldiers held in captivity need time to "decompress" and reflect on their ordeal with the help of medical professionals.

"It's real important to have decompression time before they get back with their families to assure them that they served their country honorably," the official said. "She'll meet with Survival, Escape, Resistance and Evasion psychologists. These are medical experts in dealing with this type of things."

At Central Command headquarters in Qatar, Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks showed a brief night-vision video clip of commandos rushing Lynch, on a stretcher, to a Black Hawk helicopter. Later, television networks showed footage of her arriving in Germany.

One intriguing account of Lynch's captivity came from an unidentified Iraqi pharmacist at Saddam Hussein Hospital who told Sky News, a British network, that he had cared for her and heard her crying about wanting to be reunited with her family.

"She said every time, about wanting to go home," said the pharmacist, who was filmed at the hospital wearing a white medical coat over a black T-shirt. "She knew that the American Army and the British were on the other side of the [Euphrates] river in Nasiriyah city. . . . She said, 'Maybe this minute the American Army [will] come and get me.' " The only injuries the pharmacist said he was aware of were to Lynch's leg, but there was no way to evaluate his statement.

Lynch's rescue at midnight local time Tuesday was a classic Special Operations raid, with U.S. commandos in Black Hawk helicopters engaging Iraqi forces on their way in and out of the medical compound, defense officials said.

Acting on information from CIA operatives, they said, a Special Operations force of Navy SEALs, Army Rangers and Air Force combat controllers touched down in blacked-out conditions. An AC-130 gunship, able to fire 1,800 rounds a minute from its 25mm cannon, circled overhead, as did a reconnaissance aircraft providing video imagery of the operation as it unfolded.

"There was shooting going in, there was some shooting going out," said one military officer briefed on the operation. "It was not intensive. There was no shooting in the building, but it was hairy, because no one knew what to expect. When they got inside, I don't think there was any resistance. It was fairly abandoned."

Meanwhile, U.S. Marines advanced in Nasiriyah to divert whatever Iraqi forces might still have been in the area.

The officer said that Special Operations forces found what looked like a "prototype" Iraqi torture chamber in the hospital's basement, with batteries and metal prods.

Briefing reporters at Central Command headquarters, Brooks said the hospital apparently was being used as a military command post. Commandos whisked Lynch to the Black Hawk helicopter that had landed inside the hospital compound, he said, while others remained behind to clear the hospital.

The announcement of the raid was delayed for more than an hour because some U.S. troops were on the ground longer than anticipated, Brooks said. "We wanted to preserve the safety of the forces," he said.

http://www.boston.com/dailynews/093/world/Rescued_POW_reportedly_waged_a:.shtml
 
Do you think they let her live, only because she's from Palestine W. VA? You know, just to make people think about it, sort of like the Columbia? Just a thought.

I was thinking about the same thing yesterday! They could have seen it as bad Karma! But the reports I'm seeing now is that she blew out her clips at the enemy and still put up a fight! Sort of like a female Rambo! They may have respected her warrior attitude and decided not to execute her! No matter what it is a incredible story!

She is set for life! Movie of the weeks, visits to the white house etc. There are not many instances of US woman in combat, so this will make the story even more incredible! And what they did to the other POW's and how she was rescued by DF!
 
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How can she have two broken legs and a broken arm from an ambush?

She was shot multiple times and stabbed several times! Bullets break bones! May have resulted during fire fight (fallen down rpg etc) They may have tortured her and broken them! I'm not sure if they wrecked or not in the convoy either!
 
That could be the case but it sounds suspicous.

She has a lot of spunk though. She will be rewarded quite nicely once she is healed and able to hit the talk show/lecture tour.
 
That could be the case but it sounds suspicous.

She has a lot of spunk though. She will be rewarded quite nicely once she is healed and able to hit the talk show/lecture tour.

Yea either way! It's a hell of a story! There was Intl. chatter of her putting up a fight against the Iraqis picked up! Maybe fighting a woman freaked them out! Or she went Rambo on them! Time will tell!

But the sad part is the rest of the POW's that did not make it out alive with her!:(
 
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The rest of the POWs are dead???

BTW, what an awesome chick
 
The rest of the POWs are dead???

BTW, what an awesome chick

They found a stack of bodies presumed to be POW's in the hospital! Some could still be alive from the Convoy! They took DNA samples of all servicemen before the war so they will have to check DNA! The Iraqis did some horrible shit to the bodies!
 
Great....

Great news.

Nice avitar (although the tornado and camels was nice too).

Now, if we can only do something about the guy with the Barbie wig on his wang. :eek: That creeps me out. :eek:
 
PoW's rescue a high-tech thriller


By COLIN FREEZE
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
POSTED AT 4:07 AM EST Thursday, Apr. 3, 2003

Saving Private Lynch was a feel-good story about a daring rescue that went off without a hitch and raised spirits from Wall Street to the White House. But it also turned out to be a groundbreaking high-tech thriller with a sad twist, all playing out before the eyes of its commanders.

Thanks to camera-carrying commandos, General Tommy Franks and other top U.S. military officials watched the mission to rescue Pte. Jessica Lynch unfold as it happened. Night-vision cameras and a live video link obliterated the 800-kilometre distance between U.S. Central Command in Qatar and the soldiers who carried out the late-night mission at Saddam Hospital in Nasiriyah, Iraq.

It was a tense two hours of viewing in Doha before the commanders saw their teenaged target emerging on a stretcher, hurt but smiling and blanketed by a U.S. flag, before being spirited away to safety.

Huge U.S. military resources were poured into the mission — marines, Army Rangers, Navy Seals, an air force gunship, armoured units and a communications aircraft were all in on the elaborate plan.

"It was a classic joint operation done by some of our nation's finest warriors, who are dedicated to never leaving a comrade behind," Brigadier-General Vincent Brooks, a U.S. Central Command spokesman, said yesterday.

It started earlier this week, when an Iraqi doctor handed a note to marines suggesting the 19-year-old U.S. Army supply clerk, part of a maintenance company that was ambushed after taking a wrong turn near Nasiriyah on March 23, was alive and being treated in an Iraqi hospital.

During the ambush, Pte. Lynch shot several enemy soldiers before running out of ammunition, The Washington Post reported, and was stabbed before being captured.

"She was fighting to the death," a U.S. official told the Post. "She did not want to be taken alive."

Gen. Franks ordered the mission Tuesday, and gave U.S. President George W. Bush a heads-up that something was in the works.

U.S.-led coalition armour units and marines began the rescue mission with an apparent decoy, attacking a bridge across the River Euphrates in another part of Nasiriyah. With Iraqi forces distracted, a U.S. Black Hawk helicopter dimmed its lights and made a clandestine descent at the compound that houses the Saddam Hospital.

Army Rangers emerged and set up a defensive perimeter. But it was Navy Seals who carried out the rescue itself, as an air force gunship and a communications plane circled overhead.

Operating in almost total darkness and relying on night-vision goggles, the soldiers came under Iraqi fire at the hospital compound, which has reportedly been doubling as a military base. But without suffering injuries, they stormed in and found a staff member to lead them to Pte. Lynch — the first time they knew for certain the young West Virginian was alive.

Before long, they had Pte. Lynch on a stretcher were spiriting her to safety, completing what some were calling the most successful U.S. prisoner-of-war rescue mission since the Second World War.

Last night, she was recovering from three broken limbs and possible gunshot wounds in a U.S. military hospital in Germany, and spoke to her family at their home in Palestine, W.Va.

"She's real spirited; she hasn't eaten in eight days and she's hungry," her father, Greg Lynch, said. "She wants some food."

U.S. officials would not say yesterday what happened to Pte. Lynch during her captivity, but she appeared to have been cared for in the hospital.

"Every day, I saw her crying about wanting to go home," an Iraqi pharmacist told a television reporter after the raid. "She kept wondering if the American army were coming to save her."

News of the mission's success was received triumphantly among Americans yesterday as the night-vision images were widely circulated on television.

The Wall Street Journal On-line reported that the rescue helped feed a "buoyant" market mood that raised the Dow Jones industrial average up 2.7 per cent yesterday.

Mr. Bush was "full of joy for Jessica Lynch and her family," according to spokesman Ari Fleischer.

However, there were other grim images from Saddam Hospital that Americans did not see: those of the 11 corpses that were recovered along with Pte. Lynch; two from the hospital's morgue and nine exhumed from shallow graves.

Military officials said they had reason to believe some were Americans, and The Guardian reported that at least two of the dead were among the 15 members of Pte. Lynch's 507th Maintenance Company who fell victim to the Iraqi ambush.

Forensic experts are not expected to identify all of the bodies for some time, leaving the families of the soldiers still missing or captive unsure of their fates — but with at least something to hold on to.

The rescue "gives me hope," said Jack Dowdy, father of Master Sergeant Robert Dowdy, among the missing members of the 507th.

"I'm just sitting here hoping if they find one, maybe they will find some more."
 
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