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In the
late
morning
of May
8, 2004,
a
30-truck
logistical
convoy
snaked
its way
along an
Iraqi
highway
just
north of
Baghdad
International
Airport
on its
way to
Logistics
Support
Area
Anaconda.
In the
lead gun
truck
rode SFC
Michael
Segreaves,
a squad
leader
with the
810th
Military
Police
Company
charged
with
protecting
the
convoy
with the
help of
18 other
MPs.
As the
convoy
neared a
cloverleaf
where
two
highways
connect,
surrounded
by tall
buildings,
Segreaves
could
see
several
plumes
of smoke
near the
roads.
When the
convoy
entered
the
cloverleaf,
Segreaves
realized
the area
was a
prime
ambush
site
–and
that the
smoke
was
rising
from an
earlier
ambush.
Just as
he
realized
that,
the
ambush
began.
Several
improvised
explosive
devices
(IEDs)
exploded
near the
convoy
as it
turned
into the
cloverleaf.
A single
rocket
propelled
grenade
flew
toward
the
convoy,
but
missed
it
completely.
“The guy
that
fired
that RPG
couldn't
hit
anything,”
Segreaves
remarked.
While
the
front of
the
convoy
came
under
attack,
the rear
element
saw what
it
thought
was
friendly
forces.
“The
rear gun
radioed
me and
said
that he
saw
dismounted
troops
and
wanted
to check
them
out,”
Segreaves
explained. |
Segreaves
suspected
they
were not
friendly
forces
and
wanted
the
convoy
to keep
moving
--but
the rear
element
stopped
anyway.
There
was no
reply
when he
tried to
call
them
back on
the
radio.
“We lost
communication
with
each
other,”
Segreaves
explained.
The lead
element
of the
convoy
drove
onto the
overpass,
where
they
encountered
a
stranded
Stryker
vehicle.
The
Stryker
was part
of
another
convoy
from
Segreaves'
camp
that had
been
attacked
earlier
that
morning.
U.S.
forces
were in
the
process
of
loading
it onto
a Heavy
Equipment
and
Truck
Transport
(HETT),
but the
disabled
Stryker
was
continuing
to block
traffic.
Segreaves
established
a
security
formation
around
the
stranded
Stryker,
approaching
a
sergeant
in the
Stryker
to
determine
how long
it would
take to
load the
vehicle
onto the
HETT.
Suddenly,
the
rooftops
erupted
with
small
arms
fire.
The
insurgents
launched
the main
thrust
of their
ambush,
including
more
RPGs and
IEDs.
“This
was my
very
first
convoy
into
Iraq,
and it
was a
toe-to-toe
fight,”
Segreaves
said.
Segreaves
wanted
to call
for
close
air
support
but
realized
he did
not have
the
correct
frequencies,
so he
asked
the
Stryker
sergeant.
Segreaves
then ran
towards
the rear
of the
convoy
to
reestablish
communications
with the
rear
security
team --
all
while
continuing
to
direct
suppressive
fire to
protect
the
convoy
and
recover
the
Stryker.
The rear
element
soon
arrived.
Able to
turn
more
attention
to the
fight
now that
he had
accounted
for the
rest of
convoy,
Segreaves
returned
to the
front of
the
convoy
and
continued
to fight
beside
his
Soldiers.
The
ambush
had
worsened;
now
insurgents
were
attacking
from the
rear,
from
rooftops
and even
from
below
the
overpass.
“My guys
were
dumping
a lot of
ammo,”
Segreaves
said.
“I'm
thinking
the
whole
time,
‘fire
discipline,
fire
discipline,'
because
I don't
want to
be
standing
out here
with my
9mm.”
Minutes
after he
asked
the
Stryker
sergeant
to call
for air
support,
attack
helicopters
began
circling
overhead.
The
insurgents
fled at
the
sound of
rotors,
and
Segreaves
and his
Soldiers
continued
with
their
mission.
Later,
an
infantry
unit
responded
to the
area and
cleared
the
buildings
where
the
convoy
had
drawn
fire.
Segreaves
later
learned
that his
earlier
fight
resulted
in nine
insurgent
casualties.
There
was no
damage
to his
convoy
and no
U.S.
casualties.
“I
didn't
do
anything
that any
other
NCO
wouldn't
do,”
Segreaves
shared
humbly.
He said
it
almost
felt
awkward
to
receive
the
Bronze
Star for
Valor.
“Without
my squad
I would
be
nothing.
I was
blessed
to have
great
guys,”
Segreaves
said.
Excerpts
from
article
by Capt.
Steve
Alvarez
143rd
Sustainment
Command
(Expeditionary),
Jan. 10,
2009
Photo and information courtesy
of US
Army /
Dept. of
Defense |
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