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Smith, Thayer, and Durfee carried Willis down the stairs to the waiting Humvees, where they gently placed him in a body bag and sat him in the back seat of one of the trucks. A second bag was carried back up to the roof, where Morley was gently wrapped, his head cushioned by Cisneros, and was brought back down to the vehicles, where Moser and Corriveau, alive and physically unharmed but mentally exhausted and emotionally drained, climbed in and sat down. There was no room in the cabs of Red's trucks, so Morley was laid out in the trunk of the rear Humvee, with a gear bag arranged so that it propped up his head like a pillow. Morley and Willis's fellow paratroopers wanted their friends to be comfortable on their last ride back to Patrol Base Olson.
BY THIS TIME, Charlie Company's 2nd ("White") and 3rd Platoons had arrived from Patrol Base Olson, with Captain Buddy Ferris, the Company Commander, riding along. There was work still to be done at the site, from checking the roof for sensitive items to pursuing those involved in the assault, and Blue and White Platoons would spend the next several hours doing just those things. In the ensuing gun battles, several al Qaeda -- both Iraqi and foreign -- would be killed or captured, among them the informant who had initially alerted the foreign fighters to Reaper's presence on the roof of his apartment building. Following a large number of the fighters from the apartment building and the surrounding machine gun positions using surveillance aircraft, Captain Ferris was able to identify the house to which over 20 of the surviving terrorists went after leaving the building. Minutes later, a GPS-guided bomb was dropped on the house.
Within the next hours and days, more information would come to light, both through the interrogation of captured insurgents and through the development of more human intelligence on the situation. According to the available evidence, nearly 40 al Qaeda were directly involved in the assault on Reaper's position (they believed the team on the roof comprised nearly a dozen American soldiers). During the firefight, which lasted less than ten total minutes, Corriveau and Moser had killed at least ten enemy fighters -- possibly as many as fifteen -- and had not only kept themselves alive, but, against all odds, had prevented al Qaeda from succeeding in their real goal: to kidnap the soldiers on the rooftop, and to make a public spectacle of their imprisonment and murder, just two weeks before General Petraeus's internationally viewed testimony on Iraq before the U.S. Congress. The suspicion that kidnapping was the fighters' intent was confirmed by a final piece of intelligence that Charlie Company received just after the incident: an announcement, crafted by the Islamic State of Iraq (al Qaeda's Iraqi front), stating that nine U.S. soldiers had been kidnapped in Samarra, and had been beheaded and had their bodies thrown into Thar-Thar lake (to the southwest of the city).
Thanks to the strength, courage, discipline, and unwillingness to give up in the face of seemingly impossible odds of Chris Corriveau and Eric Moser, the ISI had spoken too soon. There would be no trophy, no public relations victory to thrust in the face of those in America and around the world whose attention would in the next few weeks be focused again on Iraq. Instead, there would only be death or capture, as the ISI members responsible were hunted down, one by one, by Captain Ferris and his company of very motivated, and exceptionally lethal, paratroopers who, as Corriveau and Moser had demonstrated during the fight of their lives on the rooftop that fateful morning, would never, ever give up, whatever the odds.
Kylie | 12.13.08 @ 5:22PM
Josh Morley was a good friend of mine and my husband's. Thanks you for telling their story. It needs to be heard and remembered.
Pingback| 1.25.09 @ 11:10PM
Someone You Should Know: SGT Christopher Hamel Corriveau and SGT Eric Alan Moser | P links to this page.
not to worry| 5.21.09 @ 10:10PM
this story makes moser look like he is the main guy that took over the enemy force and well he was not corriveau was. moser hid behind a wall and contemplated running away like a bitch the true heroes are the ones that died that day and didt get the true honor of an american soldier
Douglas Byrd| 5.25.09 @ 6:28PM
Heroes are also people who ,even though they may be terrified,do their duty anyway.
Bryan Chambers| 5.25.09 @ 8:16PM
These four soldiers are true heroes in my eyes. To do what these men do daily in IRAQ takes uncommom courage that men and women who have been in battle would only know. I don't know what I would do if I was there, but I do know one thing , I would have not run just as they did not run. May God Blessed our Armed Forces!
Apalled| 5.26.09 @ 1:59PM
Not to worry...you are a sick human being. Its people like you that make this world a little worse off than it was before. Put yourself in these guy's shoes and see how you'd react. All 4 of these guys are true heroes...you're nothing, but a coward talking a lot of mess in s safe place.
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