Battle of Nasiriyah

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Battle of Nasiriyah
Part of 2003 Invasion of Iraq

USMC amphibious vehicle destroyed at Nasiriyah
Date March 23, 2003 - March 29, 2003
Location Nasiriyah, Iraq
Result U.S. tactical victory
Belligerents
Flag of Iraq Iraq Flag of the United States United States
Commanders
General Ali Hasan Al-Majid Brigadier General Richard Natonski
Strength
Iraqi Army 3d Corps, Task Force Tarawa
Casualties and losses
359-431 KIA; 300+ POW; 1,000+ WIA[1] 29 KIA; 6 POW; 60 WIA

The Battle of Nasiriyah occurred during the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Heavy fighting took place between Iraqi forces and the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade under the call sign Task Force Tarawa of the United States Marine Corps between about March 23 and March 29 2003. During the fighting, 18 Marines and 11 Army soldiers were killed, and about 60 were wounded; while the Iraqi resistance was defeated fairly rapidly thereafter.

Contents

[edit] The battle

Nasiriyah was the headquarters of the Iraqi Army's 3d Corps, composed of the 11th ID, 51st Mech ID, and 6th Armored Division—all at around 50 percent strength. The 51st operated south covering the oilfields, and the 6th was north near Al Amarah, which left three brigade-sized elements of the 11th ID to guard the An Nasiriyah area.

A US Army 5 ton truck ambushed by an Iraqi modified Type 69 tank
A US Army 5 ton truck ambushed by an Iraqi modified Type 69 tank

On March 23, a convoy of the United States Army's 507th Maintenance Company and elements of the 3rd Combat Support Battalion of the 3rd Infantry Division made a wrong turn into enemy territory and were ambushed near the city killing 11 soldiers and resulting in multiple soldiers, including Private Jessica Lynch, becoming prisoners of war. At least 15 American transport vehicles of different size (from Humvees to HEMTTs) were destroyed in this action by small-arms fire, RPGs, mortar rounds, and tank gunfire. Some of them swerved out of the road or crashed while attempting to avoid incoming Iraqi rounds. One truck was even rammed by a Type 69-QM tank. Only three units of the convoy escaped unharmed.

The navigational error has not been satisfactorily explained. Since the convoy was equipped with GPS receivers and maps, it is possible that the best-equipped navigators were not near the front of the convoy, which would have made it very difficult to avoid or correct errors. The ambush couldn't have been planned, because the Iraqis knew even less than the Americans which path the convoy would take. However, after at least two wrong turns, the convoy drove through the center of a heavily armed city and found itself surrounded by enemy forces. The week after the battle, Newsweek published maps of it, showing the convoy's planned course around the city and its actual course through it. The battle could be described as a battle of encounter, rather than a battle of maneuver—in sharp contrast to the 1991 Persian Gulf War, in which Iraqi forces could navigate only by roads and other landmarks, and U.S. forces knew their absolute positions at all times, due to consistent use of their GPS receivers and predefined digital waypoints.(Tom Clancy's book Armored Cav explains how GPS was used in that war.)[citation needed]

The bloodiest day of the operations for the Marines was also March 23, when 18 men of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marines, were killed by a combination of mortar rounds, RPGs, and indirect tank fire. A friendly-fire incident occurred when an A-10 strafed Amphibious Assault Vehicles by mistake, killing at least one serviceman.[2] Two other Marines, from the 6th Engineer Support Battalion, Corporal Evans James[3] and Sgt. Bradley S. Korthaus[4] drowned while trying to cross the Saddam canal under fire the following day. A third Marine from the Marine Air Control Gp-28 died from hostile fire.

[edit] Participating units

[edit] US military

[edit] Iraqi Army

  • 3rd Corps
    • 11th Infantry Division
    • 51st Mechanised Infantry Division
    • 6th Armored Division

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

[edit] Bibliography

  • Lowry, Richard S. (2006). Marines in the Garden of Eden: The Battle for An Nasiriyah. Berkley Hardcover. ISBN 0-425-20988-1. 
  • Livingston, Gary (2004). An Nasiriyah: The Fight for the Bridges. Caisson Press. ISBN 1-928724-04-3. 
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