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After Basra, a Fight for Life: Story of a ‘broken Soldier’ of the Iraq War

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

The electric pruners make light work of the bare cox’s apple branches as David Bradley strips them back, preparing the orchard for a new season and the harvest to follow. The farmer cuts and thins out the trees but when he removes the chamois leather glove protecting his right hand, the loss of his index finger, ligaments and skin tissue is laid bare.

This is not the only lasting injury from the former British army major’s time in Iraq. Sometimes, Bradley, 40, has to step out of the direct sunlight as his damaged iris no longer dilates and contracts in the way that it should.

The right side of his face is lightly peppered with black shrapnel marks but seeing him now on the family farm, it is hard to imagine that in the summer of 2004 he was so badly injured that doctors gave him only a 5% chance of survival.

His right hand and eye were shredded when his Warrior – an armoured infantry fighting vehicle used to carry troops – was hit by rocket-propelled grenades.

He was, he says, “blown up”. In the four years that followed, the soldier would first have to fight to live, then fight to rebuild his broken body and then create a completely new life outside the army.

“As soon as the doctors say they can’t operate on you any more you have a choice – stay in and do a desk job or leave. I left. It was the right thing for the army and for me. I am a soldier, I joined to command soldiers. With the injuries I have sustained I can’t do that. I was medically discharged and suddenly became mister, not major, Bradley.”

So, he and his wife Lara and his two children, Philippa, 10, and Alexander, eight, moved out of their military accommodation in Tidworth, Devon, and returned to Bradley’s family farm in Kent. There are times, he admits, when he wishes he was back with his company, which is currently in Iraq, preparing for the British withdrawal. But instead of men, the former major will spend his days this spring marshalling apples, pears, cherries and asparagus.

Sitting in the study of the farmhouse that once belonged to his grandparents, it’s easy for Bradley to conjure the events and mood of Iraq five years ago just as it might be easy for many to forget just how dangerous it was in the country at that time.

By the summer, the Shia insurgency was beginning to sweep across Basra and southern Iraq and in the months to come crude, but deadly, improvised explosive devices would become the weapon of choice against British soldiers, tearing through ineffectual armoured plating on vehicles, killing and maiming scores of soldiers.

Bradley had been in the country since April and was commanding B Company, the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, a group of 116 men attached to the Cheshire Regiment. This was their first tour of Iraq. The company was based in the grounds of the Shatt al-Arab hotel in the northern part of Basra. Before the war, the art deco hotel had boasted a four-star rating and had been a favourite haunt for foreign businessmen who had come to the comparatively prosperous and cosmopolitan southern port.

But by 2004, the Shatt al-Arab had become a large British military base, with row upon row of tents and portable toilets. It was heavily fortified with perimeter walls and guard posts. For US troops in Baghdad, car bombers had become the biggest threat but in the “Shatt”, B Company came under a different kind of attack – every night, the soldiers were mortared by Katyusha rockets, forcing them to sleep under the hard cover of one big, fetid room rather than in the tents that had been erected around the camp.

“We were mortared every night. We hunkered down inside the hotel because it was the only place with a hard roof. I remember once being mortared when I was outside in the toilet and thinking ‘don’t let me die here’.”

Bradley had been in the army for 12 years and in spite of serving in Northern Ireland and having been on exercise in countries such as Kuwait and Oman, this was the first time he had really felt the meaning of the adage: war is often 10% terror and 90% boredom.

The terror he had often talked of and thought about would visit him on Monday 9 August 2004.

Although it was cloudy that morning, it was oppressively hot – even more so inside the claustrophobic armoured fighting vehicles. Heading out of camp in their Warriors, the soldiers’ morning mission was to track down a group of 15 men who had been spotted on rough ground close to another British base, Camp Cherokee – that same rough ground had been the site used by insurgents who had been firing rockets at the camp.

By the time they dispersed the crowd, it was already more than 45c, and B Company were late for lunch; hot and hungry they returned to camp and made straight for the company cookhouse where the chef had kept pie and chips for them in the oven.

They were still in the middle of eating when a runner came in with disturbing news: a number of British troops were missing in the heart of Basra. The details were scarce but the problem obvious.

Gunners from the Royal Horse Artillery had been attacked when they raced in to the city to pull out an army officer who had seen a crowd build up outside the small British Camp Stephen and had radioed for help. As they drove towards the officers, their three “Snatch” Land Rovers were barraged with rockets and bullets – one managed to pull out, but two were so badly shot up they caught fire, the soldiers inside were forced to run for cover, leaving their radios inside.

Their sergeant managed to ring headquarters on an Iraqi mobile phone but he could give no coordinates as they had no idea exactly where they were.

He told HQ that nine soldiers were in the area of the Ba’ath party headquarters, right next to the office of the Moqtada al-Sadr – the headquarters of the Mahdi army.

In the cook house, Bradley remembers thinking that he just wanted to eat the rest of his chips. He gathered some of his men for a quick briefing. They were going to be the rescue party, and Bradley would lead them in to Basra to get the soldiers out. Hostage-taking had become a well-publicized weapon of the insurgents and no one needed reminding that for them the capture of British soldiers would have been the ultimate prize.

“You have images in your mind of them being caught, put into orange jumpsuits and being decapitated on TV,” said Bradley. “They were from a different regiment but none of us would ever leave a British soldier there – we would do whatever we had to to get them back.”

The first call about the missing troops came in at 3.44pm and by 4pm, five of Bradley’s Warriors swept out through the camp gates, each with a driver, gunner and commander on top and between four and seven soldiers – “dismounts” – in the back. There was no air support to call upon, the only means of rescue were the Warriors. The convoy sped down the main road into town, known to the British army as Red Route.

They had been driving for just five minutes when they came under heavy fire – more intense than any previous attack on B Company.

As it crossed a T-junction, Bradley’s Warrior, which went under the radio call sign Two Zero Alpha, was hit by a barrage of rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire.

The assault was coming from buildings on both sides of the street, and Bradley, standing in the commander’s turret, was “scanning for the enemy” through the sight of his rifle, to give his men some idea of where to return fire, but before he had a chance an RPG hit the right side of the vehicle. Another hit his shoulder.

“I just suddenly felt this pressure. I was knocked down. Then there was this small, thick, dark grey explosion below me and I thought: ‘This is bad.’ It looked evil. I flung my hand up and it was a cloven hoof – my index finger had gone.”

In the pandemonium that followed, Bradley thought that another RPG had landed inside the vehicle and shouted through the intercom for everyone to “debus” – get out of the vehicle. But the communications were no longer working.

“I crawled out on top of the turret. I was on fire and with my good hand I patted it out and thought I was OK.” As he lay up there, Private Carl Yee-Lim, his gunner, was screaming: “Sir, sir, get back inside.” The voice, cutting through the roar of the rockets, brought Bradley back to his senses.

“Suddenly I was really conscious of all the rounds coming past me. My gunner grabbed me and I dropped down.”

In fact, the Warrior had been hit by seven RPGs almost simultaneously. Inside the back of the vehicle, it was thick with smoke and blood was everywhere. Sergeant Major Simon Barnett had serious shrapnel wounds to his leg and arms and his helmet had been blown off – a lump of metal was embedded in his head and his teeth were blown out.

The medic, sorely needed, was also badly hit. The rest of the crew in the back, including the Iraqi interpreter, suffered varying degrees of injury, mostly flash burns, and could no longer hear anything because of ear damage. He had blood in his eye but he could still see light.

The pain, however, was spreading and so Bradley reached for the morphine jab he kept just under the breast plate of his flak jacket. With the last reserves of his strength, he ripped it open with his teeth and stabbed it in his thigh.

As he did this, the Warrior sounded like a grunting metal pig as the driver, Sergeant Mick Pike – who thought Bradley was dead – was attempting to drive them out of danger.

“Yee-Lim was sitting behind the chain gun and he kept leaning across and going: ‘Sir, sir, stay with us.’ I was thinking why does he keep shaking me when I am not badly wounded?”

Bradley drifted in and out of consciousness and was a little irritated by the panic in Yee-Lim’s voice. As the vehicle pulled inside camp, the major tried to get out himself.

“I remember putting my hand down on the vehicle and jumping off and just feeling really, really tired and some lads turned up with a stretcher. I collapsed back thinking I am not getting up from this. I didn’t know I was as badly wounded as I was. I just felt drained.”

Bradley collapsed on to a stretcher, was taken inside and put on the commanding officer’s desk. The room turned into a casualty clearing station, but only limited first aid could be done. It immediately became clear they needed to move him to a place with more specialist care. He begged the doctor to knock him out as he had had enough. The last thing Bradley remembers from that day was being wheeled out to a helicopter that flew him to the medical centre at Shaibah logistics base.

“One of the nurses said if any of the other lads had come in at the same time as me they would have put me to the side. They didn’t think I was saveable. If there had to have been a choice, they wouldn’t have operated on me, they would have operated on someone else.”

On the operating table, Bradley was losing blood pressure and the doctors couldn’t work out why. Luckily, there was a Czech doctor working at the base, Marcel Hyack, who was a specialist in chest surgery. With little to lose, Hyack decided to operate and found copper piercing shrapnel from an RPG embedded deep inside. “The shrapnel had cut my innominate vein. The surgeon thought I was going to die anyway, so let’s have it out.”

That night Bradley was induced into a coma and flown to Birmingham in an intensive care unit on board a C17 military aircraft. After being operated on for 18 hours he was brought round, with his wife and father at his bedside.

“They still weren’t sure that I would make it. I had severe shrapnel wounds to the right hand and they had to cut of 80% of the deltoid muscle. They removed my index finger back to the metacarpal. They had to attach my hand to my stomach and transfer the skin flap – it was attached for three weeks.”

Bradley prods the slightly puffy and hairy part of his hand that was rebuilt from his stomach.

“The blast blew out the lens of my right eye and shredded the cornea. I had a new artificial lens and a corneal graft. I can wear a lens but don’t wear it all the time because the cornea is so sensitive. I had three broken ribs and a broken clavicle. I lost some of my lymph glands.”

Bradley remained in hospital for eight weeks. On his tenth day there he received a letter telling him he had been posted to the Y list – an administrative location for people who are not fit to serve.

“In order for them to get a replacement for me I had to leave the battalion. Lara says she watched me shrink when I read it. It was confirmation of my situation and it was very impersonal. I complained about it and they have now changed their procedures.

“All I wanted to do was to get back and command the company. Over time I realised that it wasn’t going to be that easy but that time allowed me to come to terms with it. If you are a double amputee, you know that you can’t go back to fighting as soon as you open your eyes.” From hospital he was allowed home but spent six separate month-long stays at Headley Court military rehabilitation centre in Surrey.

Bradley missed out on compensation introduced in April 2005 for those British soldiers injured on the frontline. He received a medical discharge lump sum of £48,000 and supplements his pension of £21,000 a year with a wage from the farm. A few weeks ago, Bradley – with the help of his father and some hired labor – planted 7,500 new apple trees to augment the orchards of his childhood. For his family, they are a symbol of their new life.

In spite of what happened to him, the soldier-turned-farmer says he “would have been nowhere else on 9 August”. He said: “In its purest form, we went out there to save British soldiers’ lives and we achieved that.”

But also, unknown at the time to the badly injured Bradley, the battle that had engulfed his company left one of its soldiers, Private Lee O’Callaghan, 20, dead.

Without Bradley as commander, his junior officers and soldiers stormed the Ba’ath party headquarters – heavily fortified by the British but handed over to the Iraqis – but could not find the missing troops. By some stroke of good fortune a helmet was spotted in a house nearby and since only British soldiers wore helmets in Basra, they knew they had stumbled across the lost men who were about to run out of ammunition. The beleaguered soldiers were piled into the back of a Warrior.

Bradley’s men gave up their safe-ish seats to fight their way out on foot. Some soldiers were later awarded medals for bravery, including the Military Cross.

“There are dark moments when I lie in bed,” Bradley concedes. He knows he has changed. “I am more emotional than I was. I think many people who come back from those sorts of environments experience that sort of change.

“I have a shorter temper sometimes, though that is becoming less. I am different. But so far farming has been great. The army is a fit man’s business and I am a broken soldier.”

Artillery Targets Basra Leadership

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

British forces in Basra today said they had blown up the local headquarters of the ruling Ba’ath party, following reports of a popular uprising in the southern Iraqi city last night.

A 2,000lb bomb, known as a Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM), smashed through the building and reduced it to rubble, according to GMTV reporter Richard Gaisford, who is embedded with British troops surrounding the city.

Adjoining civilian structures were reportedly left intact.

American F/A-18 Super Hornet warplanes have also dropped satellite-guided bombs on central Basra – the first strikes into the centre of the city aimed at military sites hidden in civilian buildings.

This morning there were conflicting reports of a popular uprising against the Ba’ath leadership. The defence secretary, Geoff Hoon, told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that there had been an attempted uprising on some scale in Basra.

“Certainly there have been disturbances, local people rising up against the regime … we haven’t witnessed it but we know that that is happening from various sources,” he said.

“There seemed to be an uprising in Basra last night,” a British military spokesman, Group Captain Al Lockwood said today. “We are assessing the situation very carefully to see how we can capitalise on it and how we can assist.”

Gp Capt Lockwood claimed Iraqi civilians started attacking fighters who were defending the city from British forces yesterday.

“Big guns that normally shoot into the sky were turned horizontal and fired into the crowd – that’s what the intelligence reports were [saying],” reported Mr Gaisford.

This morning Al-Jazeera TV reported that all was quiet inside the city, with no apparent signs of an uprising.

In a telephone interview with the Qatar-based channel, Iraqi information minister Mohammed al-Sahhaf denied any uprising in Basra.

“The situation is stable,” he said. “Resistance is continuing and we are teaching them more lessons.”

However, British pool reports described thousands of residents rampaging through the streets in the early evening and setting dozens of buildings on fire.

US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld reacted cautiously to reports of the unrest, saying he was “reluctant” to encourage uprisings explicitly. “I am very careful about encouraging people to rise up,” he said. “We know there are people in those cities ready to shoot them if they try to rise up.”

But he added: “Anyone who’s engaged in an uprising has a whole lot of courage and I sure hope they’re successful.”

During the 1991 Gulf war, the city’s predominantly Shia Muslim population took up arms against the Iraqi regime, but government forces crushed the rebellion, killing thousands, after US-led forces pulled out of the country.

Last night, British forces at the gates of Basra battled with more than 1,000 Iraqi militia fighters outside the city. The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards are poised for the order to move in and invade, which they expect to come some time in the next 24 hours.

Yesterday, a British army spokesman said British forces staged a raid into the Basra suburb of Az Zubayr and captured a senior Ba’ath party politician, killing 20 of his bodyguards.

He added that armed irregular units were firing at British forces outside the city, and that the Iraqis were apparently using civilians in front of them as human shields.

British forces have distributed leaflets and broadcast announcements to the city’s 1 million inhabitants, telling them that aid is waiting outside the city. Basra’s residents are currently drinking contaminated water following war damage to the city’s main water processing plant.

Military leaders had hoped to avoid entering Basra, for fear of getting bogged down in urban warfare. But tenacious resistance in the city – there are an estimated 1,000 pro-Saddam fighters, plus an unknown number of regular troops – and growing shortages of food and clean water have compelled them to change their strategy.

Aid supplies begin to move in

As British ships prepare to land aid for the stricken city through the port of Umm Qasr, the health threats in Basra appeared dire today. “The humanitarian situation in Basra is difficult, and very, very tense,” said Muin Kassis of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The UN Children’s Fund estimates up to 100,000 Basra children under the age of five are at immediate risk of severe disease from the unsafe water, especially life-threatening diarrhoea.

The British naval ship Sir Galahad, carrying 211 tonnes of food and 101 tonnes of bottled water, was today beginning the six-hour journey from the Khor Abdallah estuary to Umm Qasr.

Royal Marine commandos who carried out an overnight sweep around the port say they have enough control over the area to begin sending in ships. Coalition forces are struggling to clear the way for more aid shipments, using dolphins to remove mines from waterways and hunting Iraqi fighters around the port.

Meanwhile, the first sizeable relief convoy today set out from Kuwait in a biting sandstorm, heading across land for Umm Qasr.

“We planned for 30 trucks but we only got seven loaded because of the severe sandstorm,” said EJ Russell of the Humanitarian Operations Centre, a joint US-Kuwaiti agency.

Hundreds of cases of water were stacked on three of the trucks. The rest carried boxes of tuna, crackers, sweets and other food.

Plans to bring supplies to Iraqi civilians have been on hold for days because of fiercer than expected fighting across southern Iraq.

Yesterday, the UN secretary-general, Kofi Annan, warned the US that it is legally responsible for providing relief aid.

Iraqis have about five weeks of food left, according to estimates by the World Food Programme. About 13 million people – 60% of Iraq’s 22 million – are completely dependent on food handouts.

Iraqi TV back on air

Iraqi state television was back on air this morning despite a heavy dawn bombing raid that targeted the country’s national station.

The state channel does not broadcast overnight and had been off the air at the time of the bombing. A Reuters correspondent today reported that the station began broadcasting verses from the Koran at around 0600 GMT as normal this morning, quashing US hopes that Saddam Hussein’s lines of communication with his people had been cut.

The US government has been outraged at Saddam’s use of state television to broadcast shocking pictures of US PoWs and soldiers killed in action. A successful strike on the TV station would have been a significant blow to the Iraqi regime, the US believed.

The raid on Baghdad did, however, appear to have taken out Iraq’s international satellite channel. Monitors in Dubai reported that the satellite has been off the air since the raids began early this morning. Amnesty International today warned that the TV station bombing could be in breach of the Geneva convention.

A new wave of explosions in southern Baghdad were reported at around 0800 GMT this morning, as US-led forces appeared to target Iraqi forces dug in to defend the capital. Visibility continues to be very poor in the city, with high winds, dust storms and plumes of smoke from burning oil pits.

Dawn raids on northern Iraq

Several large explosions were reported in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul this morning, according to Al-Jazeera. Its correspondent in Mosul said air raid sirens had rung out over the city, 240 miles north of the capital, around dawn this morning.

At the same time, US planes also today targeted frontline Iraqi positions in the north of the country near the Kurdish-controlled town of Chamchamal, said a Reuters correspondent in the area.

Chamchamal is about 20 miles east of the key northern city of Kirkuk, which lies in Iraqi controlled territory over the border to the northern no-fly zone. The major oil town has also been a target for US-led bombing raids in recent days.

Troops continue push for Baghdad

US marines continued to push north from the southern Iraqi city of Nassiriya today, shelling suspected Iraqi positions as they did so.

After finally punching through fierce Iraqi resistance from Fedayeen militia units on the Euphrates river yesterday, the forces are laying down barrages of artillery as they move towards Baghdad. Officers said they were prepared for more heavy fighting along the way.

British soldiers named

The two soldiers killed by fire from another British tank in southern Iraq were named today. The Ministry of Defence identified the two tank crew as Corporal Stephen Allbutt, 35, a married father of two, and unmarried Trooper David Clarke, 19.

The men, both from central England, died on Monday night when their Challenger 2 tank fighting Iraqi forces west of Basra was mistakenly targeted by another British tank.

A total of 22 British servicemen are now listed as dead or missing in the Iraq war. Only two have been killed in action. British fatalities for the whole of the 1991 Gulf war totalled 24.

‘Bloodiest battle’ kills hundreds of Iraqi soldiers

Further north, US commanders said today that “large numbers” of Iraqi forces had been killed during a major battle yesterday evening near the town of Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad. Iraqi reports of the death toll reaching 750 were this morning unconfirmed.

The US military said the fighting centred around a fierce two-hour battle in the middle of a severe sandstorm, beginning at around 1700 GMT last night. American tanks clashed with Iraqi fighters armed with rocket-propelled grenades, after a dozen or more US tanks became stranded on the far side of a river when Iraqis blew up a bridge they had crossed and more tanks went in to help.

Commanders on the ground gave no information on casualties but said they expected the Iraqi death toll to be “very high”.

Sky television quoted a senior US officer near Najaf who said the Iraqi death toll could be 650. If confirmed, the battle would be by far the bloodiest encounter in six days of fighting. In Washington, the Pentagon said 150 to 300 Iraqis might have been killed and two US tanks were destroyed.

“They did damage a couple of pieces of our gear but we’ve had no reports of casualties on our side,” a spokesman said.