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File: 970725_dec96_decls34_0071.txt
Subject = AAR 1ST MARDIV IN SWA
Parent Organization = MCCDC
Unit = WDID
Folder Title = AFTER ACTION REPORT 1ST MARINE DIVISION IN SOUTHWEST ASIA WDID SWA 0073
Document Number = 1
Box ID = BX600145
UNCLASSIFIED
The following article is offered as input to LtGen Boomer's
request for interesting items that may have happened during
the liberate Kuwait exercise.
The lat Battalion, 12th Marines received a Kuwaitee
national, honorary rank of Lieutenant, prior to Operation
Desert Storm. This officer was assigned for purposes of
interpretation should the unit take Iraqi prisoners or meet
up with Kuwaitee nationals/resistance fighters. During the
actual offensive, the Battalion took many enemy prisoners of
war and Lt Saud was extremely valuable in the interrogation
of the prisoners and identification of Iraqi Officers.
After the Battalion had moved to the Kuwaitee
International Airport area and a cease:.fire was ordered, Lt
Saud requested to go into Kuwait City to see what damage had
been done to his home. We received clearance to go into the
city and Lt Saud led a convoy of ti@,o HMWWV's with the
Battalion Commander, Sergeant Major,, Headquarters Battery CO,
First Sergeant, 2 Drivers and 2 riflemen. After we cleared
Lt Saud's home (reports from local Kuwaitees indicated Iraqis
were still present in some of the homes), we saw that the
Iraqis had totally demolished the interior. Not one thing
was left in intact.
As I waited on the street while Lt Saud took inventory,
two Kuwaitees came up to us. Both were well dressed, one was
a doctor who had to continually escape from the Iraqis for
fear of being shot. The elder Kuwaitee told me that S0,00e
Kuwaitees died in Kuwait City and 10 to 2e,000 Kuwaitee women
had been raped; but all that was not worth onZ American life.
He further said that they would not kill Iraqi prisoners
because that would bring them down to the Iraqi level. Had
Iraq invaded the US and committed the same barbaric acts, I
wonder how restrainted we could be.
The other Kuwaitee had a little girl on his right side
'and they were holding hands. He told me his daughter (I
believe her name was Moona and she was 3 1/2 years old) had
seen her mother and brothers killed and left on the street
for three days. She was wearing a black outfit with red,
green and white design on ihe shirt (that I recognized wlas
the colors of the Kuwaitee flag). She had a beautiful face
and as I reach for her hand to say 'hi, what's your name
sweetheart?' She looked up at me with her big dark eyes, took
'my hand in her little soft hand and said 'thank you.' I was
kneeling by then and I felt my eyes water because it was
obvious to me she knew what had happened and I have two
daughters, age 5 and 9 months. The First Sergeant, my
driver, and I were greatly moved.
If anyone ever wants to know why we fought the egression
of Irac, that was why!
R. W. Rivers
LtCol BNCO 2122
UNCLASSIFIED ------------
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