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News ID: 75110
Publish Date : 14 January 2020 - 22:02
U.S. Troops Open Up About Iranian ‘Slap’:

Missiles Came Down Like Shooting Stars


AIN AL-ASAD AIR BASE, Iraq (Dispatches) -- Troops at the Iraqi air base that bore the brunt of Iran’s first direct missile attack against U.S. forces said they were shocked by its intensity and grateful to emerge unscathed.
The scale of the damage at the Ain al-Asad base showed Iran’s destructive capability, Reuters reported.
The Jan. 8 attack came hours after Pentagon chief Mark Esper said the United States should expect retaliation over the U.S. assassination of Iranian military commander General Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike in Iraq the previous week.
At one site, a cruise missile had left a large crater and incinerated living quarters made from shipping containers, Reuters reported.
Heavy concrete blast walls were knocked over and the shipping containers were smashed and charred along with contents including bicycles, chairs and other furniture. Several soldiers said one of their number had come very close to being blown up inside a shelter behind the blast walls.
Almost a dozen missiles hit the air base, where U.S. forces carried out "scatter plans” to move soldiers and equipment to a range of fortified areas apart from one another.
"We’d got notification there could be an attack a few hours prior so had moved equipment,” said U.S. Staff Sergeant Tommie Caldwell.
Lt Col Staci Coleman, the U.S. air force officer who runs the airfield, said that by 10pm all the staff she manages were ready to take cover. "People took this very seriously,” she said.
Three and a half hours later the missiles started arriving. Several soldiers said they continued for two hours.
Staff Sgt Armando Martinez, who had been out in the open to watch for casualties, said he could not believe how easily one missile leveled the concrete blast walls.
"When a rocket strikes that’s one thing; but a ballistic missile, it’s like terror,” he said.
"You see a white light like a shooting star and then a few seconds later it lands and explodes. The other day, after the attack, one colleague saw an actual shooting star and panicked.”
One missile landed on the tarmac of a parking and servicing area for Blackhawk helicopters. The helicopters had been moved but it destroyed two light hangars and badly damaged portacabins nearby.
"We must have been in the bunkers for more than five hours, maybe seven or eight,” said Kenneth Goodwin, Master Sgt in the U.S. Air Force. "They knew what they were aiming at by targeting the airfield and parking area.”
It was the latest strike against an air base that has figured prominently in high-ranking U.S. officials’ visits to Iraq.
"After these missile attacks, when we hear of possible militia rocket attacks, we tend to think, ‘Oh only rockets ... that’s a change’,” Coleman said, describing the common feeling when the missile attacks were over as "sheer relief”.
On Sunday the Iraqi military said four people had been wounded in an attack on Balad air base in northern Iraq, which also houses U.S. personnel.  
Military officials at the base told


 Reuters that nearly eight hours before Iran’s missile attack, American soldiers scrambled to move personnel and weaponry to fortified bunkers.
One Iraqi intelligence source told the news agency U.S. troops even seemed to know the timing of the attack, saying they seemed "totally aware” the base would be attacked "after midnight.”
When the missiles finally landed at about 1:30 a.m., they struck "empty bunkers that had been evacuated hours before,” the intelligence source said.  
Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC)’s Aerospace Force, said, "We did not intend to kill. We intended to hit the enemy’s military machinery.”