since they left Afghanistan in May of 2002, and who were the first to go into Iraq before the war was officially declared.
We were here to honor and pay our respects to two Special Forces soldiers who had been killed in a predawn firefight in the Iraqi town of Ramadi, about seventy miles from Baghdad. Seven others from the 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group were wounded in the raid.
The Special Forces motto, De Oppresso Liber, or âTo Liberate the Oppressed,â was embodied in the deeds of these two fine soldiers who gave the ultimate sacrifice: freeing people from tyranny and oppressionâfirst from the Taliban, and now from Saddam Hussein, and at the expense of their own lives.
Sergeant Major Kenneth W. Barriger was asked to take the roll call of the team of Green Berets to which the fallen soldiers belonged.
As he read off their names one by one, the men attending the funeral of their lost friends replied: âHere, Sergeant Major.â
Finally, the sergeant major called the name of Sergeant First Class William Bennett, but there was no reply from the team.
Once again, Sergeant Major Barriger called out âSergeant First Class Bill Bennett.â
Againâno answer.
After a long silence, the sergeant major called out the name of another member of the team.
âMaster Sergeant Kevin Morehead.â
Once more, a long silence filled the Fort Campbell chapel.
With the answer of a twenty-one-gun salute, the two Green Beret sergeants were accounted for as Killed in Action.
Master Sergeant Kevin Morehead and Sergeant First Class Bill Bennett were two of the first Special Forces men in Afghanistan after the terrorist attacks of September 11. They had been in Afghanistan with Captain Mark Nutschâs team (ODA 595), and went on from there as part of the first Special Forces on the scene of the new war in Iraq.
I had crossed paths with both men while writing The Hunt for Bin Laden: Task Force DAGGER . Both I and Chris Thompson, my coauthor and project coordinator on the Bin Laden book, had met with their wives only months ago. Bill Bennett was a talented Special Forces Medical Sergeant, in the Army since 1986 and active in numerous overseas deployments and combat operations, including the Gulf War. Kevin Morehead was one of a few Special Forces soldiers who had buried a piece of the World Trade Center in an Afghan battlefield. He was killed two days before his thirty-fourth birthday, and less than two weeks before he was to return home.
SADDAM
Saddam Hussein was born on April 28, 1937, in the village of Owja on the outskirts of Tikrit, Iraq, a city northwest of Baghdad. As a young boy, Saddam was raised mainly by his maternal uncle, in the town of ad Dawr, a mud-brick village on the banks of the Tigris River. Saddam Husseinâs parents had been simple farmers, but his uncle, an officer in the Iraqi Army, gave him a glimpse of a life other than that of a humble peasant. He greatly influenced the young Saddam and instilled in him a deep passion for politics and the military.
Tikrit had always been Saddamâs base of power; his birthplace held a special meaning for him, and was also part of his full name, as is the custom in Iraq: Saddam Hussein (Husayn) al-Tikriti. This connection to place was a part of his very identity. In his teenage years, Saddam moved to Baghdad, where he joined the Arab Socialist Baâath Party when he was nineteen years old. The Baâath Party was new then, and sought to overthrow the nationâs prime minister, Abdul Karim Qassim.
As he entered his twenties, Saddam was ambitious and daring. He knew he did not want a life as a poor peasant or farmer, and the only way he saw out of that was through force. In 1959, when he was twenty-two, Saddam was involved in a brash coup attemptâan attempt to assassinate Prime Minister Qassim. The assassination attempt failed. Saddam was shot in the leg by the prime ministerâs bodyguard, but fled with his life.
Jacquelyn Mitchard, Daphne Benedis-Grab