
Kelly Kennedy
Army Times
Army Times medical writer Kelly Kennedy chronicled the 15-month tour of duty of an Army battalion that lost 31 soldiers in Iraq, making it the hardest-hit battalion since the Vietnam War. During those 15 months, one soldier threw himself on a grenade to save his friends, a well-liked first sergeant shot himself to death in front of his troops, and a platoon staged a mutiny by refusing to patrol an area they knew was mined because they feared they would lose control and vent their rage on civilians. The father of one soldier e-mailed Kelly to thank her for the four-part series, entitled "Blood Brothers." "I had some idea about how hard life was there in Iraq," the father wrote, "but you made it very personal. I could hardly read on as the tears fell from my eyes. I couldn't see."
Blood Brothers
December 3, 2007
As they started loading into the Bradley fighting vehicle to roll out of Combat Outpost Apache, the soldiers laughed as if they weren't afraid. As if each, at least twice, hadn't felt the shocking heat and been deafened by the roar of roadside bombs. As if they hadn't already lost eight friends to improvised explosive devices and snipers and grenades.
These soldiers of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, laughed because it gave them courage to step back into the Bradleys. If they didn't go, somebody else would have to.
"Somewhere on that street there's an IED," Sgt. 1st Class Tim Ybay told 2nd Platoon on June 20, briefing them just before they patrolled the streets of Adhamiya, Iraq, as they had been doing for 10 months.
"I'll find it!" shouted Bradley driver Spc. Ernesto Martin.
Not that day. Not that soldier. But others riding on that patrol would be among five to die the next day, when an IED flipped their 30-ton Bradley upside-down like a cheap toy and set it ablaze.
The surviving platoon members comforted each other that their friends died looking out for their brothers. They told each other they would have done the same. They cried and beat their fists into walls. They knelt in the sand and bent their heads and tried to convince themselves Iraq was worth it.
But that was hard because they no longer believed they were fighting for Iraq. They had, once, a long time ago. Before they had seen the Iraqi bodies with their heads dipped in acid, before the children tossed grenades at them. Now the locals refused even to acknowledge dead neighbors sprawled on their sidewalks.
The soldiers of Charlie Company had given up fighting for the Iraqis. They fought for each other.
And so that day, they forced aside the last moments of their friends' lives, moments filled with chaos and agony and pain and blood.
They remembered them laughing.
Over 15 months, the war would kill 14 men from Charlie 1-26, more than any other Army company sent to Iraq, according to their battalion commander.
The group of 138 would earn at least 95 combat awards. They were part of Task Force 1-26, some 500 troops, who would find 47 weapons caches, capture more than 300 insurgents, including high-value targets, and find hundreds of explosive devices, But 122 men would receive Purple Hearts and 31 would die, more than in any Army battalion since Vietnam.
One respected sergeant in Alpha Company would kill himself. A Charlie Company soldier would go home with three Purple Hearts and a lost dream. A buddy would be nominated for the Medal of Honor after saving four of his brothers. And there would be one brief mutiny.
Still, numbers don't tell the story.
Kelly Kennedy served in the United States Army from 1987 to 1993, including tours in the Middle East during Desert Storm, and in Mogadishu, Somalia. After earning her journalism degree at Colorado State University in 1997, she began her writing career as an education reporter for the Ogden Standard-Examiner in Utah, a criminal justice reporter at The Salt Lake Tribune and a family and education reporter with the Oregonian in Portland. While earning a master's degree in journalism at the University of Colorado, Kennedy taught journalism classes at both her alma mater and the University of Northern Colorado. After completing her master's degree, she worked an internship at The Chicago Tribune before arriving in 2005 at Army Times, where she remains today as a medical reporter.
Blood Brothers Part I
Blood Brothers Part II
Blood Brothers Part III
Blood Brothers Part IV