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In the final analysis, Saddam's regime and its threat could not be
defeated except by fighting it. Yet, in the history of war, the two
U.S. divisions that carried the brunt of the fighting, the 3d
Infantry Division and the 1st Marine Division are not impressive in
numbers. History has seen much larger forces. But on the shoulders
was placed the burden of liberating the Iraqi people, and planting
the seeds of freedom in the Middle East. In the chaos, confusion,
and uncertainty of an ever-shifting and always dangerous
battlefield, the young men and women who faced this enemy
distinguished themselves for their presence of mind, their
steadfast commitment to each other, and their willingness to pay
the price for our freedom and the freedom of the Iraqi people, a
people they barely knew. The events chronicled here capture the
story of the Marines of the "Blue Diamond" as they prepared for
war, conquered and army, and liberated a nation. From across
America and beyond, they chose the demanding path, to become
Marines. These Marines marched in the ranks of this national
treasure that we call the 1st Marine Division. And, at a time when
timid souls or cynical pundits grew loudest, these men shouldered
their weapons and moved without hesitation against the enemy. Our
victory was not inevitable. It was the courage, unselfishness, and
skill of the young men of Blue Diamond to whom we owe our victory.
Unit histories such as this cannot capture what we will remember of
those men we lost. The young smiling faces of these men will carry
more inside us than our words can ever convey. For young as they
were, they proved themselves to be the very best of warriors. We
record history so that others may share our story. We record
history so that others may learn from it. We record history to
remind us of what happened on these battlefields when we grow old.
Most of all, we record history as a monument to our men and their
families' sacrifice. We will always remember those we lost. Someday
we will smile and laugh when we recall them amongst us, of how we
were happy besides them, or even exasperated with them, but how we
trusted them always with our dreams and with our very lives. And as
we look today at the men and women of the 1st Marine Division, we
can take heart at what we see. The courage to defend our country is
still there. That awesome determination to defend our freedoms will
never die. In Iraq, those who followed in the footprints of the
heroes of Guadalcanal, Inchon, Hue City, and Desert Storm proved
themselves worthy to be counted among their number. No mere
narrative can fully capture the efforts, risks, and sacrifices of
the men and women of the 1st Marine Division during Operation Iraqi
Freedom. No words can capture the tears of family members as they
sent their loved-ones off, perhaps for the last time. Nothing we
can say will bring back our beloved comrades that made the ultimate
sacrifice on the battlefield. Yet, "unsung the noblest deeds die."
This is the story of the noble deeds of a special group of Marines
who chose to serve their nation in the cause of freedom in a
distant place.
With the 1st Marine Division in Iraq, 2003, is a unit history
written by the participants in the same vein as its
predecessors-The Old Breed-written at the end of World War II and-
The New Breed-authored during Korea. It is a narrative describing
the actions of Marines in combat during the liberation of Iraq.
Portions of the story have been told by embedded journalists-but
this full account is told by those who made it happen. The 1st
Marine Division, in concert with the U.S. Army's 3d Infantry
Division, captured Baghdad and toppled Saddam Hussein's
dictatorship. The division's 28-day "march up" from Kuwait to
Baghdad, a distance of 250 road miles, was a remarkable
achievement. It represented a validation of the Corps' maneuver
warfare strategy, particularly the seamless integration of air into
the ground scheme of maneuver and the Marine logistics command's
innovative support. "Blue Diamond," the 1st Division's Operation
Iraqi Freedom nom de guerre, consisted of some 20,000 Marines and
sailors and 8,000 vehicles organized into three regimental combat
teams. Designed to be light and self-sufficient, the regiments
"conducted the longest sequence of coordinated overland attacks in
the history of the Corps," according to Lieutenant General Wallace
C. Gregson, then commander of Marine Forces Pacific. The authors of
this account were somewhat more colloquial, preferring to state
that it "focuses on the collective action of Marines who served as
part of the 'Blue Diamond.' It is not a story of each of them, but
the story of all of them." Their story is an authentic
documentation of the feel, concerns, triumphs and tragedy of the
campaign in Iraq.
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