Time: Tue Nov 11 08:12:41 1997
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Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 08:04:08 -0800
To: (Recipient list suppressed)
From: Paul Andrew Mitchell [address in tool bar]
Subject: SLF: "We Took That Mountain" [a true story]
In honor of my father,
on Veteran's Day.
Dad, there aren't many men,
like you, still left in this
world.
/s/ Paul Mitchell
http://supremelaw.com
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"We Took That Mountain"
by
John E. Trumane
I often wonder what it was like. You have trained hard at
Parris Island, slogged through mud on your belly, 50 calibers
whizzing two feet overhead. Some guys just lost it, went crazy,
sent home. I often wonder.
What would be going through your mind as you see Mt.
Surabachi approaching in the smokey distance, a narrow slit on
the horizon framed by your helmet and the lip of the landing
craft.
Your eyes turn left, just as a shell takes a direct hit on
the next craft over, bodies and body parts go flying in every
which direction. You close your eyes and ask yourself: they
were no different from us.
The Navy behind you is pouring in 12-inch guns at a
ferocious pace; they scream through the air near the speed of
sound, and echo back delayed destruction. You trust those
gunners; their aim is awesome, always near the mark.
The waves are changing shape, the water is getting shallow.
More fifty calibers are whizzing by, this time getting closer.
Some ping off the craft, a metal wash tub with twin diesels.
You reach the crest of a wave, and then surf into hell, as
the ramp falls and it's the moment of truth.
You don't have time to ask, what am I doing here, because
you are running for dear life. You recognize the sound of your
captain yelling, hit the sand and crawl in, men. Dig in beyond
the water line.
The Japs are ferocious too. This is their last air base
before the mainland. Two runways, actually. One at each end.
These fascists will stop at nothing to defend their Emperor.
We huddle in our makeshift sand castles, trying to keep our
powder dry. My job: get the machine gun close in, take out all
buildings, and secure the first runway.
We sit while the Navy pours it on, big guns now, every 5
seconds. The roar is deafening. Men are dying, screaming,
bleeding. What am I doing here?
The captain over there loses it, goes crazy. A GI yanks him
in a trench and knocks him cold, our new squad commander, ok by
me. The Navy is relentless, big guns every second now. How can
they reload so fast? American engineering: we machinists know
all about it -- the best ever, bar none.
The smoke is choking us alive, thick and black, sulfurous,
hot ashen coral raised to plasma temperatures. Why would anybody
want to work here?
The Navy waits, to let the smoke clear, assay the damages.
Eerie silence. There is nothing in front of us except black sand
with huge meteor craters, freshly made. Move out, we hear, and
our training kicks in. No time to think, just keep moving.
My buddy comes near. We take inventory: one water cooled
machine gun, one thousand rounds, more for the asking, tripod,
carbine, back pack, portable shovel, pick, what we're wearing.
That's it. Move out.
We come upon bodies, lots of them, still, mangled, lifeless.
Don't look down; just look forward. We drag heavy loads through
black sand and ash. No color anywhere; just black and white and
grey, lots of it.
A shot from behind, a Marine down, killed in action, right
in the back. So, they lay there feigning injury, only to pop up
as we pass by. Ok, that's it. No prisoners. We pull our
butcher knives and go for throats. Grisly, effective. Every
Marine is priceless, every one expendable. Like Lawrence, of
Arabia.
Time starts to fade into slow motion. We inch along, take
this tree, that palm, this bunker. Charlie gets a flame thrower,
we watch in muted shock. Nothing is too terrible now; we are
going to TAKE that runway.
Night falls, sleep impossible. Charlie screams his insults
in strange Jap accents. Almost funny, almost. We count our
losses: Billy, Johnny, Efraim, Christopher, Sassy Brooks, Zeb,
Mack and Danny. All gone, all dead, going home now.
The sun rises in front of us, framing another rising sun
flapping in the breeze. The runway, not far ahead, beckons to
our instincts, the killer kind.
We creep in silently, no resistance. Japs are gone, only
snipers high up in the palms, sitting ducks. Stupid too.
Kamikazes with no planes, brain washed.
We take turns, it's a shooting gallery. This isn't even
funny. We take their guns, worthless rounds, and break 'em.
The eerie silence is broken now by fading gun shots. A
moment of calm descends upon this seething smoking inferno.
We hear the faint drone of a Jap Zero, headed for home. He
never got word: this runway is history. He glides in, bouncy
landing, taxies to one end. Marines watch, reload quietly, no
orders this time. We all know what we're going to do.
Pilot cuts his engine, opens the canopy, we open up. Shells
pour in again, this time from M-1's and machine guns, dozens,
hundreds, thousands of rounds shred the Zero into bits and
pieces, glass, rubber and aluminum flying every which direction.
That plane is history too. We revel, leave it to block the
runway. Some take souvenirs. The rest reload. I pee in the
barrel jacket again.
One down. One to go.
Time again slows down. How many days now? Two? Three? I
can't remember. We trudge along. More ammo arrives. Food too.
C-rations. Yumm. We urinate into the barrel to save water.
This place is hot, very hot, almost too hot. Too hot for
comfort, for sure.
We set our sites for runway two, in that clearing, up ahead.
Mortar fire, first scattered, then regular, now a frequent
problem. My buddy and I move in, stake out a position, start to
dig, his shovel worthless against the hard-packed coral. They
rolled this runway, very hard, asphalt nowhere.
My pick is working, thank God. I dig, he removes debris.
It's still slow going. We dig for our lives.
More mortars. Oh, no. They've zeroed our position. You can
tell as blasts come closer, faster. This one, right now, you can
hear, is coming right in. Billy, take cover, I yell.
He dives in one direction, I in another. The blast almost
takes his hands off, the ring in my ears unbearable. Through the
smoke, I see Billy's hit, hit bad, motionless, moaning.
I crawl to him, he's still alive. Japs figure our machine
gun's out, they re-target. Billy goes over my left shoulder, and
two carbines over my right. Forget the machine gun; too heavy;
takes two anyway. We're now one and a half, Marines that is.
Billy breathes, but barely, can't talk, bleeding bad. I
trudge through deep sand, echoes of smoke fill the air, me
yelling Medic! Medic! Billy needs help, OVER HERE. Nobody
hears, too much chaos. I trudge, I trudge.
Something is hot, liquid, near my jaw. I been too busy to
check myself. I raise my right hand to feel my pulse, blood is
pouring down by wrist. I am hit. I don't even know it. What
gives? Is this some bad dream?
I realize, that's IT. I'm OUT OF HERE. Next stop, the
hospital ship. Medics near now. I collapse in their arms,
totally, completely, utterly exhausted, and pass out, and dream
of my beautiful bride, Anna Marie, slender, loving, chestnut
hair, sea blue eyes. This must be heaven, at long last.
That was my birthday, 1945. Billy made it, docs worked two
miracles, one on each hand. We ran into each other on the
hospital ship. First time, he didn't recognize me, my face so
heavily bandaged, after several surgeries. The shrapnel had just
missed my spine. God's little miracles, for sure.
Everything got mixed up -- time, space, where, when, how?
It didn't matter. We were alive, and we were on our way home.
The commander wanted me back. You can wear your Purple
Heart on your lapel, he said. I told him, I'd rather take it
home and show it to my son. Thank you anyway.
I later saw that photo, 4 "Gyrines" raising old Glory, right
atop Mt. Surabachi. I knew those red stripes were soaked in
blood, the whites were stained as well. 4 guys, just like me,
their names forever written on the wind.
Next stop for them, the Japanese mainland. Next stop for
me, a farm in Oregon, cows, chickens, dogs and geese. And a time
to recuperate from shell shock, and a time to thank God for this
country. We left fascism behind when we came back from hell,
where it belongs, where it should stay.
# # #
===========================================================================
Paul Andrew Mitchell, Sui Juris : Counselor at Law, federal witness 01
B.A.: Political Science, UCLA; M.S.: Public Administration, U.C.Irvine 02
tel: (520) 320-1514: machine; fax: (520) 320-1256: 24-hour/day-night 03
email: [address in tool bar] : using Eudora Pro 3.0.3 on 586 CPU 04
website: http://supremelaw.com : visit the Supreme Law Library now 05
ship to: c/o 2509 N. Campbell, #1776 : this is free speech, at its best 06
Tucson, Arizona state : state zone, not the federal zone 07
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_____________________________________: Law is authority in written words 09
As agents of the Most High, we came here to establish justice. We shall 10
not leave, until our mission is accomplished and justice reigns eternal. 11
======================================================================== 12
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