For all I know, we could have killed thousands." "What you saw was a bunch of buried trenches with people's arms and legs sticking out of them. "I came through right after the lead company," said Colonel Anthony Moreno. Just behind the tanks, straddling the trench line, came Bradleys pumping machine-gun bullets into Iraqi troops. The tanks had flanked the lines so that tons of sand from the plough spoil had funnelled into the trenches. Thousands of Iraqi soldiers, some of them firing their weapons from first world war-style trenches, had been buried by ploughs mounted on Abrams tanks. Months later, Daniel and the world would learn why the dead had eluded eyewitnesses, cameras and video footage. "Where are the bodies?" he finally asked the First Division's public affairs officer, an army major. Daniel wondered what happened to the estimated 6,000 Iraqi defenders who had vanished. It was a battlefield without the stench of urine, faeces, blood and bits of flesh. Yet this ferocious attack had not produced a single visible body. "The bodies would be stacked up like cordwood," he recalled. There, right where he was standing, 8,400 soldiers of the US First Infantry Division - known as the Big Red One - had attacked an estimated 8,000 Iraqis with 3,000 Abrams main battle tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles, Humvees and armoured personnel carriers.ĭaniel had seen the aftermath of modest firefights in Vietnam. Daniel was one of a pool of journalists who had been held back from witnessing action the previous day, when Desert Storm's ground war had been launched. On Februthe war correspondent Leon Daniel arrived at a battlefield at the tip of the neutral zone between Iraq and Saudi Arabia.
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