![]() |
From Green Bay to the Persian Gulf A Side Trip to Emerald City |
![]() |
|
| Page 15 | |||
The two big buses rolled out of Camp 1 on Monday, February 25; and it didn't take long for the troops to realize they were in a combat zone of a different sort. Once the freeway narrowed to a heavily travelled single-lane highway, people began noticing wrecked cars, trucks and buses beside the road, almost every three or four miles. The main reason was the Arab willingness to pass, regardless of traffic conditions. Unfortunately, Americans easily adopted the habit as well. Wrecked American vehicles were occasionally spotted; and on one busy stretch, a large US Army flatbed truck flew by the buses, down the center of the road forcing oncoming traffic onto the shoulder.
Despite the near miss and an over-heated engine on one of the buses, the unit made it to KKMC. The end of the line was a muddy motor pool filled with barely usable vehicles, from which the drivers had to select the best for the trip back to Camp 1. After finding the vehicles, the drivers then left the motor pool to find lodging for the night. The drivers who did not find vehicles boarded one of the buses for a ride to the barracks area for the night. Just as the bus pulled out of the motor pool however, a loud roar was heard from the right side of the bus, the driver's blind side, as a large truck shot by, missing the bus by inches.
Following that near miss and a good night's sleep in a building adjacent to a green-domed mosque -- which one GI described as the Space Ship Enterprise because of its eerie arrangement of lighted windows -- the convoy of buses and newly acquired trucks made their way back to Camp 1, but not without scoring another near miss with the same bus. More monumental than surviving the trip back, the troops were elated to learn that enemy troops were unexpectedly fleeing Kuwait City in large convoys headed north to Iraq. Those convoys -- compliments of the US Air Force and supporting ground units -- were destined to have worse luck going north than the next convoy of the 432nd.
![]() |
Page 15 | ![]() |