March 10, 2007 
Arma Virumque Cano: "Of arms and the man, I sing,"
By John B. Dwyer
AmericanThinker.com

Reviewing TAKEDOWN: The 3rd Infantry Division's Twenty-One Day Assault on 
Baghdad, by Jim Lacey, Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, MD, 2007.  262 pages, 
photos, maps, index.  $29.95


"Of arms and the man, I sing," wrote Virgil in the Aeneid.  In TAKEDOWN, 
retired Army infantry officer Jim Lacey, who was embedded with the 101st 
Airborne Division during Operation Iraqi Freedom, has written an overdue 
account of the martial accomplishments of the 3rd Infantry Division 
(Mechanized), which led the V Corps drive to Baghdad that liberated Iraq four 
years ago this month. 


In the last chapter, "Reflections" Lacey asks, 
"Has there ever been an Army like this one?  It is almost impossible to think 
of another fighting force disciplined and compassionate enough to do what the 
3rd ID and other US forces did."  
Why did they succeed?  Because, Lacey tells us, "the division simply outfought 
the Iraqis."  


This despite the fact that the enemy fielded more men, more tanks, more 
artillery than the 3rd ID. And that "probably fewer than one in fifty soldiers 
had ever seen combat before." The key factor, as always, was leadership.  
"Without exception, every officer and sergeant rose to the occasion."  They had 
to, because on the way to Baghdad, the strategic center of gravity, they were 
called upon to adapt to the unforeseen, defeat fanatical, suicidal fedayeen 
fighters, regular Republican Guard forces and commando units, cross bridges 
rigged for demolition, and fight through an apocalyptic sandstorm.        


The 3rd Infantry Division, organized for service in World War One, carries the 
proud nickname "Rock of the Marne" for its valiant stand at that strategically 
vital river in July 1918.  America's most decorated soldier, Audie Murphy, 
served with the division's 15th Infantry Regiment during World War Two.  


After reading TAKEDOWN, you will have no doubts that the infantrymen, tank 
crews, artillerymen, engineers and various support units of the 3rd ID proved 
themselves the equals of their heroic forebears.  To emphasize this fact, the 
author describes the valorous actions of Staff Sgt. Dillard Johnson. In the 
Introduction we read how this Bradley Fighting Vehicle commander was ordered to 
take a bridge outside As Samawah.  

Accompanied by an M1 tank, he proceeded to do so, but soon became embroiled in 
a firefight with several hundred enemy.  There is not sufficient space in this 
review to do justice to the 4-page account, so here is a brief excerpt: 
"That done, he raced up to the stricken Bradley, dropped his ramp while under 
intense fire, and rescued the trapped crew.  After wiping out another vehicle 
full of Iraqi fighters, Johnson took his Bradley to the rear to replenish 
ammunition and seek medical attention for his wounds."  
Lacey does not tell us what award Johnson received, but I would hope it was the 
Silver Star.  


Every military campaign has a plan.  In its finals stages, the plan for 
Operation Iraqi Freedom called for the 3rd ID to maneuver between the Tigris 
and Euphrates rivers, "a canal laden, inhospitable route." As the author makes 
clear, it was only because 3rd ID commander, Maj. Gen . Buford Blunt pressed 
his boss, V Corps commander Lt. Gen. William Wallace, that this route was 
changed to a more tank friendly one west of the rivers.   


LTG Wallace is given great credit for agreeing to what was, in fact, the better 
plan, the route to victory.  High level decisions are always made by the 
generals, but in Jim Lacey's view, the campaign fought by the 3rd ID was "a 
colonel's war" with the hour by hour, day to day decisions being made by the 
officers in charge of the division's three maneuver brigades and the lieutenant 
colonels commanding their component task forces. Lacey identifies these 
officers and provides an appraisal of each one by an anonymous individual who 
knew them.  


His effort could have been improved by ensuring that each appraisal was of 
equal length so as not to imply favoritism.  To illustrate the importance of 
these officers, let's take a look at Lt. Col. Ernest P. "Rock" Marcone (Lacey 
misspells his first name in the book) and the accomplishments of his 1800-man 
Task Force 3/69th Armor, which consisted of A and C Companies, 3/69th Armor, B 
Company, 2/7th Infantry, B Company, 3/7th Infantry, and A Company, 11th 
Engineer Battalion.  From April 1 to 4, TF 3/69th Armor had the direct support 
of 1/41st Field Artillery and two companies of AH-64 Attack Helicopters.   


In an e-mail to this reviewer, LTC Marcone stated:  
"No other task force in the theater was given more responsibility, given more 
assets to control, covered more ground, fought more battles (7), killed more 
enemy, destroyed more enemy formations and took proportionately fewer 
casualties than TF 3/69th Armor.  The task force seized five bridges and 
executed an RB15 boat assault with Infantry and Engineers to seize the 
(Objective) Peach bridge intact.  The task forced synchronized combat air 
support, attack aviation, artillery, smoke, Psyops and close combat to 
perfection.  We were ‘a perfect storm' of men and machines combined into an 
unbeatable force."  
In the end, it was all the 3rd ID units that combined into an unbeatable force. 
The 21st century Rock of the Marne soldiers faced and overcame all challenges, 
displaying exemplary fortitude, perseverance and heroism.  It will be recalled 
that Sgt. 1st Class Paul Smith of the 3rd ID's B Company, 11th Engineer 
Battalion earned a posthumous Medal of Honor for actions above and beyond the 
call of duty on April 4, 2003 near Baghdad International Airport.


To give readers both sides of the story, the author cites the recorded thoughts 
of several Iraqi officers, including Lt. Gen. Raad al-Hamdami, who commanded 
the Republican Guards deployed south of Baghdad.  In Ch. 17 Lacey  examines the 
regime's war plans, noting that 


"Saddam did not expect he would ever have to face a Coalition ground attack 
with the end of his regime as its final objective."  
Saddam and his senior commanders were convinced "of the inherent fighting 
superiority of the average Iraqi over the Americans."  Saddam was influenced by 
the movie "Blackhawk Down" and gave copies to all his commanders.  He believed 
that the Somalia scenario "could be replicated on a massive scale in every city 
in southern Iraq" which would cause Americans to cease hostilities.  


In Ch. 4, the author describes the organization and mission of what proved to 
be the most tenacious of all the forces engaged by 3rd ID units - the 
fanatical, suicidal fedayeen Saddam.  We learn why they kept charging tanks and 
Bradley Fighting Vehicles, whose crews kept mowing them down:  If any unit 
commander, from section up to regiment, was defeated, he would be executed.  
The same held true for the individual fighters.     


In his book, Jim Lacey augments the narrative with first-hand accounts by some 
of the warriors who fought their way to Baghdad.  This is an effective 
technique that can often make for compelling reading, but the author at times 
overuses these accounts and undermines their impact.  


Overall, the author does a good job of presenting the voluminous material he 
had at his disposal, of relating the actions of each unit and its progress 
towards Baghdad, from Talil to Samawah, through the perilous escarpment, then 
on to Najaf and the Karbala Gap, with its chemical weapons threat, across the 
key bridge at Objective Peach, ever forward to Baghdad International Airport 
and the capital city, where 1/64th Armor's second thunder run led to the 
regime's collapse.  


In this reviewer's opinion Lacey should have striven for a more balanced 
presentation, giving each brigade and unit more or less equal attention. He 
fails to achieve this in TAKEDOWN. Then there's the matter of utilizing 
available information.  Discussing the situation facing Col. Grimsley's 1st 
Brigade, specifically LTC Marcone's TF 3/69th Armor, at the sheer cliff face of 
the escarpment in Ch. 8, Lacey does not tell the reader that the two officers, 
while at the National Training Center in the fall of 2002, anticipated this 
challenging mission and prepared for one just like it.  This information can be 
found in On Point: The United States Army in Operation  Iraqi Freedom  


Lastly, this book would have been improved with a good map of Iraq, an 
organizational chart of the 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized), a description 
of the specifications of the M1 Abrams tank and Bradley Fighting Vehicle, and a 
glossary, defining such terms as "coax" - the turret-mounted M240 7.62 m.m. 
machine gun to the right of the main gun.

My criticisms notwithstanding, I recommend TAKEDOWN, especially now, when 
support for the war in Iraq, central battlefield in the war against 
Islamofascism, has ebbed, and when Congress is passing cynical anti-war 
resolutions.  Americans need the bracing context and perspective this book 
provides, to  be reminded that Iraq was liberated only four years ago this 
month, that the service and sacrifice of the warriors of the 3rd Infantry 
Division and all those who followed, must not be rendered null and void by 
cowardly, defeatist and dangerous mindsets and actions. 


John B. Dwyer is a military historian.
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