Wounded Four Times But Determined To Live
Posted: 7:46 pm MDT April 24, 2003
April 24, 2003 -- "I got to make it through it. I want to live, and you had to do whatever it took to get through it," that's what Staff Sergeant Tarik Jackson of the 507th Maintenance Company said was going through his mind during the ambush in Nasiriyah, Iraq on March 23rd.
With a bible and his purple heart on the nightstand next to his hospital bed, Sgt. Jackson gave an exclusive interview to Fox News. He says the bible was his late grandmother's, sent to him by his Aunt to provide comfort. Jackson is a man of faith.
"I got shot in the arm, it broke my arm, I have a plate and two screws in my arm. Also entrance and exit wound in the hip. And in my left thigh, entrance and exit wound," says Jackson. "How many times were you shot?" asks his interviewer? "Three times, three different times. And also it nipped a piece of my finger," Jackson chuckles.
Jackson also smiles thinking back to the day when he first reported to his new unit, the 507th Maintenance Company at Ft. Bliss. "The first thing I was told 'don't find a place to stay, we're deploying."
It was a deployment that started like any other. But within weeks the stories of this small unit would captivate the nation. Stories of sacrifice, bravery, and - in the case of many, including Jackson - heroism.
The 507th was part of the 5-52nd ADA - a patriot missile battalion also from Ft. Bliss. The battalion was supporting the Third Infantry division on its drive to Baghdad. On March 23rd, the convoy stretched for dozens of miles across South-Central, Iraq. The 507th had been busy, stopping here and there to fix broken down vehicles.
Many media outlets claim the unit made a wrong turn. Jackson vehemently denies it "It's probably no secret that everybody's saying that we made the wrong turn, things like that of that nature, but we didn't, we were just going where we were supposed to go."
And they were supposed to go through Nasiriyah, a city of about 560,000 people - nearly the size of El Paso. It was dark. 4 a-m. Six vehicles of the 507th were about to cross the Euphrates River when Iraqi forces started firing from all directions.
"I was a passenger in a Humvee," says Jackson. "And the only thing you can do is, the only way through an ambush is fire at whatever is out there and keep moving forward. And the driver just laid on the gas and we just rolled. The whole time we getting fired upon we can hear bullets whistling by you. Hear them hitting the truck."
Bullets shattered Jackson's arm, and shredded his Humvee. A rocket propelled grenade slammed into a supply truck, another vehicle overturned. The 507th was now trapped, and spread out in small groups for a mile or more. Jackson and Sergeant Curtis Campbell organized the defense in their area.
"Once they were in this intense firefight, he and Sgt. Campbell jumped off the vehicles, formed a perimeter, went in some cases went and dragged wounded soldiers into that perimeter."
Jackson isn't one to talk about his heroism, in fact he shys away from the word. But Representative Silvestre Reyes of El Paso, who is on the House Armed Services Committee, is proud tell the story. "We know that they were under intense attack from all sides," says Reyes, "and that they were basically overrun."
Jackson realized "It's a possibility that I might die, but my mind said I wasn't going to die, I was going to live."
According to Reyes, "it was only through the leadership of Sgt. Jackson and Sgt. Campbell that they were in a position to form a defensive perimeter that the Iraqis were not able to penetrate, to kill them or to take them prisoner."
With a military censor in his hospital room during this interview, Jackson isn't allowed discuss a number of details about the battle, but it's believed that he, Sergeant Campbell, Corporal Damien Luten and Private James Grubb - all wounded - started walking - urging each other on.
"I just had the determination that I wanted to come back here alive. And that was my drive to just walk."
They headed in the direction of a Marine unit trying to rescue them.
Reyes says "The Marines were in the area and heard the intense firefight."
Jackson tells us "We walked maybe about a mile, a mile and a half"
According to Reyes "The Marines suffered nine casualties, plus a number of wounded in trying to get to the 507th."
Jackson says the group walked until "We heard helicopters hovering, we looked up and Marines were hovering over us. And when we stopped, I took a knee and I just felt blood rushing down by leg. And also in my hip."
Reyes says the Marines also deserve credit. "Sergeant Jackson mentioned, and Sergeant Campbell as well, that the Marines were heroes because they were able to get to them to rescue them."
Jackson was afraid he would lose his arm, but Doctors were able to save it. His purple heart for being wounded in action was presented to him by the Army's Chief of Staff Gen. Eric Shinseki. "It's kinda like an award nobody wants," says Jackson. "You know, I had to get injured to get it."
Now as Jackson recovers he doesn't watch much television coverage of the war, he prefers to time to think. "There are a lot of things in my mind. Heavy things that I'm thinking about. I choose not to watch it."
According to Reyes there is no doubt "He is a hero."
Jackson modestly replies "I don't look at it that way. I did what I had to do to get as many people out safely as I could. It's a part of my everyday job."
Look for more profiles on the "Heroes of the 507th" in the coming weeks, exclusively on KFOX News at Nine.
Copyright 2006 by KFOXTV.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.














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