“Cliffhanger,” March 2005, God Answers Prayers,
Inspiring True Stories of Faith and Hope, Allison
Bottke,
Harvest House Publishers
|
Lieutenant Arno Kivi and I had just
arrived back at our compound from battalion headquarters on a warm January
evening. Six weeks in the Saudi Arabian
desert, as part of the United States Third Armored Division’s medical company
gave us plenty of reasons for us to try and get some rest.
That
evening I lay down on my cot and opened my worn Bible to a favorite verse of
mine, Isaiah 41:10 (NIV): “So do not
fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, since I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will
uphold you with my righteous right hand.”
The Army
Central Command Operations Plan called for a five-week massive air campaign
against the Iraqi Army occupying Kuwait.
Rumors were flying that the air war would begin any day.
I took a
deep breath. “Please God, keep us in
Your right hand. Watch over us and
protect us.” After I finished praying, I
settled in for a little sleep.
“Doctor
Hanson?” The tent canvas shook as a communications
specialist crawled inside. “There’s a call for you on the field phone from the
major over at battalion headquarters. He says it’s important.”
I pulled on
my boots, picked up my Colt.45 and gas mask, and hurried to the medical company
headquarters tent.
“Doctor
Hanson here.”
“You need
to get over here right away to inspect a case of meals-ready-to-eat. Some soldiers from Bravo Company said they
got sick from eating them, and I have a case of MREs in my office, waiting for
inspection.”
I drew a
deep breath. “We’ll be there tonight,
Major.”
I headed to
the tent where Lieutenant Kivi lay sound asleep. He woke with a start when I put my hand on
his shoulder. “Arno, we need to inspect
some MREs tonight at battalion headquarters.
I just got off the phone with the major.”
Arno
groaned. He switched on his flashlight
and squinted to see his watch. “We
might as well get over there right away, before it gets any later.”
“How long
will it take to get there, do the inspection, and get back?” Arno was more familiar with distances than I
was.
He thought
for a moment. “Shouldn’t be more than an hour or two. There’s enough light from the stars and moon
for us to follow the Green Supply Route barrel markers.” He sat up and reached for his boots. “I’ll get Sergeant Vernardo to come
along. She’s done a lot of field ration
inspections.” He began to get dressed.
“I’ll come
along with you and the Sergeant. The
major is a terror with junior officers and enlisted people. If I come along, we should get back quicker.”
The three
of us Humveed out the front gate at 9:15 pm.
The desert sky was partly cloudy, with no wind or rain. Lieutenant Kivi drove, Sergeant Vernardo sat
in the back, and I navigated with my wrist compass while sitting in the right
front seat. We bounced over the rocky desert
terrain with only dim blackout lights providing illumination over the barren
ground ahead of us. Mandatory light
discipline required us to drive with no more than blackout lights at night to
avoid detection by Iraqi forces.
The major
was waiting for us in the battalion operations center. “About time!”
His voice was threatening. “I
thought you got lost.”
“We got
back here as quick as we could. Now if I
could get one of those MRE’s to take back with me tonight, I’ll inspect it
during daylight hours. I also need to
get the lot numbers
and call the unit when we get back to see if they have any more of the same meals.”
and call the unit when we get back to see if they have any more of the same meals.”
“Well, I
guess that will have to do, Doctor.” I
was glad I made the trip for the sake of my comrades.
We left
battalion headquarters at about 10:00 pm with the MREs. As we drove northwest into the darkening
desert, Arno hummed a tune. The minutes
stretched to a half hour, and gathering clouds hid the moon and stars. Wind began to pick up, and visibility became
limited.
After a
while, I could see well enough to find the green barrels marking our route
back. I switched on my red-lens
flashlight and pointed it to my field compass.
“Turn a little more to your north, Arno.”
He turned
the steering wheel about thirty degrees counterclockwise. The three of us strained our eyes to find a
barrel or anything that would stand out from the empty terrain. Nothing.
Kivi slowed
the Humvee to about five miles per hour.
The landscape became rougher and clouds gathered lower. We couldn’t see anything except blackness of
the night. As we drove along, my eyelids
grew heavy, and my chin slumped to my chest.
Arno
slammed on the brakes.
I bolted
upright in my seat. “What’s wrong?”
“Sir, you
yelled at me to stop.”
I rubbed my
eyes. “No I didn’t.”
“Sir, I
distinctly heard you yell at me to stop.”
We strained
our eyes to look ahead trough the front windshield. Beyond the Humvee’s front bumper, the ground
disappeared.
“Arno, take
a deep breath, shift into reverse, and ease your foot off the brake.
He backed us up about ten feet, where the three of us climbed out. We switched on our red-lens flashlights and shined them forward, and then down into the darkness. We were standing on the edge of a cliff on a ridge of sand dunes. We all peered down in disbelief. The ground plummeted at least a hundred feet into black-velvet darkness. Another few feet forward and we would have disappeared over the edge. There were no seatbelts in the Humvee, so we would have all been ejected trough the front windshield.
He backed us up about ten feet, where the three of us climbed out. We switched on our red-lens flashlights and shined them forward, and then down into the darkness. We were standing on the edge of a cliff on a ridge of sand dunes. We all peered down in disbelief. The ground plummeted at least a hundred feet into black-velvet darkness. Another few feet forward and we would have disappeared over the edge. There were no seatbelts in the Humvee, so we would have all been ejected trough the front windshield.
I swallowed hard. “Arno, I wonder who yelled at you to hit the brakes. It wasn’t Vernardo or me. We were both sleeping.”
Arno pulled
a U-turn and headed southwest. After about fifteen minutes, we made out the
shape of a lone barrel, and then another in the distance. Finally, we had found the supply route!
By midnight
we entered the front gate of our perimeter.
We pulled up to our tent and climbed out. Exhausted, we were relieved to be back on our
compound.
The next
morning, we found out that there was a ridge of sand dunes with a cliff
overhanging a deep ravine in the Third Armored Division area. We were the first soldiers in the division to
find it, and in complete darkness.
I
remembered hearing over Armed Forces Radio several months prior that the first
American fatality of Desert Storm occurred when a U.S. Marine captain drove a
Humvee over the cliff of a sand dune.
Unknowingly
we made the same mistake as the Marine Captain; however, unlike the captain, we
survived the encounter with the drop-off.
It was then
that the clear, unmistakable message came to me; God’s hand was at the wheel of
our Humvee that night.
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