FALLOUJA, Iraq — Improved technology and better planning before November's battle for Fallouja helped U.S. forces avoid the "friendly fire" casualties that have plagued other large-scale military operations, Marine Corps commanders say.
Col. John Coleman, chief of staff for the Camp Pendleton-based 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, said new technology, rushed to Fallouja within days of the battle, allowed air and ground units to know the precise location of U.S. forces in real time. Among the improvements was better intelligence gathering by ScanEagle, the unmanned reconnaissance aircraft that circled Fallouja and continuously beamed back information on U.S. forces and the location and movement of insurgents.
"I know of no blue-on-blue incidents," said Coleman, using military parlance for cases of members of a military force mistakenly killing their own fighters.
In Fallouja, the chances for friendly-fire deaths were significant, as more than 10,000 Marines and soldiers and dozens of warplanes were involved in a crowded, fast-moving battle in an area roughly the size of a Southern California suburb.
The U.S. used several unmanned aircraft during the battle. Unheard and largely unseen, they broadcast information to forces on the ground, air units and top brass at a command post.
"It's been a great tool for us," Coleman said during a wide-ranging interview about Fallouja and other aspects of the Marine mission in Iraq.
Brig. Gen. Joe Dunford, assistant commander of the 1st Marine Division, said in a separate interview that, along with technological advances, good "situational awareness" among troops on the ground thanks to advance planning helped avoid friendly-fire casualties.
"Technology is an enabler, but there's no substitute for the engagement of Marines, soldiers, sailors at all levels in good cross-talk," Dunford said.
"I believe that the man-in-the-loop is the biggest factor in precluding blue-on-blue," Dunford said. "Human factors outweigh technological factors."
Coleman said some Marines might have been struck by bullets intended for insurgents, given the enormous distances that even small-caliber ordnance can travel if it misses its target. At least 72 Marines were killed during the eight-day battle. Most were killed while storming barricaded buildings where heavily armed insurgents, refusing to surrender, had taken refuge and attacked the Marines with small-arms fire.