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صحبتهای گروهبان نظامی دانمارک در زمان حمله موشکی سپاه ایران به پایگاه نظامی آمریكا عین السد در عراق گزارش شبکه۲ اخبار دانمارك
testimony of Danish military Sergeant present at time of Iran IRGC missile strike at U.S. military base Ain Al-Assad in Iraq, talking to channel 2 Danish news
In a bunker in Iraq, Danish sergeant John and the other Danish soldiers waited for several hours for the Iranian attack on the Ain al-Asad military base in Al Anbar province in western Iraq overnight.
- It was terrible. It cannot be described and it should not be experienced. We could do nothing, we could just accept. So we couldn't use our training in that situation, he tells TV 2.
then came the attack.
- Suddenly the first layer comes, as I call it. Nine rockets a barely a ton each. It cannot be described. I've never experienced anything like it, and I hope to never come to it again, says John.
Violent attack
The attack was so severe that the bunker shook, and dust penetrated in large quantities.
- We had to sit with scarves on our faces just to breathe, says John.
But it was the ignorance and powerlessness that were the worst for the Danish soldiers.
The ignorance of how close to the next one is and when it will come. After all, we had no idea down there. We could just sit and take a seat. We couldn't do any of what we're trained for. We could just wait, says John.
The Danish soldiers reacted differently along the way.
- Some sit and tell jokes to protect themselves. Some are closing in on themselves, and some are shedding a tear, says the Danish sergeant.
The first setbacks were so severe that we were sure we were going to a golden desert and nothing was left. We were really surprised it wasn't over our heads. I would estimate that the nearest rocket hit 300 feet from us, and as we walked around afterwards, there were half helicopters and holes so big that you could park a van in them, John says.
Now that the Danish soldiers have been a few days away from the experience, the mood has changed. It is still crowded, but the soldiers are also relieved and they enjoy themselves in Kuwait, playing cards and talking to the family at home. Psychologists are now on their way to Kuwait to help the Danish soldiers recover from the experience.
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