t SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUTRR.nA ii K Ui4L7~LV' a '. iuMa. U i TFUTE CRITICISM: Guardsmen Defend Detroit Riot Tactics (Oontinued from Page 1) w Guardsmen that each time ey would clear a street, a mob ould reappear behind them. the problem wasn't that we uldn't clear the mobs," said one ooper, "but that there weren't ay mobs to clear. When we found ie, we cleared it, but we didn't ave enough people there to keep clear." Looters provided much of the umor of the riot, too. "We stop- d a looter who had eight wrist- atches on his arm," chuckled a uardsman. "He told us 'someone ust have stashed them there.'" nother Guardsman told of burst- g into a liquor store, finding free men in it, and being told at "they'd just come down to can it up for the owner." No Joke But humor was rare during the ot, and most of the Guard troops ld only of hour upon hour of ork in the littered streets and noldering buildings. By midnight mnday, snipers began to appear, iding another problem to what Ad already become a weary utine. By Monday, the looting was most over and police and uardsmen settled into a routine patrolling, halting curfew vio- tors and seeking out snipers. A lice officer said: "On Sunday .ey went shopping. Now they're nna use what they got then." Stationary guards on each block, icked by roving two-jedp patrols ere the Guard's primary answer these problems. The, guards ere armed with rifles, but the cond jeep of each patrol had caliber .30 machine gun. Squads infantrymen mounted on arm- ed personnel carriers (APC's) id tanks were available if eded. Guardsmen Target During the first few days of the ot, Guardsmen felt they were at veral disadvantages. A lieuten- it explained that "having men ounted on jeeps cruising slowly > and down the streets was a cessary tactic, and quite help- l, but it put the men at a psy- ological disadvantage by mak- g them feel that they were tar- ts to draw fire." The men on the stationary lard also complained. "Why is " asked one "that all our train- g tells us to avoid showing lights tnight, and not to expose our- lves to light, but then we get' at down here and all night long' the streetlights shine down on' us?" Others felt too much emphasis had been put on "restoring a feel- ing of normality to the neighbor- hood." Maj. James McNally, op- erations officer of a battalion of airborne Guardsmen, explained: "The whole idea of having the lights on was a part of the cam- paign to convince the neighbor- hood people that the riot was over. We didn't feel that our men were in jeopardy, or we wouldn't have allowed the lights to stay on." The Guardsmen told of con- frontations with some snipers and curfew violators. "We were cruis- ing down this street on the East Side," said a corporal, "when a car comes rolling up and almost rams us. So we jump out of the jeep and search the car. Nothing! They were sightseers from one of the suburbs. What kind of a fool would come into that area at 2 o'clock Tuesday morning? Some people don't have a brain in their head." Bottles and Bullets A jeep driver told a different story. "We'd stopped to check out an alley. This car-it was a sta- tion wagon - comes down the street, so we halt it. Then it sped up and someone inside shot my leg. So we opened fire on it. At the same time, someone tossed a pop bottle from a second-floor window. It shattered on the jeep and cut up a corporal's neck. But it could have been worse-it might have been a fire bomb." Other Guardsmen told of being pinned down by sniper fire. "Mon- day night in the fifth precinct," a Negro pfc said, "we were getting some damned heavy fire. Took us almost an hour to spot where they were shootin' from, and then we could move in and clean them out." A few hours after the inci- dent there was another. "I was right inside the plate glass front window," a trooper related, "and a car pulled up out front. The guy rolled down his window and started firing a pistol into the station. So we opened up, with a machine gun. After that, we had machine guns mounted on the roof." Even in the sniping, there was some humor. "In the middle of the first week, I was driving the lead jeep of a patrol," said one man. "We stopped for a snort break, so I thought I'd duck inside a phone booth and call my par- ents to let 'em know I was ok. No sooner had I said 'don't worry, Mom, I'm safer down here than I am on the expressway' than all hell broke loose less than a block away. I guess they were pretty worried after that." By Monday morning, all the Guardsmen had arrived in Detroit, and on Tuesday morning elements of the 101st and 82nd Airborne divisions had taken up patrolling the quieted East Side, releasing the Guard for a few hours rest and then recommitment to the fighting on the West Side. Many Guardsmen said that they were happy to see the federal troops arrive, but that they felt that their performance was over- rated. One man complained: "We held the East and West Sidi for two days, working without sleep and spread so thin that you Just' wouldn't believe it. Then the fed- eral troopers pulled in - to an area that we had quieted-and they get all the credit for calm- ing down the fighting." After pulling back to their armories or to their headquarters in various schools, Guardsmen settled, down for a few hours sleep on the floor, their first shave in two days, a shower and a change of clothes. But by that evening or early the next day, most of them were back on the street again. Guardsmen said that the rest of the first week was house-to- house fighting, an attempt to root out snipers. They said that the proper tactics were "to locate the sniper, pin him down, and send in a squad to get him." However, many complained that they could not pin a man down for fear of hitting innocent people. Officers said that in some cases, they could not send people in to search for a man "because of the prob- lems of illegal search and seizure." Guardsmen told of returning after long hours on the street to read "biased and inaccurate news stories." One man said, "Hell yes I was scared, but because I was scared doesn't mean I was pan- icky. But you get these news stories which are ostensibly ob- jective but semantically biased and loaded with condemnation by innuendo - things like that cut into morale badly." Others bitterly denounced Lt. Gen. John Throckmorton's order to unload their weapons. Trock- morton, who was the commander of the federal troops in Detroit, has been criticized recently for the order. One man, a sergeant who fought in Vietnam, said: "On Wednesday night I had a sniper in my sights. I saw his muzzle flash when he fired, and I was lined up on his silhouette--but I couldn't fire. Know why? No offi- cer around to tell me I could load my gun." Unfair Journalism Although officers and men alike agreed that morale had been hurt by what they described as "un- fair Journalism and politicking on the part of the news media," most said that they felt that if the Guard were mobilized for another emergency, the men would per- form well. Guardsmen felt that while in some cases newer equipment would have been a help, they were ac- tualy better equipped for riot duty than the federal troops. "We could have used some tear gas, newer radios," said an officer, "but as far as weapons go, our M-1's were better for this sort of thing than the ederal troops and their M-16's. The M-1 is longer, so the bayonet is more effective, and as a result we could sort of prod people along, rather than having to fire over their heads to get them to move." Another officer pointed out that the M-1 is more accurate than the M-16, and so better suited to counter-sniper fire. Most did agree, however, that a full issue of trucks and radios would have helped. The units which were in Detroit had loaned some of their trucks out to other units which were attending summer camp. The officers and men of the National Guard feel that their units served honorably and ef- fectively during the Detroit riot. Police officers seem to agree with them. However, most also feel that after the upcoming special train- ing combined with lessons learned during the riot, they will be more effective in the event of a future outbreak. <} aNWMAN REGISTRATION-WEEK PROGRAM FRIDAY, SEPT. 1 B. Pomerey. 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