R. Haeberle: So the helicopters put down and we jumped out and we heard a lot of firing. And we were on the ground for maybe about a minute and then could still hear a lot of firing go. And I thought, holy cow, this is really a hot zone. But after, you know a couple minutes later, we realised we were not being fired at. There was no you know, outgoing fire. So we all stood up and started advancing toward a road. And I could see some people on the road, kind of, you know, running moving and the Americans just, you know, opened up on these people and just indiscriminately, you know, just fire 'em. They were just, you know, women and some children that were shot and just kind of, you know, freak me out a little bit. I couldn't, you know, understand really what was going on. I couldn't comprehend the scene at that time. So after that, we started moving in to the village and when I walked into the village, I mean it was just complete carnage in the village. Just unreal scenes happening. I mean, the hooches (houses) were burning. There was people, dead people laying in some of the hooches. There was people, you know, on the trail. I think the weirdest thing was some of the soldiers were jumping on some of the animals, the water buffaloes, with their bayonets trying to stab 'em. And just a complete, you know, freak out scene. But still to this day, I still can't really figure it out.