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gun on a truck rolling through northern Iraq last November, in a convoy transporting Iraqi volunteers to Mosul for military training. As they entered the town of Talafar, Emme noticed that the streets were unusually quiet: no children were outdoors running toward the vehicles demanding sweets. Emme got on the radio and warned others in the convoy: Something might happen. They might have some plan for us. Moments later, as they slowed at a traffic circle, an improvised explosive device (IED) went off right next to Emmes truck, knocking him out. Emmes version of what happened next is patched together, from his own memories and what others told him later. I remember waking up and wondering who the hell I was, where the hell I was, and why cant I see or hear? My soldier was screaming for me to get out of the truck and I told him no, because it hurt too much. So he literally threw me out of the truck and guided me to a Stryker, a lightweight armored vehicle. The blast wave and fragments from the explosion had blown out Emmes left eardrum, fractured his skull, injured his left eye, and caused a severe contusion in the left frontotemporal area of his brain. His fellow soldiers rushed him to the nearby military base, where he partially regained his vision and tried to walk before again losing consciousness. He was medically evacuated, first to a combat support hospital in Balad and then to one in Baghdad. There, neurosurgeons performed a craniectomy, removing a large piece of skull
Susan Okie (Wed,) studied this question.
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