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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
...""I got blasted against, there was a little wall you know," Colabuno remembered.

Colabuno also recalled Shihab, standing relaxed, looking up through the opening of the schoolhouse courtyard right before the blast.

"Shihab was just ... staring up at the stars," he said, his voice breaking.

Colabuno and his friend John Nelson were both badly wounded. They're still on active duty and each reached the rank of Sergeant Major. The Marines never told them the truth about their wounds, and about the death of their friend, Shihab.

Colabuno said he always assumed the explosion that day in April 2004 was caused by the enemy, until NPR told him what really happened. He's never talked much about that day.

"I don't carry it like a weight. I carry it sometimes I guess, but I mean..." he said, his voice trailing off. "I mean war sucks, war is hell right? I mean, we know that. But why (be) so stupid to... why would you cover it up?"

Colabuno points off in the distance to the U.S. Capitol building, where Congress meets.

"The further we get away from war, the less they understand the cost of war going forward," he said. "I mean, it needs to be an incredible tax on the nation to go to war. Because we need to think real f***ing hard before we do that."

Marines who were in Fallujah the day of the attack, who still bear the scars, the anger, the guilt, the sense of loss, plan to gather at Camp Pendleton in February for a 20th reunion. Among those in attendance will be Elena Zurheide and her son Robert.

They've also invited the two Army soldiers wounded that day, Colabuno and Nelson – men they never got to know at the time, but who shared the same tragedy."
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