Student Rescue
Headline Wednesday: Operation Urgent Fury, a late Cold War intervention on the island of Grenada, follows Rangers, Marines, and paratroopers into a fight where radios, maps, and leadership mattered as much as rifles. From the first parachutes over Point Salines to tense convoys racing toward the True Blue campus, this episode traces how American troops moved under fire to reach scattered medical students while Cuban and Grenadian forces held ridges, forts, and construction sites. You will hear how a tiny island, a new airfield, and a sudden coup collided with Cold War fears, regional politics, and the fresh memory of Beirut. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com.
In this episode, we walk through the compressed planning, the first chaotic drops over an unfinished runway, and the Marine landings near Pearls before following the firefights that stretched from barracks to ridgelines. You will hear how small-unit leaders bridged bad maps and mismatched radios, how naval gunfire and air support finally tied into the ground fight, and how uneven resistance on the island shaped the outcome. We then step back to look at the aftermath: rescued students, political controversy, and the hard questions that turned Grenada into a case study for joint reform. Use this episode as a refresher for your own reading, professional study, or staff-ride preparation when you think about how “small” wars can change how a force fights.
In this episode, we walk through the compressed planning, the first chaotic drops over an unfinished runway, and the Marine landings near Pearls before following the firefights that stretched from barracks to ridgelines. You will hear how small-unit leaders bridged bad maps and mismatched radios, how naval gunfire and air support finally tied into the ground fight, and how uneven resistance on the island shaped the outcome. We then step back to look at the aftermath: rescued students, political controversy, and the hard questions that turned Grenada into a case study for joint reform. Use this episode as a refresher for your own reading, professional study, or staff-ride preparation when you think about how “small” wars can change how a force fights.