On October 7, two Kuwaiti men,
Anas al-Kandari and Jassem al-Hajiri, sat in a small white-with-red stripes Nissan pickup truck that they had rented and reconnoitered the marines training from a distance. They had spent some time at a local mosque a few days before and had reconnoitered the marines the day prior as well. The two men were jihadis who had received terrorist training in Afghanistan. They had arrived at the island via ferry at 10:30 a.m. and had been to the island a few times before, where they played soccer and drank soft drinks. Al-Kandari had fasted and prayed before going to the island in October, writing a will in which he demanded that his possessions be given to his fellow jihadis. He recorded a "martyrdom video" at a mosque before going to the island, where he recited some verses from the Quran and gave an oration to the camera urging Muslims to be more devout in Islam and to fight infidels, and lambasted the U.S. for its alleged atrocities against Muslims. Al-Hajiri was al-Kandari's cousin and a 26-year-old man who worked for the Kuwaiti Ministry of Oil. The following day, October 8, was a hot and sunny day on the island. At approximately, 11:00 a.m., some marines were taking a break and resting at a beach-side campsite during a lull in the training. They did not have live ammunition in their rifles for training purposes, although a few commissioned officers and senior NCOs carried
Beretta M9 sidearms with live ammunition. Soon thereafter, the two gunmen began shooting at the marines with Kalashnikov rifles, specifically targeting two marines playing a makeshift game of baseball during a rest in the training. One nearby marine at first thought the gunfire was from his fellow marines, but soon realized otherwise. The marines were caught off guard. The gunfire struck the two baseball-playing marines, as well as a tent and dozens of cases of soft drinks. The men then drove to another location and then shot again. A marine sentry, Corporal James Cottrell, returned fire with the only M16A2 rifle on the beach with live ammunition. He disabled the truck and critically wounded the driver and his passenger allowing company commander Captain Matthew S. Reid the chance to return fire with his sidearm. The two Kuwaiti gunmen were shot, with one of them exiting the vehicle on the passenger side with several gunshot wounds. Reid and the senior-most enlisted marine on the island, First Sergeant Timothy Ruff, and Company Gunnery Sergeant Wayne A. Hertz then closed with and shot the gunman several more times, killing him. Ruff and other marines, including Hertz, then extracted the wounded driver from the vehicle. That gunman also died. Before the second gunman died, the marines walked up to his body and stood over him. Surrounded by U.S. marines, the mortally-wounded gunman laid dying on the ground and muttered a few phrases in Arabic before dying. Radio operator Lance Corporal George R. Simpson, Jr., a 21-year-old Ohioan from
Dayton, was shot in the arm and Lance Corporal Antonio J. "Tony" Sledd, a 20-year-old Floridian, was shot in the chin and abdomen. An avid baseball fan from Florida's
Hillsborough County, Sledd was playing an impromptu baseball game with Lance Corporal Simpson when the former was shot by one of the black-bearded gunmen at point-blank range in the back.
Naval corpsmen assessed the injured marines and came to the conclusion that they needed more care and thus a request was put in to the U.S. Army hospital at
Camp Doha for a medical evacuation. Within ten minutes, a U.S. Army UH-60 medical helicopter arrived and flew the two wounded marines to the mainland for treatment at an army hospital in Kuwait City. Sledd was reportedly in good spirits when he was taken away by the helicopter, but he died during surgery the same day. Simpson survived his wounds and was awarded the
Purple Heart medal later that month by a general. After al-Kandari and al-Haijiri were killed by the marines, reports indicate that the marines then took incoming gunfire from a nearby fishing village, with some of them jumping into the water to avoid being shot, as cover was scarce on a sandy beach. A
CH-47 helicopter arrived and distributed ammunition to the marines, who then went into the town to fight the village-based attackers. Eight hours later, the marines concluded and left. ==Aftermath==