Some of the Marines fatally shot last week in Chattanooga may have saved a larger group of their fellow troops by getting them to safety before running back into the fight to divert the gunman.
"While I cannot share specific details about what happened that morning, our Marines reacted the way you would expect — rapidly going from room to room. They got their fellow Marines to safety," Maj. Gen. Paul Brier, commander of the 4th Marine Division, said during a news conference on Wednesday.
"Once they got them to safety, some willingly ran back into the fight," he added.
The FBI has said four Marines — Marines Gunnery Sgt. Thomas Sullivan, Staff Sgt. David Wyatt, Sgt. Carson Holmquist, and Lance Cpl. Squire Wells — were shot and killed by 24-year-old Mohammod Youssuf Abdulazeez last Thursday when he opened fire on two military facilities in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Randall Smith was shot and died later from his injuries.
Officials say Abdulazeez, wielding a semiautomatic derivative of an AK-47 assault rifle, attacked a military-recruitment office — shooting through the office's front door from his car, injuring no one — before driving roughly 6 miles to a naval reserve center and crashing through its gates.
Twenty Marines and two Navy corpsmen were in the facility inspecting their equipment after returning from a training program, Brier told reporters.
"This could have been a lot worse," an official who wished to remain anonymous told The New York Times. "It could have been a horrible, horrible massacre — so much worse."
Officers reportedly began to fire at the shooter as soon as he crashed through the reserve center's gates, but he was able to enter the reserve center, where he shot and mortally wounded the sailor identified as Smith before exiting through the back and killing the four Marines in the center's gated motor-pool area.
The shooter was eventually "neutralized" by Chattanooga police officers, an FBI agent told reporters, and all evidence suggests he acted alone.
Officials are treating the shooting as an act of domestic terrorism and are investigating the internet and travel history of the Kuwait-born Abdulazeez, a naturalized US citizen who lived most of his life in Chattanooga.
"When history records what happened in Chattanooga last week, it won't be remembered for the heinous actions of one individual," Brier said. "The legacy of that day is one of valor."