Fallout中文維基
Fallout中文維基
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Fallout中文維基


Yeah, I was there. I was Captain Dhatri, then. That whole situation was a mess and could easily have been avoided with good intel. The major in charge at the time made a bad call - he thought Bitter Springs was full of Great Khan raiders, so we surrounded the place. By the time any of us realized there were civilians down there - women and children - the shooting had already started. The major froze up at the news, and we couldn't get another word out of him. I took over and salvaged the situation as best I could. For my effort, I was promoted to major. Not quite the way I'd have wanted it.Major Dhatri

The Bitter Springs Massacre[2] was a major event that took place in the Mojave Wasteland in 2278.

Background[]

The Great Khans were once one of the most feared raider tribes in the Mojave, having entered the wasteland in 2267, after relocating from NCR territories. For years they dominated the wasteland, until Robert House's tribes entered the picture in 2274. Supported by superior technology, funds, and equipment, they drove the Khans away from New Vegas, to Bitter Springs.[3][4]

When the NCR deployed into the Mojave in 2274, the Khans initiated a campaign of raids against Republic holdings, considering them easy pickings. Caravans, towns, camps, all fell to the Khan onslaught.[5]

Things changed in 2278, when the Great Khans became the last significant problem in the Mojave, after the conclusion of Operation: Sunburst and victory in the First Battle of Hoover Dam. The tipping point came with the abduction and killing of four NCR soldiers. The NCR decided to cut off the head from the serpent and mounted an assault on Bitter Springs.[Non-game 2]

Events[]

Set up[]

The military operation was one of the largest after the Battle of Hoover Dam, taking up nearly all of the available military resources at Camp Golf, including an elite team of sharpshooters from the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion.[6] While the primary force was ordered to attack the suspected Khan stronghold through the main pass, the 1st Recon detachment was set up on Coyote Tail Ridge, overlooking Canyon 37. Their orders were to shoot anyone emerging from the canyon on sight, to prevent the Khans from flanking the main attack force.[7]

The operation was based on incomplete intel, however, the major in charge of the deployment ordered it to go ahead, convinced that they were assaulting a Khan stronghold.[8]

The attack[]

The operation went sideways from the moment NCR troops deployed into Bitter Springs. The attack force was spotted too soon and made contact with Great Khan defenders prematurely. 1st Recon troops heard an intense firefight take place, before they spotted Khans coming down Canyon 37 - the Red Pass to the Khans[9] - in groups, composed of women, children, and the elderly, followed by wounded Khans. The sharpshooters hesitated and reported the situation up the command chain. They were order to shoot until they were out of ammunition. The sharpshooters obeyed the order.[10] The retreating civilians were gunned down.[5]

When the major in charge of the operation realized his men were gunning down women and children, he suffered a psychological shock and become unresponsive. When his second in command, Captain Dhatri, realized that his superior was no longer able to lead, he took charge of the situation. He ordered 1st Recon to cease fire and and started to salvage the operation. However, at that point, the damage was already done.[8]

New California Republic[]

The Khans were tracked to Bitter Springs.[6] To ensure the raiders would not escape, a First Recon detachment, including Craig Boone, was deployed atop Coyote Tail Ridge to cover Canyon 37, the only escape route from Bitter Springs.[6][7] To the Khans, it was known only as the Red Pass, figuratively until that point.[9]

However, Bitter Springs was not merely a staging base for raider attacks, but the home of the Great Khans.[6] Khan scouts spotted the approaching force and attacked NCR forces before they were in position. Civilians started to flee the camp together with the wounded, straight into the guns of the First Recon. The commander of the detachment radioed for orders, trying to inform command that their unit is facing unarmed civilians and wounded, disarmed raiders. The major in charge did not understand the situation and ordered First Recon to open fire and keep firing until they're out of ammo. The sharpshooters executed the orders, leading to mass casualties among Khan civilians, including women and children.[10]

The whole situation was chalked up to bad intel. As soon as the commanding officer realized what happened, he froze up and couldn't speak. His subordinate, Captain Dhatri, took command in his place and salvaged the situation, ordering a ceasefire and tending to the wounded. For his efforts, he was promoted to the rank of Major, though it was not the way he preferred to advance in rank.[8]

Great Khans[]

Great Khans offer a variety of differing accounts, most of them negative. Sergeant Bitter-Root, a survivor of the massacre later adopted by Major Dhatri and a First Recon service member, believed that the reprisal was warranted on account of the Great Khans' intentional raiding of NCR property. In his view, the Khans incited the resulting violence.[11] He also held a low opinion of his former tribe, including his own parents, dismissing them as as "scum" and "lazy, trumped-up raiders" who attacked innocent settlers for fun, going as far as teaching their own children how to shoot by taking practice shots at NCR soldiers, personnel, and civilians.[12][13] In his view, the attack at Bitter Springs was a direct result of the Great Khans carelessness, prolific drug use, and intentionally provoking the NCR.[14][12]

Other survivors, especially ones who remained with the raider tribe, did not share his view. Many struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder and other scars left by the Massacre. For example, Chance, became mute and began abusing drugs to cope with his severe flashbacks.[Non-game 3] In his view, the massacre was the result of NCR's brutality in the pursuit of its political agenda, conquering the land from the Great Khans at all costs.[Non-game 3] He did not believe the claims of miscommunication,[Non-game 3] instead, remembering the NCR soldiers converging on the town and opening fire without hesitation.[Non-game 3]

Aftermath[]

Refugee camp? Is that what they're calling it? Good old NCR, they can whitewash anything. Let me tell you something, that refugee camp? It's built on the blood and tears of my people. Nobody likes to talk about it, but I remember.Oscar Velasco

The Republic's medics provided immediate care to all the wounded, NCR and Khan alike. The dead were buried in the Canyon where their lives ended, while the surviving Great Khans were permitted by NCR military authorities to resettle at Red Rock Canyon without interference.[15] The Bitter Springs camp was cleaned up and adopted by the NCR as a camp for refugees from the east, fleeing from Caesar's Legion.[16]

The official cause of the massacre was miscommunication. Without good intelligence and with an incomplete picture of the situation, NCR command did not realize that they were attacking a town and ordering their troops to fire on civilians.[17]

However, despite the NCR making amends, the death of entire Khan families has cast a permanent shadow over the relations between the Republic and the tribe. Many swore vengeance and some, such as Oscar Velasco, made good on their threats, beginning a guerrilla campaign against the Republic.[18][5] Although the incident went unreported in NCR press, rumors spread fast throughout the wasteland, damaging the reputation of the Republic and its Army.[Non-game 2] In some cases, NCR soldiers would be insulted as murderers when they entered towns to secure and fortify them.[19]

A separate issue was post-traumatic stress disorder. Members of the 1st Recon who fired on the non-combatants suffered major trauma, leaving military service and trying to find meaning in life again.[20] Others, like Bitter Root, a Khan child, considered the massacre a chance to begin a new life. In Bitter Root's case, he convinced himself he truly hates his parents and the Khans. Eventually, he joined 1st Recon, the very formation that was the culprit of the massacre.[12] In other Khans, the trauma of losing their family and friends took a particularly heavy toll. For example, untreated PTSD turned Chance into a mute death seeker, permanently addicted to heavy drugs to dull the pain and the memories. The impact of drugs have twisted and warped his memories, to the point that they no longer resemble reality at all.[Non-game 3]

Appearances[]

The Bitter Springs Massacre is mentioned only in Fallout: New Vegas and in the graphic novel All Roads.

Behind the scenes[]

  • The Official Game Guide erroneously states that the Bitter Springs Massacre took place at the Red Rock Canyon instead.[Non-game 2]

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. Bitter Springs cemetery
  2. The Courier: "Must've been one hell of a miscommunication."
    Craig Boone: "Yeah, well. That's how they wrote it up in the report."
    The Courier: "Sounded like more of a massacre."
    Craig Boone: "Yeah. I guess that'd be the word. We did what we were there to do. Lot of people got killed. That's war. Maybe looking back you'd do things differently, but that's not how it works. In the field, you hesitate, you or someone you care about will die. They teach that from day one."
    (Boone's dialogue)
  3. The Courier: "How did the Three Families defeat you?"
    Papa Khan: "They allied with Mr. House, the self-proclaimed master of New Vegas. He supported them with the resources of New Vegas: weapons, technology, caps. They were better equipped, and we could not stand against them."
    (Papa Khan's dialogue)
  4. The Courier: "Maybe you could give me the short version."
    Papa Khan: "In a hurry, are you? Very well then: The Great Khans came east out of the NCR 14 years ago. We ruled the Wastes, then, and called no man master. But we underestimated the Families of the Strip, and they drove us back to Bitter Springs, where we remained until the NCR arrived and drove us here."
    (Papa Khan's dialogue)
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 The Courier: "What happened at Bitter Springs?"
    Papa Khan: "When the NCR came to the Mojave, we thought they would be easy pickings. We raided their caravans, their towns, their camps - they couldn't stop us. At least, that's what we thought. They tracked us to Bitter Springs and surrounded us. When our children, our sick and old, fled through a nearby pass, the NCR gunned them down."
    The Courier: "That doesn't sound like something the NCR would order."
    Papa Khan: "Oh, they claimed it was a miscommunication, but tell that to those who saw our families butchered. Tell it to the survivors who were banished here."
    (Papa Khan's dialogue)
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Craig Boone: "This is the place. We got sent from Camp Golf, looking for some Khans who'd been making trouble with one of our settlements. I guess one of the settlers was connected, because we sent everything we had. We figured this was a gang hideout, but... they'd led us to their home. There's a ridge called Coyote Tail on the south side. That's where we set up."
    (Craig Boone's dialogue)
  7. 7.0 7.1 Craig Boone: "Canyon 37. That's what the NCR calls the pass down there. It was the Khans' only escape, so we set up here to guard it while the main force attacked from the front. Standing orders were to shoot on sight."
    (Craig Boone's dialogue)
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 The Courier: "You were at Bitter Springs, I'm told."
    Dhatri: "Yeah, I was there. I was Captain Dhatri, then. That whole situation was a mess and could easily have been avoided with good intel. The major in charge at the time made a bad call - he thought Bitter Springs was full of Great Khan raiders, so we surrounded the place. By the time any of us realized there were civilians down there - women and children - the shooting had already started. The major froze up at the news, and we couldn't get another word out of him. I took over and salvaged the situation as best I could. For my effort, I was promoted to major. Not quite the way I'd have wanted it."
    (Dhatri's dialogue)
  9. 9.0 9.1 The Courier: "What happened to your people?"
    Oscar Velasco: "The main force hit the canyon by surprise. While our warriors tried to hold them off, we sent our women, our children, our old through the Red Pass. NCR's First Recon Battalion was waiting for them on Coyote Tail Ridge. No Khan left alive, that was the order. My family...."
    (Oscar Velasco's dialogue)
  10. 10.0 10.1 The Courier: "What happened?"
    Craig Boone: "Main force got spotted too soon. We heard shooting. Then Khans started coming through Canyon 37 in bunches. It was all wrong, though. Women, kids, elderly. Wounded started coming through, too. We radioed to confirm our orders but command didn't get what we were seeing. They told us to shoot till we were out of ammo. So that's what we did."
    (Craig Boone's dialogue)
  11. The Courier: "Tell me about happened to them at Bitter Springs."
    Bitter-Root: "It was massacre. That's what a lot of NCR folk will tell you. Most of them feel plenty bad about what happened. But I was there. Saw it myself. I don't care what anybody says. The Khans asked for Bitter Springs. They wouldn't leave the NCR be. My damn parents, too. They were just as bad as the rest."
    (Bitter-Root's dialogue)
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 The Courier: "What do you know about the Great Khans?"
    Bitter-Root: "They're scum. Lazy, trumped-up Raiders. Most of the time, they're drunk or high, and when they're not shooting chems, they're selling them. Used to have a settlement up at Bitter Springs, 'til they pissed off NCR and got slaughtered for their trouble. Lot of us got killed at Bitter Springs. Lot of them, I mean. My parents died, too."
    The Courier: "Losing your parents must have been hard for you. I'm sorry."
    Bitter-Root: "You're sorry? Well, that makes one of us. Bitter Springs was the best thing that ever happened to me. Best thing that ever happened to my parents, too. They were as bad as the rest. Worse, maybe."
    (Bitter-Root's dialogue)
  13. The Courier: "You don't really mean that, do you?"
    Bitter-Root: "Don't I? Mister, you never met my parents./Don't I? Beg pardon, ma'am, but you never met my parents. My dad, he got himself fucked up, every chance he got. Always started with folk for no reason. Hell, he was the one who taught me to shoot. You know how? By taking potshots at NCR. And not just soldiers. Civilians, too. Even kids. Then he'd get high with his buddies and swap tales about the folk they killed. Bunch of animals. And my mom... couple times she tried to sell me to some waster, just to score some Jet. Even the other Khans said she was useless. Only reason they kept her around was because she was a... how'd my dad say it... "a smokin' piece of ass.""
    (Bitter-Root's dialogue)
  14. The Courier: "What happened to your parents?"
    Bitter-Root: "They're dead. Got themselves killed at Bitter Springs. Served them right, if you ask me."
    (Bitter-Root's dialogue)
  15. The Courier: "Like what? It looks to me like the NCR ran the Khans out of Bitter Springs altogether."
    Gilles: "We provided medical aid to the wounded - all the wounded - and permitted the Khans to resettle at Red Rock Canyon."
    (Gilles' dialogue)
  16. The Courier: "What is this place?"
    Gilles: "This is the Bitter Springs refugee camp. We've been maintaining it for a few years now, ever since Caesar's Legion started seriously pushing west. Most of the people here were displaced by the Legion's advance. At first there weren't many, but lately it's been more than we can handle."
    (Gilles' dialogue)
  17. The Courier: "You mean the massacre three years ago?"
    Gilles: "The incident, yes. It was a tragic mistake, but the NCR has done everything it can to make amends since then."
    The Courier: "What incident?"
    Gilles: "About three years ago, this canyon was the main encampment for the Great Khans. NCR's 1st Recon tracked them here after a raid and made an attack. There was a communication mix-up that resulted in some noncombatants being killed. It was a tragic mistake, but we've done all we can to make amends."
    (Gilles' dialogue)
  18. The Courier: "That's horrible!"
    Papa Khan: "It's because of that that we have sworn to take revenge on the NCR. With our new allies in Caesar's Legion, we will crush them!"
    (Papa Khan's dialogue)
  19. The Courier: "So why'd you leave?"
    Manny Vargas: "Ah, well... I just felt like it was time, you know? Wanted to have a home. Plus I was up at Camp Golf when Bitter Springs went down. I faked like I was sick to get out of going, because I knew some of the people there. But when everybody came back nobody would tell me what happened. And people would call us murderers sometimes when we showed up to secure towns."
    (Manny Vargas' dialogue)
  20. The Courier: "Maybe you can make up for your mistakes."
    Craig Boone: "A murderer who does good deeds is still a murderer. And he'll still get his judgment. I left the NCR when my tour was up. Had enough of war. Decided I was gonna start over. None of it made a difference in the end."
    (Craig Boone's dialogue)

Non-game

  1. Fallout: New Vegas Official Game Guide Collector's Edition p.360: "[3.08] Bitter Springs
    In the past century, Bitter Springs was used by the Great Khans as a semi-permanent community. Due to prolonged conflict with NCR, the Great Khans were eventually tracked back to Bitter Springs by NCR forces. The assault that rapidly followed was known as the "Bitter Springs Massacre" due to the NCR's First Recon mistakenly shooting down dozens of young, old, and wounded Khans who attempted to escape through a southern slot canon from a location called Coyote Tail Ridge [3.15]. Today, Bitter Springs hosts refugees from settlements Caesar's Legion are razing; a solution that is becoming increasingly untenable. Currently, there are rumors of an NCR-hating ghost that comes down from the mountains to frighten refugees and Troopers alike. The actual settlement itself is almost completely surrounded by rocks, and is in a gully. It can be accessed via the southern slot canyon refugee camp, the eastern Great Khan graveyard, or the northern bluffs."
    (Fallout: New Vegas Official Game Guide Collector's Edition Tour of the Mojave Wasteland)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Fallout: New Vegas Official Game Guide Collector's Edition p.458: "Important Dates
    "2278 Following the abduction and killing of four soldiers, NCR troops assault the Great Khans' settlement at Red Rock Canyon and massacre several dozen men, women, and children. This event goes unreported in NCR press."
    (Behind the Bright Lights & Big City) Note: the Guide erroneously states that Red Rock Canyon, rather than Bitter Springs, was attacked by the NCR.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 All Roads
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