MilitaryTimes staff writer Matthew Cox and senior photographer Rob Curtis have teamed up to cover Army forces in Iraq and are blogging their Tales from the Sandbox. Good stuff, I think you’ll like. Sgt Hook out.
Taking care of your wounded warriors is a mission the Army has placed atop the priority list second only to combat.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (Army News Service, Jan. 22, 2008) - Getting Soldiers healed from physical, psychological or emotional wounds is an Army mission of highest priority, second only to combat, a senior official said during the Warrior Transition Leadership and Training Conference Jan.13-18.
With the creation of 35 Warrior Transition Units worldwide since mid-2007, more than 8,900 Soldiers, or warriors in transition, are currently assigned and have but one primary responsibility - to heal.
“There has to be a place for these Soldiers to convalesce and heal, and possibly one day return to duty,” said Brig. Gen. Michael S. Tucker, assistant surgeon general for warrior care and transition. He also heads up the Army Medical Action Plan, which called for establishing the WTUs.
Rock of the Marne Soldiers from Company A, 1-30th Infantry fought tooth and nail alongside local Iraqi citizens to push more al-Qaeda rat bastards out of their neighborhoods.
FOB KALSU, Iraq (Army News Service, Jan. 28, 2008) - For three days, Coalition Forces weathered harsh cold and deadly pressure-plate improvised explosive devices to secure a foothold in southern Arab Jabour, beginning with an air assault Jan. 20.
Infiltrating areas dominated by al-Qaeda in Iraq, infantrymen of Company A, 1-30th Infantry, 3rd Infantry Division began their push through the farm fields.
Capt. Neil Hollenbeck, Company A commander and his Soldiers would initially be cut off from ground supply lines. They had to pack enough food and water to sustain themselves for three days while arrangements were made to have supplies flown into the territory, which had never seen a sustained Coalition presence.
Photo Courtesy U.S. Army
Dog faces and angry citizens on the same side make a recipe for success. Sgt Hook out.
A handful of Marines and Military Police from the Texas Army National Guard remain in the once war torn city.
After I adjusted my embed to focus specifically on Police Transition Teams, I was nearly surrounded by young men from Texas. Many seemed to instinctively understand Fallujah’s infamous provincial “nationalism.”
“Fallujah pride is like Texas pride,” I heard from several MPs who, unlike Iraqis from Baghdad, didn’t think that was a bad thing.
BAGHDAD (Army News Service, Jan. 25, 2008) — Most of Sha’ab was still sleeping as a Humvee weaved its way through the neighborhood’s maze-like streets early one frigid, January morning.
Leading the patrol was 1st Lt. Austin Dziengelewski’s platoon of paratroopers from 2nd Battalion “The White Falcons,” 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment. The patrol was on its way to a squatter village in the area, where displaced families were living in makeshift tents. With the temperatures dropping below freezing at night, the paratroopers were worried people in the camps might freeze to death. The platoon’s mission was to find them and see what help they needed.
As the Humvee rounded a corner, the squatter village appeared. The vehicles pulled up and the platoon dismounted. With breath steaming out of their mouths in the chilly air, the paratroopers picked their way through the ramshackle camp. It was a nest of tents, tarps, and scrap metal that looked as if it had been picked up and dropped there by a tornado.
The head of a family emerged from one of the tents and spoke with Dziengelewski. He told the lieutenant that sectarian violence had forced him and his family to flee their home in another part of Baghdad and settle in Sha’ab.
“Why here?” Dziengelewski asked him.
“It is safe here,” the man replied.
After Dziengelewski promised to return later with blankets, tarps and food, the platoon headed back to base. On the ride back, the man’s seemingly insignificant words hung in the air.
It is safe here.
A year’s worth of work, translated into four words. When the White Falcons first arrived in Sha’ab with the mission of improving security, the neighborhood was gripped by constant violence. Twelve months later, it is safe enough that families flee to it as a sanctuary.
For paratroopers like Spc. David Higuera, a medic with Company B, the area’s revival against all odds is a point of pride.
“After a year, when you look back on how it was, compared to now - things are definitely a lot better,” Higuera said. “I know for a fact that when I look back on all this, I’ll be proud of what we did.”
I highly encourage, nay order you to read SSG Mike Pryor’s entire article. His piece clearly puts those four words into perspective. It is safe here. Sgt Hook out.
Your Army continues to push out the sonsofbitches al-Qaeda in Iraq and turning neighborhoods over to Iraqis. Oh, and by the way, they’re sticking around to keep the rat bastards from coming back.
CAMP VICTORY, Iraq - Just days after a major precision air strike in southern Arab Jabour to root out al-Qaeda in Iraq, combat engineers traversed the battlefield, arriving in the area to construct Multi-National Division - Center’s newest combat outpost.
Soldiers with 535th Equipment Support Company, 479th Engineer Battalion convoyed from Camp Stryker, Baghdad, 15 miles southwest to Zambraniyah in southern Arab Jabour to begin construction on Combat Outpost Meade Jan 15. Coalition Forces hit more than 40 AQI targets in an air strike Jan. 10 to secure the area in support of Operation Marne Thunderbolt.
The commanding general, MG Rick Lynch, stopped by the COP to speak with the engineers digging in reminding them they are making a difference…
“I just want to tell you I’m proud to be here with you,” said Lynch to the combat engineers gathered around him at COP Meade.” You all have had more impact than you’ll ever know … The whole world is turning right here right now at Combat Outpost Meade. We’ll fight the Global War on Terrorism here so we won’t have to fight it back home.”
And your Soldiers get it…
On site for less than two days, the engineers had already graded the ground and a significant proportion of the outer wall was completed. Soldiers constructed the wall with Hesco barriers - wire-framed, fabric-lined containers filled with dirt.
Pfc. Charles Brosnahan, from Granton, Wis., explained his unit’s mission. “We’re just trying to build up a spot so the infantry can come in, clean house and keep their sweep going to push the terrorists further away,” he said. “(Soldiers) can’t do that without a place to live, so we come out here first and build it up.”
As much as some might hate to admit it or choose to ignore it because the story doesn’t support their agenda, good things are happening over here every damned day. We will come home, but we will come home with honor having accomplished our mission. Sgt Hook out.
GunmenTerrorists Rat bastards have apparently taken students and teachers of a Pakistani school in the village of Wali Dar hostage. Security forces have surrounded the school. This immediately brings to mind the massacre at Russia’s school in Beslan in 2004. I shudder at remembering the atrocities committed on the students and teachers by the Chechen separatiststerrorists rat bastards. If you haven’t read John Giduck’s Terror at Beslan, you ought to. My veins are chilled by this news from Pakistan and my heart is in my throat. Sgt Hook out.
“Last Sunday, my dad asked if I was still in Iraq,” Lynch said. “He’s not seeing it on TV because bad things aren’t happening over here. It’s less publicized. That breaks my heart, because I’ve got 20,000 ‘Dog Face Soldiers’ working their (butts) off every day over here making great progress for the United States of America, and we just have to get that story told.” -Major General Rick Lynch, MND-C Commander
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