The Soldiers that found themselves a part of this thing called “surge” will soon be rotating home and many have had the satisfaction to see some of the furits of their labor.
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.
Posted by Hook @ 0552 zulu | | Permalink
This post is filed under: GWOT & Iraq
