Homecoming

Homecoming
Redeployment Ceremony; April 22nd, 2008

In The News

Articles, pictures, and other news about the 2-32 Field Artillery, and the area (Yarmouk and Hateen neighborhoods) where they've been working. For posts older than 30 days, check the archive links on the left, or use the searchbox at the top of the page.

[last update: April 22, 2008]

Friday, April 25, 2008

Homecoming


Redeployment Ceremony, April 22nd 2008

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Fort Riley Troops — R&R Earned

Fort Riley Troops — R&R Earned
Topeka Capital-Journal
Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Welcome-home celebrations for soldiers returning from Iraq have become a regular occurrence at Fort Riley this month.

More than 3,400 soldiers with the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division who were deployed to Iraq 15 months ago are returning to the fort, and to their families and friends, in groups of several hundred at a time. More than 3,000 had returned by Monday, and the remaining 300 are expected to arrive today.

Fort Riley officials say the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team during its 15 months in the Rashid Security District of southern Baghdad conducted operations that resulted in the capture of more than 200 "high-profile targets" and reduced the number of enemy cells in the area from 20 to five. The team also repaired sewer, water, medical and education facilities and electrical projects.

By all reports, it was a job well done.

Deployment of the brigade was part of a large troop buildup in Iraq designed to combat increasing violence from and among the different Muslim sects and by terrorists.

We join the soldiers, their families and friends in rejoicing at their safe return. We also express our condolences to the families of those soldiers who didn't make it back safely. A spokeswoman for Fort Riley said the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team lost 38 soldiers in the war.

Since the war began March 20, 2003, with the invasion of Iraq, more than 4,000 members of the U.S. armed forces have died there.

That human toll, coupled with the absence of any indication our forces won't be fighting and dying in Iraq for a long time to come, has contributed mightily to the public's growing concern that the country has become bogged down in a civil/religious war that has no end.

The emotional strain the war in Iraq and the war against terrorism being fought in Afghanistan are placing on our men and women in uniform is another source of growing concern across the nation. Any soldier who has been in uniform any length of time likely has served at least one tour of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan. Some have served two or even three tours in those hostile environments. National Guard units in Kansas and across the country also have been called upon regularly to contribute.

The Fort Riley spokeswoman said the Army's goal is to give soldiers returning from a 12- or 15-month deployment at least 12 months in the states before they are deployed again.

But repeated deployments to a war zone in a relatively short number of years can weigh heavily on even the bravest, and the families who can only stand and watch as one of their own heads once again toward danger.


We admire the courage of the soldiers and their families and honor the sacrifices they make.

It's our hope that members of 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team receive the time they need to decompress from the rigors of war and reconnect with family and friends before they are sent into battle once again.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Sand storms cancel air flights, stop US helicopters in Iraq

Sand storms cancel air flights, stop US helicopters in Iraq
Middle East News
Apr 17, 2008

Iraqi airline companies cancelled Thursday all air flights due to a strong sand storm hitting Baghdad and different Iraqi cities.

An official in one of Iraq's airline companies told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that strong sand storms hit Iraq since the early morning of Thursday, which resulted in postponing and cancelling all domestic and foreign air flights.

The storm is considered the strongest since 2008, stopping US helicopters from hovering over Baghdad.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

500 soldiers returning to Fort Riley after 15 months in Iraq

500 soldiers returning to Fort Riley after 15 months in Iraq
Kansas City Star

The Associated Press
April 8, 2008

After 15 months in Iraq, a batch of soldiers from Fort Riley are about to return home.

The soldiers were part of the 4th Brigade of the 1st Infantry Division that was sent to Iraq last year, when the U.S. beefed up its troop levels. The units were sent to Baghdad, where officials sought to keep civil unrest in check to allow the Iraqi government time to develop.

Fort Riley officials said Thursday that the first 500 soldiers will return to Kansas, with more expected to arrive over the next two weeks. In all, 3,400 soldiers from the brigade will return.

Gen. David Petraeus told members of Congress that troop levels will continue to decline by 20,000 through this summer, before taking a break. Petraeus is the top U.S. commander in Iraq.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Security Incidents

Security Incidents
McClatchy News
April 3, 2008

A roadside bomb exploded targeting an Iraqi Army patrol in Qahtan Square, Yarmouk neighbourhood, west Baghdad at 11 pm Wednesday, killing 1 serviceman, injuring 3.

A roadside bomb exploded between Qahtan Square and Yarmouk Hospital injuring 2 civilians at 7 am Thursday.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

MND-B Soldiers Capture Key Criminal Suspect, Seize Weapons Cache

MND-B Soldiers Capture Key Criminal Suspect, Seize Weapons Cache
DVIDSHUB
03.24.2008

BAGHDAD – Multi-National Division – Baghdad Soldiers capture key criminal suspects also led to the seizure of a weapons cache in the Mansour District in northwestern Baghdad, March 19.

Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, attached to the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), captured the individual during a mission to capture him.

While the Soldiers detained the individual, Iraqi security forces provided a ring of security.

The suspect is allegedly a mid-level leader of al-Qaida in Iraq who is believed to be responsible for conducting several vehicle-borne improvised explosive device attacks throughout Baghdad and southern Iraq.

“His capture will likely provide us with the information we need to capture other AQI members” said Capt. H. Eric Perez-Rivera, assistant military intelligence officer for 2nd BCT.

After Soldiers detained him, they searched his house and discovered a cache of weapons behind a hidden wall.

The cache consisted of 14 AK-47 rifles, three rocket propelled grenade launchers, six 9 mm handguns, various hand grenades and other munitions. The cache also contained seven landmines, detonation cord and other improvised explosive device making materials.

The cache was turned over to an Explosive Ordinance Detachment for disposal.

“This is another example of what the partnership of Iraqi security and coalition forces can produce”, said Maj. David Hollis, 2nd BCT spokesman. “This arrest, coupled with the cache find, is another step toward a safer and more unified Iraq.”

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

FACTBOX-Security developments

FACTBOX-Security developments
Reuters
March 18, 2008

BAGHDAD - Seven people, including three Iraqi soldiers, were wounded when a bomb in a parked car blew up near an army checkpoint in western Baghdad's Yarmouk district, police said.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Feeding the Fire: Dragons Take Home More Retention Awards

Feeding the Fire: Dragons Take Home More Retention Awards
DVIDSHUB
by Spc. Nathaniel Smith
Posted on 03.06.2008

Dragons Take Home More Retention Awards

BAGHDAD – For the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, a new year and a new division didn’t change the ‘Dragons’ retention fortunes.

The Fort Riley, Kan., based unit, which led Multinational Division-Baghdad in reenlisting Soldiers for fiscal 2007, started 2008 off in style by being awarded the commanding general’s award from Command Sgt. Maj. John Gioia, the senior noncommissioned officer of the 4th Infantry Division and MND-B, for the first quarter of the new fiscal year in a ceremony at the 4th BCT headquarters on Forward Operating Base Falcon, March 4.

The 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 4th BCT, currently attached to the 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, earned the battalion-level retention award as a key contributor to the 744 Soldiers who have reenlisted in the task force, tallying up to almost $8 million in bonus money.

Sgt. Phillip White, the retention noncommissioned officer for the 610th Brigade Support Battalion, 4th BCT, said the brigade’s success has been collaborative effort.

“Everyone’s come together to reenlist the most Soldiers in the Baghdad area in the first three months. As far as being part of that, it’s just part of my job,” the Salem, Ill., native said. “Any time you get honored, it’s great. It kind of reiterates the fact that you’re a part of something larger than you are. The teamwork and everything else is great.”

Command Sgt. Maj. Jim Champagne, the senior noncommissioned officer of the Dragon Brigade, said the award reflects on every Soldier in the brigade.

“This is a great day for the brigade. This recognizes the brigade for your mentorship, for your leadership, for your coaching,” he said. “If it wasn’t for the Soldiers doing that on a daily basis, our retention would not be where it is today.”

White agreed that some of the brigade’s retention success is due to its leaders.

“It all boils down to the leadership of the Soldiers,” he said. “If the Soldiers didn’t think they were being led, they didn’t like their NCO’s or their commanders they probably wouldn’t be stepping forward to reenlist.”

During the ceremony, Gioia said the retention noncommissioned officers of Task Force Dragon do a good job in a very difficult field.

“Retention right now is hard. The retention NCOs have the hardest job, trying to retain our force,” he said. “We have to make sure we have somebody to replace us. It’s important that we retain as many Soldiers as we can and keep them in the Army.”

Keeping Soldiers around is something Task Force Dragon has done very well, with 50 percent of those eligible, roughly a third of the brigade opted to extend their Army careers.

White said he agreed.Keeping Soldiers in the Army is not always easy, he said. Getting them the right prospects for a career in the service is often easier said than done.

“The toughest part is coupling the needs of the Soldier with the Army. You have Soldiers on their second, third and fourth deployment and they want downtime, but they either don’t have the rank or the knowledge to get that downtime,” he said. “Trying to get those Soldiers somewhere where they won’t deploy for the next year-and-a-half or two years, that’s the hardest part, but for the most part, we’re doing pretty well on it, taking care of Soldiers who have done multiple deployments.

“When you get them that long shot, though, that’s the probably the most rewarding part of the job.”

Even when Soldiers do get the right situation, Col. Ricky Gibbs, the 4th BCT commander from Austin, Texas, said it takes a special person to enlist and reenlist in a time of war.

“After Sept. 11, if you raised your hand, you have something in your heart other Americans don’t have,” Gibbs said. “These Soldiers stepped up to the plate in a time of war, with no draft, and elected to serve their country, knowing their chances of going to combat are very high, and right now, their country needs them even more.”

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Radar Team Keeps Eye on Falcon

Radar Team Keeps Eye on Falcon
DVIDSHUB
By Spc. Nathaniel Smith
Posted on 02.29.2008


Radar Team Keeps Eye on Falcon

BAGHDAD – In a small corner of Forward Operating Base Falcon there is a team from an artillery unit, not even on the base, performing a job a lot of Soldiers have no knowledge about.

Such is the life of FOB Falcon’s radar team, detached from Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad which performs all their duties in the shadows, working hand-in-hand with the counter-rockets and mortars cell, quietly keeping an electronic eye out for enemy indirect fire attacks.

Staff Sgt. Matt Richter, the radar section chief with HHB, 2nd Bn., 32nd Field Artillery, said while his job may not be high-profile, he gets a sense of fulfillment from performing his day-to-day duties.

“It gives us the opportunity to have a significant impact in places where there’s a lot of indirect fire. If we do a good job, it allows the brigade and their sub-units to do a great job, too. We help the (Iraqis) and we help ourselves,” the Topeka, Kan., native said. “This job has satisfaction; it’s challenging and every day I learn something new. It’s an $8 million radar; there’s a whole bunch of electronics involved. You can’t know everything about it. When you have any problem, it makes it interesting because it’s always something new.”

With more than 1,300 acquisitions, more than 500 rounds tracked, and a 98 percent operational rate since March 21, 2007, things have been interesting for the Falcon radar team.

Spc. Adam Hovelson, from Brookings, S.D., and a radar operator with HHB, 2-32 Field Artillery, said he enjoys the quiet occupation he chose.

“I love my job,” he said. “It’s something that is really technical, but not terribly tough to do. It’s a fun job; I really enjoy doing it.”

Richter said his favorite part of being a “radar Soldier,” which he has been doing for seven years, has been the unique assignments he has received.

He said being in a small, dynamic field has afforded him the opportunity to work with a wide range of elements, from Special Forces to Marines. Richter, who is on his fourth deployment as a radar operator, said he enjoys having the chance to be in situations that most Soldiers would rarely find themselves.

Despite having a rewarding, one-of-a-kind job, like every other Soldier, the deployment has not been without challenges.

Among the difficult parts of the radar teams job is maintaining focus during what can be long hours of inactivity.

Hovelson said he keeps himself sharp over what can be very boring stretches by studying the radar system’s manual.

Despite the team’s difficulties, Hovelson said the camaraderie in the section became stronger due to the team’s relying on each other throughout the course of the deployment and being away from the rest of the 2-32 Field Artillery, “Proud Americans.”

“It’s helped bring our section closer together; it really helped to establish lasting relationships,” Hovelson said. “It’s given us a chance to meet a lot of people.”

Richter also found a silver lining.

“The cohesion of the section definitely went up quite a bit,” he added. “The opportunity to network and work with other people not in the same unit has been great.”

Monday, February 25, 2008

Dismounted Patrol

Dismounted Patrol
DVIDSHUB
Photographer: 55th Combat Camera
Date Taken: February 17th, 2008

Dismounted Patrol 20080225

Gallery includes: 'Controlling a Possible VBIED', 'Daklea Neighborhood Patrol', 'Dismounted Patrol'
  • Battery B
  • Staff Sgt. Peter McCabe
  • Sgt. Benjamin Stoddart
  • Pfc. Steven Robbins

Audio: Ironhorse Tracker #48

Audio: Ironhorse Tracker #48
DVIDSHUB
Produced By: Sgt. Marshall Pesta, 27th Public Affairs Detachment
Date Taken: 02-20-2008

Video Location:
IQ||

Unit(s) Involved:
• 4th Infantry Division
• 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

Submitting Unit:
Headquarters, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs

  • Spc. Christopher Herff reports on improvements in security and technology in Yarmouk's hospital, thanks in part to Soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, Fort Riley, Kan. Spc. Christopher Herff, 27th Public Affairs Detachment, produced the story.
  • Staff Sgt. Brian Rhodes discusses the significance of the 4th Infantry Division's motto, "Mission, Soldier, Family, Team," with the 4th Inf. Div.'s commander, Maj. Gen. Jeff Hammond. Staff Sgt. Brian Rhodes and Sgt. Marshall Pesta, 27th Public Affairs Detachment, produced the story.


Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Fire Station in Yarmouk

Fire Station in Yarmouk
Army.Mil Images on Flickr



U.S. Army 1st Lt. Patrick Henson, from Bravo Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, sprays a fire house at a station in Yarmuk, Iraq, Feb. 17, 2008. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Sharhonda R. McCoy)

Soldiers Provide Security at Hospital

Soldiers Provide Security at Hospital
DVIDSHUB
Photographer: Sgt. James Hunter
Date Taken: February 16th, 2008

Soldiers Provide Security at Hospital 20070219

  • Cpl. James Baker
  • 1st Lt. Quinn Robertson
  • Spc. Terrill Welge
  • Sgt. 1st Class Samuel Popple

Troops on Patrol in Hateen

Troops on Patrol in Hateen
DVIDSHUB
Photographer: 55th Combat Camera
Date Taken: February 13th, 2008

Troops on Patrol in Hateen 20070219

  • Sgt. 1st Class Daniel McKim
  • Spc. Daniel Hinojosa
  • Sgt. 1st Class Daniel McKim
  • Sgt. James Daniel
  • Staff Sgt. Frank Woode

Monday, February 11, 2008

Security Incidents

Security Incidents
McClatchy News Service

Feb 9, 10, 2008

Sunday, Feb 10, 2008
Gunmen opened fire targeting Lieutenant General Mohammed Basim Abdul Redha and Colonel Farqad Salman Alwan, both work in the directorate in the general inspector of the defense ministry. The incident took place at 9:00 am in al Yarmook neighborhood west Baghdad.

Saturday, Feb 9, 2008
Around 8 a.m. a roadside bomb targeted an Iraqi police commandos patrol at Qahtan square near Yarmouk neighborhood ( west Baghdad) .Two of them were injured with some damage to their vehicle.


Sunday, February 10, 2008

Known Area of Interest Control

Known Area of Interest Control
DVIDS
Feb 3, 2008

Known Area of Interest Control

  • Sgt 1st Class Rickie Jackson
  • Staff Sgt Jeremiah Brennan
  • Sgt Jason Billings

Friday, February 8, 2008

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Enroll Iraqi Police Volunteers

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Enroll Iraqi Police Volunteers
DVIDS

Date Taken: 11-21-2007

Video Location:
IQ||Yarmuk

Unit(s) Involved:
• 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

Submitting Unit:
Joint Combat Camera Center

DVIDS Summary Page
Direct Link to Video

B-roll of U.S. Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment enroll Iraqi Police Auxiliary volunteers. Scenes include Iraqi volunteers walking in a line, getting their photos made and performing various exercises.



Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Assessment Mission

Assessment Mission
DVIDSHUB
Photographer: 1st Sgt. Adrian Cadiz
Date Taken: January 21st, 2008

Assessment Mission

A U.S. military joint civil affairs team comprised of U.S. military personnel from various military units and branches of service go on an assessment mission of the Hateen Industrial Park in Baghdad, Iraq, Jan. 21, 2008.
  • U.S. Army Spc. Gregory Marchand
  • U.S. Army Spc. Joshua Barmer
  • U.S. Army Cpl. James Baker
  • U.S. Army Spc. Daniel Schmidt
  • U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Samuel Popple
  • U.S. Army 1st Lt. Quinn Robertson

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Bravo Battery's Christmas Party - II **Updated**

Bravo Battery's Christmas Party
DVIDSHUB
Date Taken: December 25th, 2007

Bravo Battery Christmas


Continued Coverage of LTC Gadson and the Giants

Here are just a handful of the articles about LTC Gadson, his courageous spirit, and inspiration for the Giants:

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

St Barbara's Day Celebration

St Barbara's Day Celebration
DVIDS
Photographer: Pfc. Nathaniel Smith
January 28th, 2008

St Barbara's Day
  • St. Barbara's Day Ball at the Al Faw Palace in Baghdad, Jan. 25. The ball is held annually in honor of the patron saint of field artillery.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Lieutenant colonel Greg Gadson is Giants' inspirational co-captain

Lieutenant colonel Greg Gadson is Giants' inspirational co-captain
NY Daily News

Mike Lupica
January 22nd 2008

His name is Lt. Col. Greg Gadson and he used to wear No. 98 for the Army football team and was with the Second Battalion and 32nd Field Artillery, on his way back from a memorial service for two soldiers from his brigade when he lost both his legs to a roadside bomb in Bahgdad. It was the night of May 7, 2007, and Lt. Col. Gadson didn't know it at the time because he couldn't possibly have known, but it was the beginning of a journey that brought him to Lambeau Field Sunday night.

He was there as an honorary co-captain of the Giants, there on the sideline at Lambeau because this Giants' season has become his season now and he wasn't going to watch from some box. This is a Giant at the Super Bowl worth knowing about, as much as any of them.

"Me being a part of this team," Gadson was saying Monday night from his home in Virginia, having made it back there from Green Bay, "really starts with the team I played on at West Point."

He played at West Point between 1985 and 1988, and one of his teammates was Mike Sullivan, who played cornerback and some safety and is now one of Tom Coughlin's assistants with the Giants. When Sullivan and so many other of Gadson's teammates found out what had happened on the night of May 7, found that Gadson had first lost his left leg to arterial infections and then his right, it brought that old Army team back together.

"My injury turned out to be a catalyst event," Gadson said. "These were guys who hadn't talked in years, but now were rallying around me, and my family. Some of us had stayed in contact, but not to any great degree. But now an incident in a war reminded us that we were still brothers."

Sullivan visited Gadson at Walter Reed, came back in June, this time with a No. 98 Giants jersey, Gadson's own name on the back, signed by several Giants players. When Sullivan left that day in June, he said to Gadson, "What else can we do?"

Greg Gadson said he'd love to take his family to a Giants game.

It was the Giants-Redskins game, in Washington, third Sunday of the season, Giants 0-2 by then. The tickets were arranged and then the Friday before the game Mike Sullivan called and asked if Gadson would be interested in addressing the team on Saturday night.

Gadson's wife Kim drove him to the Giants' hotel. Lt. Col. Greg Gadson, Second Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, old outside linebacker from Army, spoke to the Giants. And just as no one knew that the Giants would begin a 10-game road winning streak the next day, just as no one knew this could ever become a Super Bowl season, no one in that room including Gadson himself knew that the soldier in the wheelchair was joining the season that night.

"I just spoke from the heart, as a soldier and as a former football player," he said, "for about 10 or 15 minutes. I talked to them about appreciating the opportunities in their lives, how special and privileged they were, how everybody needs to understand what they truly have. And I talked to them about the power of sports in people's lives, especially soldiers' lives, how many times I'd watched soldiers get up in the middle of the night after a 12-hour shift if there is a chance to watch a game, or how soldiers would do anything to watch a game before they went on that kind of shift.

"I told them that of course after all the exteriors had been stripped away, they played the game for themselves. But that they had to play the game for each other. Then I talked about myself, how my old teammates came to my need, and how I was reminded again the power of a team, the emotional commitment teammates have for each other, that when a team finds a way to do things greater than they thought they could do, that they couldn't have done individually, that a bond is formed that can live forever.

"I told them that truly great teams usually form that bond by going through something together, and how whatever they were going through at that point in the season that no success ever came easy. And finally I reminded them that nothing is promised to anybody in this life, starting with tomorrow."

The Giants won the next day against the Redskins, and began a six-game winning streak, and began that road winning streak that now takes them on the road to Super Bowl XLII. It began Greg Gadson's road to Lambeau, and being wheeled out by his 13-year old son Jaelen as an honorary co-captain of the Giants along with the great Harry Carson.

"I can't even remember the last time I was actually out on the field," he said. "Maybe when I played."

Gadson had been on the sidelines when the Giants won their first playoff game against the Bucs. The team wanted him in Dallas, but he was having more surgery, on what is left of his right leg, and his right arm, which had also been damaged by the IED. But he was well enough to travel to Green Bay, and strong enough to spend the whole game on the sideline with his son, the players calling him what they have all along:

Sir.

"I wouldn't say I was warm," he said. "But I was comfortable enough not to be hugging one of those heaters all day."

He watched from the sidelines at Lambeau as the team he met at 0-2 played the way it played against the Packers and played itself to the Super Bowl, watched as the Giants came back from that missed field goal at the end of regulation, finally saw Lawrence Tynes kick it through from 47 yards out.

"When the ball went through, you could feel the elation on our sidelines, and hear the stadium go quiet at the same time," Gadson said. "It was like the air being let out of a whole state's soul. And then the next thing I saw was my son jumping in the air and running on that field."

The boy ran for both of them.


Saturday, January 19, 2008

Al Qaeda in Iraq's shrinking area of operations

Al Qaeda in Iraq's shrinking area of operations
The Long War Journal

Nearly one year to the day of the announcement of the "surge" of US forces to Iraq and the change in counterinsurgency plan, Iraqi and Coalition forces have shrunk al Qaeda's ability to conduct operations inside Iraq, a senior US commander said
...

Article with excellent maps, detailing progress in Baghdad and throughout Iraq, through the past year.

Video: Iraqi Police Screening

Video: Iraqi Police Screening
DVIDS
Date Taken: 01-17-2008

DVIDS Video Summary
Direct Link to Video

B-roll of U.S. Army Soldiers, along with Iraqi army and police, screening 175 applicants applying for positions in the Police Auxiliary in Hateen, Iraq. Scenes include Iraqis applicants waiting to be screened, filling out personal information and taking part in health and physical tests. Produced by Spc. Charles W. Gill.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Conduct a Traffic Control Point Inspection and Patrol

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Conduct a Traffic Control Point Inspection and Patrol DVIDS
Date Taken: 11-09-2007

DVIDS Video Summary Page
Direct Link to Video

B-roll of U.S. Army Soldiers conducting a traffic control point inspection and patrol in Hateen, Iraq. Scenes include Soldiers searching cars, speaking with local market owners and playing with Iraqi children. Produced by Spc. Sharhonda R. McCoy.

Activities at Yarmuk Hospital

Activities at Yarmuk Hospital
DVIDS
Date Taken: December 30th, 2007

Activities at Yarmouk Hospital

Troops Visit Yarmouk Hospital

Troops Visit Yarmouk Hospital DVIDS
Date Taken: December 30th, 2007

Troops Visit Yarmouk Hospital

Dismounted Patrol

Dismounted Patrol
DVIDSHUB
Joint Combat Camera Center
Date Taken: November 28th, 2007

dismounted patrol 01042008

  • U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Kevin Hudson and Pfc. Wesley Bass, Alpha Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, and Iraqi soldiers search vehicles at a traffic control point in a market area of Hateen, Iraq, Nov. 29, 2007.
  • U.S. Army Sgt. Thomas Ciurro, Alpha Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, provides security outside a market shop during a dismounted patrol in Hateen, Iraq, Nov. 29, 2007.

Video: Controlled Burn

Video: Controlled Burn
DVIDSHUB
Joint Combat Camera Center
Date Taken: 10-26-2007

DVIDSHUB Video Page
Direct Link to Video

B-roll of U.S. Army Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery supervising a controlled burn led by the Iraqi Fire Department. Scenes include starting the fire and placing barriers around the blaze.

Giants name Honorary Captains

Giants name Honorary Captains
Giants.com
By Michael Eisen
Jan 17, 2008

Harry Carson and Lt. Col. Greg Gadson Named Giants Honorary Captains for NFC Championship Game.

Lt. Col. Greg Gadson has been inspiration to the Giants.

One of the men is very well known to the Giants and their fans: Harry Carson, the Hall of Fame linebacker who played for the team from 1976-88. Carson remains a frequent and valued presence around the Giants.

The other honorary captain has become a special figure to the players and coaches this season, but is unknown outside the immediate team family: U.S. Army Lt. Colonel Greg Gadson, who lost both of his legs in May when an IED (improvised explosive device) detonated while he was serving in Iraq. Gadson spoke to the Giants prior to their victory in Washington in September and he attended their Wild Card victory at Tampa Bay two weeks ago.

Coach Tom Coughlin selected Carson and Gadson as the honorary captains for their leadership abilities and the respect they command from the players and coaches.

�I�ve always been a very strong advocate of Harry in terms of what he accomplished on the field and the quality of person he is,� Coughlin said. �Harry Carson, to me, represents the Hall of Fame, the New York Giants and New York Giants pride, and I think this is another excellent opportunity for us to express our gratification to Harry for the great player that he was and the quality of person that he is.

�Lt. Colonel Greg Gadson � is a real hero. There is a real man. His sacrifice, what he has done in his young life so that we all are able to sleep under the blanket of freedom is an incredible testimony to the quality of man that he is and his belief in the values that we all aspire to believe in.

"We just thought that this was a natural at this point in time. Since John Mara met Greg way back when, John has wanted him to be with us on the sideline as much as he can. The only reason he wasn't in Dallas was because he had surgery. It's a tremendous opportunity for us to thank him, first of all. His son will be with him, and this opportunity means as much to us as it does to Greg and his family. And I think it's good for America. The NFL is an extremely, extremely popular game and we are in the final four, one step from the Super Bowl. And really what's important is that we honor someone like Lt. Colonel Greg Gadson. Every player on this team is touched by that guy."

Carson and Gadson haven't met, but they sound as if they're mimicking each other each other when they speak about leaders, teamwork and their opportunity to stand in the center of Lambeau Field for the coin toss on Sunday.

"I was really surprised and really honored, much like when George Young passed away and at his funeral service I was the only player asked to speak," Carson said. "Another example is when we went to the Super Bowl in '86 and (Bill) Parcells sent me out for the coin toss as the lone captain. It's an honor and I don't take it lightly. It made me feel good."

As it did Gadson.

"It's overwhelming and I'm completely honored that they felt that way about me," Gadson said. "I certainly feel that way about them. It's really been a unique experience. Eight months ago I never would have imagined that my life would have been turned upside down and I'd have these things happen to me. I'm just fighting to get it back together again. Here I am now going out as an honorary captain for the New York Giants. I don't know that you ever have dreams like that. So I'm really very honored and very flattered. And to be out there with Harry Carson, who was one of my heroes growing up, makes it even more special."

Both Carson and Gadson are leadership specialists. Carson was a team captain (either with others or solo) for most of his last decade with the Giants. To the Giants of the 1980s, and particularly the 1986 team that won Super Bowl XXI, Carson is still the team�s leader.

That point was driven home to Coughlin in May, when he was honored as the 2007 Man of the Year by MAN (Minority Athletes Networking) Inc., a non-profit organization co-founded by former Giants Ron Johnson and George Martin and a group that Carson is intimately involved with. MAN Inc. is dedicated to positively influencing the lives of disadvantaged youth in the tri-state area.

Approximately 15 members of the 1986 Giants attended the MAN dinner. Coughlin was impressed with the deep bond that still exists among the players, one that is constantly fostered by Carson.

"I could just sense the tremendous respect and admiration they all had for each other and they had fun being back together," Coughlin said. "It's hard to separate anybody out, but right in the middle was Harry."

That's where Carson has been since he first wore a Giants uniform almost 32 years ago.

"Tom looked at the relationships that we have as players after all these years," Carson said. "The guys still call me their captain. When Pepper Johnson sends me an email he says, 'My captain.' You have those bonds, you have those relationships. As you prepare for battle and you're going to war - but in a different way - you go to war with the guys that are around you. And you hold those guys up with the utmost respect. Those guys - Carl Banks, Jim Burt, Pepper Johnson - they still refer to me as their captain.

"I'm happy that the organization looks at me in the same way. I'm almost 20 years out of football, but I still have a relationship with the organization, and I'm very honored to have been asked to be an honorary captain for this game.

Gadson, 41, was in a war - a real one - and it cost him his legs. He also suffered less severe injuries. Gadsen had surgery on his arm last week - "For the first time in eight months I'm able to touch my nose and eat with my right hand," he said yesterday - and he is learning to use prosthetic legs. But as much as he's looking forward to Sunday, he would return to the battlefield in a heartbeat if he could.

"The opposite side of the coin is I could be in Iraq leading my soldiers," Gadson said. "Honestly, as special as this is, that's where I want to be first. I could also be dead, because I almost died. But I'm thankful I'm alive and having a chance to participate in this."

Gadson was introduced to the Giants by wide receivers coach Mike Sullivan, his teammate and fellow member of the Class of 1989 at West Point. Gadson was a three-year starter at linebacker. The two men have remained close friends. Sullivan visited Gadson at Walter Reed Army Hospital just outside of Washington in June. He was taken by Gadson's upbeat attitude and determination in the face of tremendous adversity. Sullivan told Gadson he wanted him to attend the game when the Giants visited the Redskins.

As the game approached, Sullivan told Coughlin about Gadson. The coach arranged for Gadson to speak to the then 0-2 team the night before they played the Redskins. Gadson talked for 15 minutes and received a standing ovation when he was finished.

"His message and the lessons that he spoke of in terms of team - the seriousness of his team and how he prepared his team and the thoughts that he had about the people that served under him in Iraq were just tremendous lessons," Coughlin said. "I told our players that it's not often in our lives that we meet an individual who can have a profound influence on our lives just simply by the value of the character of the man and what he stands for. This guy is something very special."

The day after Gadson spoke to the team, Plaxico Burress scored a touchdown and immediately presented the ball to Gadson, who was sitting in his wheelchair on the sideline. The Giants trailed at halftime, 17-3, but rallied for a 24-17 victory that turned around their season.

When the Giants arrived in Tampa, Gadson, to the surprise of everyone but Coughlin and Sullivan, was waiting for them in the hotel. He was greeted warmly by everyone.

"I'm honored that the players and I have developed a bond in the short time that we have," Gadson said. "They're a special group of men that is playing well as a team. They got it. It's a team sport. Their accomplishments are greater as a team than they are as individuals."

Carson believes that teamwork is the key to the Giants' success.

"I'm very happy for the team," Carson said. "I'm not overly surprised. I always felt that this was a team that if it played smart, and regardless of what happens, keeps playing as hard as you can play, good things can happen. This is a team that Tom has put together and has done a good job of instilling the concept of team in these guys. It's about playing for one another. It's not about the individual, it's not about stats - it's about winning. Whenever guys are called on, it's about stepping up and making a play."

The Giants will need to make many plays on Sunday if they are to win the conference title and advance to Super Bowl XLII. Carson and Gadson hope they can use their position as honorary captains to help inspire the team to greatness.

"Plaxico tells the story of his first year with the Giants when he got hurt in a game," Carson said. "He looked over on the sideline and saw me and one or two other (former) players. He said the look that we gave him, he knew, "I better get back into the game." We sort of laugh about that.

"But when you have guys that have been there, guys that have won it all, guys who know what it takes, perhaps that can help inspire some of the younger guys. I hope that I can be an inspiration for them."

Gadson will be accompanied on the field by his 13-year-old son, Jaelen.

"When I was in Tampa, it was the first time I saw everybody since Washington," Gadson said. "I felt that I was as special to them as they are to me. I was in the team hotel when they filed in and I had my prosthetic legs on. The eye contact we made with each other as the players came in, I felt then that I was part of the team."

He's correct. And on Sunday, Gadson and Carson will be with the Giants on the field for the NFC Championship Game.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Combat team provides barrier security in Iraq

Combat team provides barrier security in Iraq
The Leave Chronicle


January 14, 2008

Since arriving in theater, Company A, 526th Brigade Support Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, has been providing barrier movement and emplacement support throughout the greater Baghdad area.

Recently, the company was tasked with another mission of significant importance. The new task also involved concrete barriers; however, these barriers are not your ordinary highway dividers found on roads in the United States.

The barriers used in Iraq are a lot bigger. In fact, there are several types of barriers, all with different heights, lengths, widths and even shapes. Some barriers have the capability of interlocking with each other. These interlocking barriers are used to secure roads leading into a neighborhood or to divert vehicles through a checkpoint controlled by Iraqi security forces.

During the most recent barrier mission, Company A was tasked to support the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment. By supporting the artillerymen, they are helping them improve their relations with the local nationals. The soldiers accomplished their mission in the nighttime hours by providing a forklift, operator and ground guide for safety while using night-vision devices.

The crew has also emplaced barriers in Baghdad neighborhoods for protection or as a trash collection point. The trash collection points provide the people of those neighborhoods a place to store their trash before it is burned or disposed of.

"The challenges that these neighborhoods face in protecting themselves is totally different than what we go through in the U.S. We have to respect that," said Sgt. Jesse Veeser, with Company A, 526th BSB.

The gesture of creating trash points and walls for the neighborhood watch groups to defend themselves helps create a strong bond between the Iraqi people and the coalition forces.

"Working with 2-32 to improve these neighborhoods is easy for us," says Sgt. James Aycock, Company. A, 526th BSB. "They (2-32 FA) protect us and our forklift and talk to these guys [Iraqi citizens from each Muhallah] before we come out to get exactly how they want the barriers emplaced in their [Iraqi] neighborhood."


Saturday, January 12, 2008

Yarmouk leader killed by extremist attack

Yarmouk leader killed by extremist attack
Multi-National Corps – Iraq
Public Affairs Office, Camp Victory

January 11, 2008

A Baghdad neighborhood council chairman was killed by an extremist who detonated a car bomb Jan. 8 in western Baghdad.

Dr. Faleh Mansour Hussain served his community as the chairman of the Yarmouk Neighborhood Council.

Following the detonation, Soldiers with 2nd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division, sealed off the area and assisted in the aftermath of the attack.

Iraqi first responders transported him to the Yarmouk Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

“Dr. Faleh was an honorable man who always held the interest of the Yarmouk neighborhood first,” said Maj. J. Frank Garcia, public affairs officer for 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division. “Attacks on civilians like this are done by those who are trying to prevent the peace and stability Iraqi citizens deserve.”

The incident is under investigation.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Award Grants to Business Owners

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Award Grants to Business Owners
DVIDSHUB

Joint Combat Camera Center
Date Taken: 10-10-2007


B-roll of U.S. Soldiers awarding grants to local business owners in Baghdad, Iraq. Scenes include Soldiers meeting with a local business owner, speaking with the individual and paying out money to the individual. Produced by Senior Airman Geneva Stone.

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Site Weapons

Video: U.S. Army Soldiers Site Weapons
DVIDSHUB

Joint Combat Camera Center
Date Taken: 10-10-2007

B-roll of U.S. Soldiers siting weapons in at Camp Liberty, Iraq. Scenes include Soldiers at a shooting range siting in their weapons, firing rounds and checking their targets. Produced by Senior Airman Geneva Stone.


Black Lions capture suspected extremist (Baghdad)

Black Lions capture suspected extremist (Baghdad)
Multi-National Force Iraq Website
January 9, 2008

Multi-National Division – Baghdad forces captured a suspected extremist in the southern portion of the capital during a raid in the early morning hours of Jan. 3.

The 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division received word from the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 1st Inf. Div. that one of their targets was in the “Black Lions” area of operations.

Company A, 1-28 Inf. raided a house in the western area of the Rashid District after receiving reliable information to the suspect’s whereabouts.

In addition to capturing the suspected insurgent, “Attack” Company detained another individual who was in the house.

“This is a strong example of cooperation between units to identify an individual who we believe has been conducting extremist actions outside of our operational area,” said Maj. Kirk Luedeke, Task Force Dragon spokesman.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Daily Security Incidents

Daily Security Incidents
McClatchy News
Jan 8, 2008

Around 11 a.m., an IED was planted inside the car of the head of Yarmouk council ( Dr.Falah Mansour Hussein ) who was killed in the incident with two other people who were injured .

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Iraqi Police Badging and Market Dismount

Iraqi Police Badging and Market Dismount
DVIDS
Photographer: Spc. Sharhonda Mccoy
Date Taken: November 28th, 2007

Iraqi Police Badging 20071230

  • U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Shurland Pierre from Bravo Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kan., provides security during a dismount outside a market in Hateen, Iraq, Nov. 28.
  • U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Timothy Brown and 1st Lt. Patrick Henson from Bravo Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kan., dismount outside a busy market intersection to gather intelligence in Hateen, Iraq, Nov. 28.
  • U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Terrance Goff, Alpha Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, holds an Iraqi boy after helping him down from a tree during a dismounted patrol in Hateen, Iraq, Nov. 29.
  • U.S. Army Soldiers from Alpha Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, conduct a dismounted patrol in a market area of Hateen, Iraq, Nov. 29.

Yarmuk Carpentry Shop

Yarmuk Carpentry Shop
DVIDS
Photographer: Spc. Charles Gill
Date Taken: November 27th, 2007

Yarmouk Carpentry Shop 20071230

Local men work on a project at a carpentry shop in the Yarmuk neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq, Nov. 27. U.S. Army Soldiers from the Civil Military Operations Company, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, were in the area conducting a routine patrol.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Troops Celebrate Christmas With Dinner, Candlelight Service

Troops Celebrate Christmas With Dinner, Candlelight Service
DVIDSHUB
Photographer: Spc. Charles Gill
Date Taken: December 25th, 2007


Christmas in Yarmuck

  • Sgt. Vincent Passero and 2nd Lt. Patrick Henson from Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) discuss strategies while playing a game of Risk at the battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.
  • Soldiers from Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team show some holiday sprit and love at the Battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.
  • Soldiers from Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), prepare snacks at the Battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.
  • Soldiers from Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), enjoy a special holiday meal brought out to the Battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.
  • Staff Sgt. Valentin Pena, Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Staff Sgt. Valentin Pena, Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), serves a special holiday meal brought out to the Battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.
  • Soldiers from Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), take part in a candlelight ceremony at the Battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.
  • Chaplain (Capt.) Troy Parson, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), leads Soldiers in a prayer at a candlelight ceremony at the B Battery's Christmas party at Joint Security Station Torch in Yarmouk, Iraq, Dec. 25.


Thursday, December 27, 2007

Field Artillery Troops Train Volunteers

Field Artillery Troops Train Volunteers
DVIDSHUB
By Sgt. James P. Hunter
2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division Public Affairs
12.26.2007

Field Artillery Troops Train Volunteers 20071226
When one thinks of a police force, he may think of a two-man team, patrolling through a neighborhood in their white-Chevy Monte Carlo, with blue and red lights, and the word “police” written on the side.

They move throughout talking with local citizens at the diner, coffee shop, or on the streets corners. No matter what community, country or religious sect, policemen are there to “protect and serve.”

Take away the type of vehicle, re-write it in Arabic, from right to left, and an average policemen in Iraq is no different.

One of the biggest areas of focus in northwest Baghdad, which has been seen widespread, is the volunteers stepping up throughout the various muhallahs, giving way to freedom and democracy.

In Ameriyah, Kahdra, Jamia, and Adil, men are volunteering their efforts. Now, in Hateen, there are Iraqi police auxiliary forces, focused on maintaining a stable, secure neighborhood.

In the Strike area of operations alone, units have been very successful with establishing volunteer forces, said Capt. Brian McCall, commander and native of Junction City, Kan., with Battery A, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regt. If they apply and adapt too what they have learned from other units in dealing with volunteers, they too will be successful.

Just two weeks ago, U.S. troops with both Battery A and B of the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, began volunteer recruitment drives in the Hateen and Yarmouk muhallahs, the Mansour District of Baghdad.

From 300 men, they were able to, through background checks and various means of investigation, narrow the field to 150 volunteers.

At the Operation Ace Academy in Hateen, the Iraqi police auxiliary began their training, Dec. 17. Twenty-five volunteers will train over a four-day period for the next four weeks, until all volunteers are trained. Also, in Yarmouk, Battery B troops are training auxiliary forces.

These men will patrol their homelands, almost acting as a neighborhood watch, until called up to begin training at the Baghdad police academy where they will officially become Iraqi policemen.

In the meantime, troops with Battery A, 2nd Bn., 32nd FA, are training these men on basic military and policing skills, said Sgt. Anthony Williams, instructor and native of Fresno, Calif., with 2nd Platoon, Battery A, 2nd Bn., 32nd FA. They are training on everything from weapons and countering-improvised explosive devices, to proper police ethics and values training.

For every two Soldiers there were seven Iraqis at the training grounds in Hateen.
Through interpreters they were able to convey their message of training and the importance of their role.

Their goal, during the course, is to ensure these men are fully capable of patrolling and maintaining ethics policemen live by, said Williams.

“We are trying to instill certain core values…” said 1st Lt. Douglas McDonough, platoon leader and native of Bonham, Texas, with 2nd Platoon, Battery A. They are tailoring their training to the Iraqi society, but ensuring they instill the basic skills and situational awareness each policeman must be keen on.

Even Iraqi army commanders in the area came to talk with these men on their importance; for their job is important to the future of Hateen and the future of Iraq.

Everyone knows military forces are used for aggressive actions against a known enemy force. Pushing police forces out into the muhallahs allows Iraqi military troops the opportunity to focus on training and military operations.

It also gives the Hateen IPA a sense of ownership for their homeland, said McCall. These men want to help their neighborhood, and in doing so, it puts more jobs into the community and gives them a sense of pride for security in their neighborhood.

“(Being a volunteer) is very important to these people,” said Williams. “These guys want to save their neighborhoods.”

With their will to save their neighborhoods, they should have an immediate impact in the area.

“I think initially the people will see friendly faces in their neighborhood – guys they have known all their lives there working to protect them,” McCall said. “… if a guy they know and trust is patrolling the streets in front of their house (should) make them feel a lot better.”

In the area, with a population of 30,000 Iraqis, McCall is eager to see how the good initiative of the Iraqi volunteers will play out.

“I think it can be a turning point for this community,” he said.

Monday, December 24, 2007

Bush Thanks Servicemembers, Military Families for Sacrifices

Bush Thanks Servicemembers, Military Families for Sacrifices
DefenseLink News Article
Melinda Larson
Dec 23, 2007

President Bush used his weekly radio address yesterday to thank America’s servicemembers who will spend Christmas far away from their homes and loved ones.

“America is blessed to have men and women willing to step forward to defend our freedoms and keep us safe from our enemies. We are thankful for their courage and their dedication to duty,” Bush said.

Families of the nation’s soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen serve their country too, Bush said.

“America is also blessed to have military families willing to sacrifice for our country. And this Christmas, many will sit down to dinner thinking of their loved ones half a world away,” the president said.

Bush also praised the families of wounded warriors who help their loved ones recover from injuries suffered in combat. “Through their encouragement and devotion, they help heal the body and spirit, and they remind our wounded warriors that our nation stands behind them,” he said.

For the military families who have lost loved ones in battle, Bush commended them for turning their grief into acts of compassion and love.

“One such inspiring example is the family of Army Spec. Michael Rodriguez, of Knoxville, Tenn. During his deployment in Iraq, Michael often wrote home to his family about the children he met on patrol. In April, Michael was killed by a suicide bomber,” Bush said.

Bush added that Rodriguez’s family honors his memory by helping to collect school supplies for students at an Iraqi school for girls. “At this time of year, we acknowledge that love and sacrifice can transform our world,” he said.

While thousands of military families are apart this holiday season, Bush expressed his hope for all of America’s families to tighten their familial bonds.

“As Christmas approaches, Laura and I extend to all Americans our best wishes, and we hope every family is brought closer together during this season of reflection and rejoicing,” the president concluded.


Friday, December 14, 2007

Mission in Yarmuk

Mission in Yarmuk
DVIDS
Photographer: Spc. Charles Gill
Date Taken: November 27th, 2007

Mission in Yarmuk 20071115
  • Staff Sgt. Whaley
  • 1st Lt. Quinn Robertson
  • Spc. Shedrick Franklin