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]

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Duke Blue Devils pay tribute to military in season openerDuke Blue Devils pay tribute to military in season opener

Duke Blue Devils pay tribute to military in season opener 43rd Airlift Wing Public Affairs
by Staff Sgt. Jon LaDue
Sept 11, 2007

While many college campuses across the country began their regular football season September 1 with typical pre-game chants, cheerleaders and the occasional mascot cart wheel, the Duke University Athletic Department opened its gates in a special way. Marking the start of the college football season and paying tribute at the same time, the Duke Blue Devils, for the fourth consecutive year, have given thanks to the men and women of the armed services in their annual Military Appreciation Game.

The team made a point to include as many military members in the crowd as they could by offering free tickets to members of all the services in the surrounding area.

"We wanted to show appreciation for them and what they do," said Bart Smith, Duke's director of promotions.

Although the free tickets were the biggest part of showing thanks, Duke also paid tribute by hosting the Marine Band from Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, S.C., who performed pre-game and during halftime, a flyover by an Apache Helicopter from the North Carolina National Guard and the Army's Golden Knights from Fort Bragg who landed mid-field before the start of the game.

John McNabb, a Duke alumnus who served in Vietnam as an Air Force Aviator, presented the opening coin toss.

Mr. McNabb graduated from Duke in 1966 after playing four years for the Blue Devils and being named to the All-American team as an offensive lineman in 1965.

Following graduation, he commissioned into the Air Force as a B-66 Bomber aviator and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with three Oak Leaf Clusters for actions during the Vietnam War.

Mr. McNabb said he was more than proud to represent all prior Duke Alumni who have served in the Armed Forces.

"I played here and I love this place. It was a great honor," Mr. McNabb said.
Being a veteran himself, Mr. McNabb said the military appreciation game was very special.

"I really appreciate the young men and women who are serving. I appreciate their dedication and (the) sacrifice they're giving to the country," he added.

Perhaps the most touching moment was during half time when Duke Athletics presented a retired football jersey, number 52, to Army Lt. Col. Greg Gadson, on behalf of the Wounded Warrior Program at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

Colonel Gadson lost both of his legs to an improvised explosive device while deployed in support of the War on Terror. Duke and Connecticut players and fans alike roared throughout the stadium following the presentation.

The Duke Athletic Department made sure to include all components of the military; Air Force, Army, Navy and Marines. Invitations were also given out to active duty, guard and reserve forces as well as many different chapters of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Close to 2,000 veterans took advantage of the tickets and Duke fans and servicemembers alike said they are already looking forward to next year's military appreciation game.

"Duke Athletics wants to show our appreciation for everything the military has done and hopefully the event will continue to grow in the future," said Mr. Smith.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

The Time Has Come, the General’s Here: Petraeus Preps for Testimony on Iraq

The Time Has Come, the General’s Here: Petraeus Preps for Testimony on Iraq
The New York Times
THOM SHANKER
September 8, 2007

Gen Petraeus met with LTC Gadson at the opening of the new Walter Reed rehab center (see paragraph in bold)

WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 — Although a resident of Baghdad, General David H. Petraeus is assigned military housing just above the Potomac River at Fort Myer, Va., whose lush grounds give way to the somber geometry of simple white tombstones at Arlington National Cemetery

General Petraeus arrived quietly on Tuesday night with a small team that included his brain trust: three colonels, all Iraq veterans and Ph.D.’s, along with a Rhodes Scholar wearing captain’s rank.

He has spent long hours in those quarters studying three large binders of classified statistics, maps and analysis, and will head to the Pentagon on Sunday for a final dress rehearsal, including tough questioning, in a process known in the military as a “murder board.”

Already, the testimony about the status of Iraq that General Petraeus will deliver to Congress beginning Monday has become the most anticipated by an Army officer since April 29, 1967, when, under President Johnson, Gen. William C. Westmoreland traveled from Vietnam to address a joint meeting of Congress at a time of deep public doubts about a faraway war.

In recent weeks, President Bush has himself made high-profile speeches on Iraq and visited a desert base west of Baghdad.

But as it seeks to sell Americans and the Congress on the wisdom of continuing an unpopular conflict, the White House clearly wants to make General Petraeus its public face, believing that the lean, 54-year-old scholar-warrior will prove more successful in making the case than Mr. Bush has been.

“The one who should be trusted more than anyone on this is General Petraeus,” said Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon press secretary.

One senior administration official involved in planning the testimony expressed hope that the words of General Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan C. Crocker would be given particular weight as the recommendations not of politicians but of “professional soldier and professional diplomat.”

The appearance will be the culmination of a carefully choreographed campaign that has included the lobbying of lawmakers by White House officials and supporters, and the coordination of a $15 million, 20-state television advertising blitz by a new group called Freedom’s Watch, led by a former White House press secretary, Ari Fleischer.

Military aides have coordinated the general’s schedule with the White House, but officials confirmed that some suggestions for public appearances offered by Mr. Bush’s staff for General Petraeus had been rebuffed.

The fact that most of the administration’s projections about Iraq since the invasion of 2003 have not been borne out has contributed to a deep erosion in White House credibility.

Only after General Petraeus and the ambassador have made their case in two days of hearings does the White House plan to present its own strategy, which is to hew closely to what General Petraeus recommends, sustaining the American involvement in Iraq at a high level.

While early accounts of the general’s testimony have been reported, those hoping for a further public preview will not get any help. He is under wraps, with no advance interviews scheduled and no appearances on the weekend talk shows, which traditionally open the policy plans and politicking of the week ahead.

The first official word that anyone is scheduled to hear of General Petraeus’s assessment will come when he opens his testimony before a joint session of the House Armed Services Committee and the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The advance text is not even being previewed for committee members.

The general and the ambassador then appear Tuesday, the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, in testimony first before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and in the afternoon before the Senate Armed Services Committee for what one administration official has called “closing arguments.”

General Petraeus has kept in close touch this week with the Defense Department’s most senior civilian and military leaders, using the secure communications within his traditional brick residential quarters at Fort Myer.

But he also has taken short breaks for walks with his wife, the former Holly Knowlton, daughter of a retired superintendent at West Point; for dinner with their daughter, who lives in the area, and for lunch with his wife’s parents.

On his daily jogging route he maintains a brisk, steady pace over a seven-mile route, snaking from Fort Myer, across the Potomac and through Georgetown.

The general holds a doctorate in international relations from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and has spent most of the past four years in Iraq, first in command of the 101st Airborne Division during the 2003 invasion and for the early occupation of northern Iraq, based in Mosul.

On his second tour, he was assigned the training of a new Iraq Army, a posting that generated a Newsweek cover in 2004 asking, “Can This Man Save Iraq?” The headline certainly set up General Petraeus for potshots from some at the Pentagon, and his anointment as savior of an entire military campaign worried many of his general officer colleagues, and angered not a few others.

The general has also been criticized for writing an op-ed essay before the 2004 election that a number of commentators said far overstated progress in Iraq.

The decision to place the general and the ambassador as the advance guard for the president’s own announcement on Iraq strategy continues with what one aide called “an aggressive schedule” even after the two days of hearings.

A joint news conference by General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker is scheduled for Wednesday. The venue will be a large public hall, not at the Pentagon or State Department; the location remains undisclosed for security reasons. Interviews with television anchors and newspaper and magazine reporters are planned.

“Presidents galore have hidden behind the military and tried to use the military in war or national security situations in which there is controversy or their policies are under assault,” said Richard H. Kohn, a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who specializes in civilian-military relations.

“There is never a perfect congruence, but this seems to me to be like Johnson bringing Westmoreland back in ’67 to persuade the Congress and the country of progress in Vietnam.”

Mr. Kohn said that “Westmoreland knew what was going on, and knew the problems — but also believed there was progress.” If General Petraeus “is to keep faith with his profession and his soldiers,” Mr. Kohn added, “he simply has to tell the truth as he sees it and answer the questions that both the president and the Congress pose to him.”

Another comparison offered by some is to the address by Gen. Douglas MacArthur in 1951, although there is a stark difference: MacArthur spoke to Congress after he was removed by President Truman over his handling of the Korean War.

After his testimony, General Petraeus will meet with the Iraqi ambassador to Washington, Samir al-Sumaidaie, and gather with a group of his West Point colleagues, Class of 1974.

General Petraeus’ schedule includes a visit that will be viewed as honoring the memory of the 3,071 Americans killed in action in Iraq and a tribute to the 12,476 wounded too severely to return to duty when he attends the opening of a rehabilitation center at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center. The general will spend time there with one of his former battalion commanders, Lt. Col. Greg Gadson, a West Point football star who lost both legs to a roadside bomb in Iraq.

On Friday, General Petraeus left Washington to visit Fort Benning, Ga., where he spoke at a graduation ceremony for new Army Rangers, and stood at the drop zone as his son, an R.O.T.C. cadet, made his final jump of airborne training.

He also sent an open letter to all American soldiers, sailors, marines and air crews serving in Iraq, to alert them to his planned testimony.

The general told the troops that he would appear before Congress “conscious of the strain on our forces, the sacrifices that you and your families are making, the gains we have made in Iraq, the challenges that remain, and the importance of building on what we and our Iraqi counterparts have fought so hard to achieve.”

Real warriors take field at West Point

Real warriors take field at West Point
The Providence Journal
JIM DONALDSON
September 9, 2007

LTC Gadson gave the pre-game speech for the West Point game last week.
Army went on to beat Rhode Island.
coincidence? we think not.
(Army takes on Wake Forest this weekend here in Winston.)

Knute Rockne had The Gipper. Stan Brock has Lt. Col. Greg Gadson.

“He’s an Army football player who lost both his legs in Iraq,” said Brock, who is in his first season as coach of the Cadets. “He came up from Walter Reed (hospital) to speak to the team. It was very moving. He told them: ‘Your mission here is to win football games. After you graduate, your mission is to serve and protect your country.’ ”

At West Point, the reality is that a football player has a better chance of going into combat than he does of going to the NFL.

“They know what they’re in for,” said Brock. “These are young men who came to West Point in time of war.”

These are very special young men that the University of Rhode Island Rams will be playing against tomorrow afternoon at Michie Stadium, high above the Hudson River —young men who not only are dedicated to football, but also to defending the nation.

“We don’t get everybody we want,” Brock said this week. “Not everybody wants to come here. But the kids who do are kids you want to coach. They’re not always the most talented athletes. They’re not always blue-chippers. But they don’t ever lay down for anybody.

“These kids are the kind you want to be around. They’re great kids. I feel very privileged to be here, coaching them. West Point is a special place.”

It was during World War II that Gen. George Marshall, a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute, said: “I want an officer for a secret and dangerous mission. I want a West Point football player.”

Such a man is Lt. Col. Gadson.

A defensive end at Army, Gadson became an artillery officer after graduating from the U.S. Military Academy in 1989. He served in Bosnia, in Operation Desert Storm, and was a battalion commander with the 32nd Field Artillery in Iraq when he was severely wounded in May.

Four years ago, when a winless Army football team came to Honolulu to play the University of Hawaii, Gadson attended a practice at Schofield Barracks, where he was stationed with the 25th Infantry Division.

“I truly believe we can be successful,” he said then in an interview with the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. “We never have a lot of size, but size isn’t everything. Attitude, discipline — you can make those a premium to be successful.”

Brock would be successful if he could recruit players as big, and as talented, as he was.

At 6-6, 290, he was even bigger than his “big” brother, Pete (6-5, 270), who was an offensive lineman for the New England Patriots for 12 years, from 1976 through ’87. Both were first-round draft picks out of Colorado, where Pete was an all-Big 8 center and Stan, an all-conference tackle. Their brother Willie also played at Colorado and spent a season with the Detroit Lions, and another brother, Ray, played at LSU.

Taken 12th overall by the Saints in 1980, Stan played 13 seasons in New Orleans, where he is a member of the franchise’s Hall of Fame, then three more in San Diego, where he was a member of the Chargers’ AFC championship team in 1994, coached by Bobby Ross.

It was Ross who brought Brock to Army in 2004, as his offensive line coach. Prior to coming to West Point, Brock had been coaching in the Arena Football League.

When Ross retired after last season, Brock was named his successor.

“Stan commands a great deal of respect from our players,” said Kevin Anderson, Army’s director of athletics. Among the reasons for that are that, when he first came to West Point as an assistant, he went through “Beast Barracks” — the demanding, summer indoctrination program for incoming plebes.

“He wanted to make sure the kids knew he appreciated the kinds of things they have to go through,” Pete Brock said of his younger brother. “He loves it there — the culture, the environment.”

Stan Brock wants his players to be leaders and role models for the Corps of Cadets.

“They carry a heavy academic load,” he said. “They’re taking 18 credit hours, in difficult courses.”

That is in addition to the demands of playing big-time college football and the regimen of military life.

“As Army football players,” Brock said, “they need to do more. They need to be leaders.”

They need to be like fullback Mike Viti, who, in addition to being a team captain, also is one of four cadet regimental commanders.

“Mike Viti,” said Brig. Gen. Robert Caslan Jr., the commandant of cadets at West Point, “is the type of inspirational leader America needs leading her sons and daughters, both at West Point and in today’s Army.

“He is a totally selfless team player. He’s a tremendous leader and role model for every member of the Army football team, and for every member of the Corps of Cadets.”

He is the type of player that makes Brock proud to be coaching at West Point.

“These kids are very goal-oriented,” he said. “They know where they’re going, and how to get there.”

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides
Dagger Brigade Combat Team Official Site
Week: Sept 3 - Sept 9
Slides: 33, 34

Alpha Battery Spends a Day With Local Businessmen
  • 1SG Frederick Johnson receives the royal treatment from a local barber
  • 1SG Johnson pumps money into the local economy
  • 1SG Johnson and SSG Ahmad Brunson assist a local baker as he makes his daily batch of samone bread
Bravo Battery Re-Opens Yarmouk Neighborhood Advisory Council Hall, Conducts Medical Program
  • CPT Morgan joins community leaders for the ribbon cutting ceremony
  • SPC Defreest evaluates an infant
  • PFC Sabo checks an Iraqi child's vital signs
  • SPC Defreest and CPT Foster set up vitamins and medicine to distribute to local citizens

Better security affords chance to build economy

Better security affords chance to build economy
Lancaster Online
By FIRST LT. NEAL RICE
Sep 08, 2007

Hello from Baghdad,

Another month has passed us by and it's high time for an update to you, our devoted supporters. I cannot thank you enough for what you are doing. Be assured that your care packages, notes, and prayers (along with the start of football season) are a huge boost to morale. Please keep them coming and know that we count ourselves fortunate to have you behind us.

Well, it's been another decent month here on the ground. Our area has remained relatively calm, though we have had a few incidents of roadside bombs and small arms fire…a poignant reminder that we are, in fact, in a war zone.

Thankfully, none of the attacks against us were successful and your brave soldiers remain well protected, I believe, by the Hand of Providence. I wish you could see first hand how these young men press on towards the goal despite knowing the dangers that confront them each time they leave the wire. They are an admirable bunch, truly the best of young America and, in the end, all the incentive I need to keep going.

This month has been quiet enough that we have been able to focus on building the economy and essential services. In fact, security has continued to improve throughout much of Baghdad. I believe this is the result of the "surge," which has given us the appropriate number of boots on the ground to execute the difficult job we face.

Lately we have been working diligently to open new businesses. In fact, just this week we were able to help open a grocery market, a hardware store, and an air conditioning repair shop. We have established small business grants in an effort to kick start the economy in our area and the three new businesses are a result of that program.

I personally delivered the finances to each of the business owners and I want you to know that I made it clear this money is a gift from the American people to the Iraqi people. I also emphasized that I would be watching closely to ensure my countrymen's money is not wasted — and I will. It's businesses like these that hold some promise for the local economy and, step by step, there is progress on the economic front.

Lately, I have seen improvement in the local government council. Either my boss or I meet with them each week and help direct their evolution into, we hope, a functioning and relevant local government. I am often frustrated by their slow progress, but the last few weeks I have seen signs that they may actually begin to understand their proper role.

As we pass more responsibility to them they will need continual guidance if they are to succeed. Yet we must remember that they simply do not understand how a representative government should function. I find hope in the little measures of progress, most notably their recent acquiescence to the idea that they must actually talk with the people they represent if they hope to understand the problems they face.

The simplest democratic ideals, you see, are entirely foreign to them. And so you can see part of the reason why, four and a half years later, Iraq is not where we thought it would be.

Friends, the challenges here are significant, but not insurmountable. I find reasons for doubt when I watch the Iraqi politicians wander aimlessly about their parliament or, more recently, vacation with vigor as their own troops, and ours, fight for peace in the capital.

But I also see signs of hope. I see hope in the relentless and meaningful work of your soldiers every day. I see hope in those Iraqis I meet who really do want a future for themselves and their children. I see hope in the businesses we open and the local leaders who are beginning to get it.

The way ahead for Iraq is bottom up. In the absence of Iraqi leadership at the highest levels, the future belongs to those with the courage to build from the ground up. The businessman, the religious leader, the policeman, the local councilman who decides to put aside the past and the deep divides of history in order to move forward side by side, not as Shia or Sunni, but as Iraqis — these people are the hope of Iraq.

On the ground, at the lowest level, I'm seeing more of these people. Let's pray together that the tide of change grows and strengthens quickly, that a day in the not so distant future may hold the promise of peace for Iraq.

Please do not forget that you are a big part of the reason we keep moving forward here. We will never forget your steady encouragement as we give all we have to make this thing work.

Thank you, sincerely and forever.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Iraqi Army, U.S. Special Forces detain extremist Islamic Army cell leader, 9 insurgents

Iraqi Army, U.S. Special Forces detain extremist Islamic Army cell leader, 9 insurgents
Multi-National Corps – Iraq Official Website
September 10, 2007

Iraqi Army Scouts detained a high-level insurgent working for both the Islamic Army and al-Qaeda in Iraq during a raid Sept. 9 in the Yarmouk area, near Baghdad.

The suspect is accused of ordering the assassination of a security guard for a local school and the attempted murder of an Iraqi policeman. In addition, he allegedly orders his cell members to attack citizens who oppose his terrorist criminal activities and those who support efforts to provide security and stability in the region.

Reports say his terrorist cell is responsible for numerous kidnappings, murders, extra-judicial killings and improvised explosive device and indirect fire attacks against Iraqi and Coalition Forces.

Forces detained seven other individuals believed to be linked to this terrorist cell while seizing four AK-47 assault rifles, one 9mm pistol and a shotgun.

In a separate operation, members of an Iraqi Army Reconnaissance unit detained a suspected terrorist Sept. 9 in Taji during an air assault operation.

The cell member acquires fuel and materials to prepare vehicle borne improvised explosive devices for use against Iraqi and Coalition Forces. Forces detained one other suspicious individual during the raid and seized two weapons.

U.S. Special Forces were advisers during both operations and no Iraqi or U.S. Forces were injured.