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, June 15, 2007

US, Iraqi troops uncover large weapons cache in Yarmouk neighborhood

Black Anthem Military News:
US, Iraqi troops uncover large weapons cache in Yarmouk neighborhood
By 1st Lt. Brian Cooke, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment
Jun 15, 2007

Blackanthem Military News, BAGHDAD, Iraq - Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldiers, working in conjunction with Iraq Army troops, uncovered a large cache of explosives and bomb-making materials in the western Baghdad neighborhood of Yarmouk June 13.

Iraqi troops from 2nd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division initially discovered a weapons cache while on patrol in the Yarmouk neighborhood. The cache contained 113 land mines, 63 grenades, three rockets, three mortars, two gas masks, five washing machine timers, more than 2000 rounds of AK-47 ammunition and seven boxes of various electronics and other assorted explosives.

It is the largest weapons cache discovery by either U.S. or Iraqi forces to date in the Yarmouk area. The Iraqi troops quickly notified their liaison officer at the Joint Security Station Torch, where both Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces work and live together.

"This is just more proof to us that having the JSS and being out in the community is what's allowing us to work so effectively with the Iraqi Army," said Major Jim MacGregor, executive officer of 2-32nd FA.

The 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment received the report and sent a patrol to the site of the cache to assist the Iraqi troops. Upon arrival the U.S. patrol leader, 1st Lt. Nick Bell, received an update from the Iraqi battalion commander, Col. Ali Al-Obaydi.

Ali told the lieutenant that a gardener was trimming the bushes of an empty house for which he was the caretaker, and noticed several bags hidden behind the shrubs. Upon closer inspection, the gardener identified what he believed to be hand grenades and promptly called the Iraqi Army for help. Col. Ali responded to the call and then sent word for U.S. assistance to dispose of the explosives.

McGregor pointed to the tip coming from a resident as another sign of progress in Yarmouk.

"The people of Yarmouk are showing us that they are ready to stand up against violence and make their neighborhood's better places to live," he said.

Bell and Ali's troops set up a joint cordon of the area to secure the cache and ensure the safety of local residents. Once the area was secure, an explosive ordnance disposal team was called in to destroy the munitions.


US Army photos by 1LT Patrick Henson, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

'Patriots' uncover cache, capture suspected terrorist in western Baghdad

'Patriots' uncover cache, capture suspected terrorist in western Baghdad
BlackAnthem Military News
By 1st Lt. Brian Cooke, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery
Jun 12, 2007

BAGHDAD, Iraq — Multi-National Division- Baghdad Soldiers, in cooperation with Iraqi Security Forces, conducted a raid in the western Baghdad neighborhood of Hateen June 10, uncovering a cache of bomb-making materials and capturing a terrorist suspect believed to be linked to al-Qaeda in Iraq.

“We’ve been looking for this guy for some time,” said 1st Lt. Kevin Mills, a tactical intelligence officer with 2-32nd FA. Mills said the operation’s success can be attributed to the cooperation and shared intelligence between U.S. and Iraqi Security Forces.

Soldiers from the 2nd “Patriot” Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, acted on a tip and apprehended the alleged al-Qaeda member. The troops also found approximately 500 boxes of toilet bowl cleaner and 20 boxes of circuit breaker covers, which can be used to build improvised chemical weapons.

Mills said the planning and coordination for this operation took place at Joint Security Station Torch in the Yarmouk neighborhood, near the site of the raid. The raid was a product of coordination and cooperation between the Patriot Battalion and members of the 2nd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army and the Yarmouk Iraqi Police.

Monday, June 11, 2007

West Baghdad Market Thrives During Troop Surge

West Bagdad Market Thrives During Troop Surge
Digital Video and Imagery Distribustion System

BlackAnthem Military News
Defend America
Official Website of the MNF-Iraq
By 1st Lt. Brian Cooke2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

June 11, 2007

BAGHDAD—Adjusted security measures have resulted in a resurgence of economic growth in the western Baghdad neighborhood of Hateen. A local market has seen a resurgence of activity as Multi-National Division – Baghdad Soldiers and Iraqi Security Forces give way to shopkeepers, and fear gives way to progress.

Soldiers from the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, have teamed up with members of the 2nd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army to find a way to stimulate business in the Hateen Market while still maintaining security. As a result, economic activity in the market has increased, fostering better relations between local merchants and the Iraqi Army.

The market, located in the southeastern Mansour neighborhood of Hateen, is the economic center of the area and its activity is directly tied to the economic prosperity of the residents.

Markets in Baghdad have long been a favorite target of suicide bombers, and the previous Iraqi Army unit in Hateen worried that the market there might be next in the long line of attacks committed by insurgents. With its three blocks of grocery stores, butcher shops, cafes, and vegetable stands, the Hateen Market presented a security problem for 3rd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Infantry Division.

In response to this problem, the Iraqi battalion blocked the roads leading into the market with concertina wire and concrete and sand-filled barriers. The concertina wire and concrete kept suicide bombers at bay, but it also limited pedestrian access to the market. As a result, sales plummeted and a large number of proprietors closed their shops.

The local merchants were distraught by the decline in customers, and requested that the Iraqi Army and Coalition Forces find a way to secure their market without limiting pedestrian and vehicular traffic.

The new Iraqi Army battalion commander, Col. Ali Al-Obaydi, made fixing the situation in the Hateen Market his top priority. On May 21, Col. Ali toured the market, along with Maj. Jim MacGregor, 2-32 FA’s executive officer, and Capt. Brian McCall, commander of Battery A, 2-32 FA.

Together, the three leaders engaged local merchants about the status of commerce in the market and asked the shop owners what could be done to stimulate business. Most of the owners agreed that the Iraqi srmy needed to remove the concertina wire and abandon its blocking position to allow local residents easier access to the market.

They also asked that coalition forces conduct regular combined patrols of the market with Iraqi army units. Within one week, the blocking position was unmanned and the concertina wire was removed. Business in the market immediately picked up. Soldiers from 2-32 FA regularly patrol through the market with Iraqi Army troops, and local merchants greet both forces with smiles and, many times, an offer of a cold drink or snacks.

“It was unbelievable,” remarked McCall, following a patrol of the market a week after his tour with Col. Ali. “Just a week ago, half of these stores were closed, and the ones that were open had owners who only wanted to complain to Col. Ali and I. Today, a week later, I felt like I was walking through a completely different market. The shops were all open. The merchants seemed happy, and best of all, there were customers everywhere.”

McCall added that his unit, in conjunction with 2-5-6th IA, will continue to evaluate economic activity in the market. He said they are currently planning an advertising campaign that will use billboards to highlight the security of the market.

photos by photo by Capt. Brian McCall and 1st Lt. Neil Rice, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides
Dagger Brigade Combat Team Official Site
Week: June 4 - June 10
Slides: 22, 23, 24

S6 Building MWR Computers
SGT Stevens
SGT Dosch
ACES Safety and Stand-Down Day
SSG Tutman
SSG Richards
SSG Brunson
SGT Ellis
Getting to Know the Local Populace in Yarmouk
SGT Tucker
CH Parson

Monday, June 4, 2007

Local Iraqi government leaders focused on essential services in Baghdad

Local Iraqi government leaders focused on essential services in Baghdad
Multi-National Force - Iraq
RELEASE No. 20070604-03
Monday, 04 June 2007

BAGHDAD — Local Iraqi government leaders are working together to
improve the quality of life in western Baghdad by providing essential services in
the Sunni neighborhoods of Yarmouk and Hateen.

The Mansour District deputy director general and his assistant for
Yarmouk met with Coalition Forces and the Hateen and Yarmouk neighborhood
advisory council (NAC) chairmen May 28 in an attempt to coordinate resources
to improve essential services in those neighborhoods.

Adil Kathim, the deputy director general for the Mansour District, toured
the Hateen and Yarmouk neighborhoods with the NAC chairmen in order to point
out areas most in need of civil service projects. Sections of roads throughout the
neighborhoods contain standing water that collects sewage run-off, many areas
cannot sustain power and residents are unable to solve these problems on their
own.

Before the tour began, Kathim provided the NAC Chairmen with the
necessary contact information for the engineer responsible for the power stations
which powers both neighborhoods.

One of the main difficulties is getting these agencies to
communicate and work together. The bureaucratic process has slowed much of
the progress in western Baghdad adding significance to the meeting with the
district’s deputy director.

Kathim, in an attempt to improve district services, requested
notification of Coalition Force projects in the area, helping him commit Beladiya
resources in a coordinated effort.

Maj. James MacGregor, the executive officer of 2nd Battalion, 32nd
Field Artillery Regiment, whose unit operates in the Hateen and Yarmouk
neighborhoods, emphasized to the district deputy director that Coalition Forces
will work closely with the district.


Sunday, June 3, 2007

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides
Dagger Brigade Combat Team Official Site
Week: May 28 - June 3
Slides: 34, 35

HHB/2-32 Promotes New NCOs
SGT Craig Carroll
SGT Oscar Salazar
SGT Troy Wozniak
Bravo Battery Assists With New Recruit Training at Yarmouk IP Station

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Baghdad: Embedded Provisional Reconstruction Teams

Baghdad: Embedded Provisional Reconstruction Teams
Counterterrorism Blog
By Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
May 31, 2007

A few days ago, I spoke with a U.S. official working for one of the new embedded provisional reconstruction teams (EPRTs) in Iraq. Last year ten provisional reconstruction teams (PRTs) were created throughout the country to operate parallel to the military. Each PRT was headed up by a foreign service officer; had a deputy from the U.S. Army; had at least one member from USAID; and had a bilingual, bicultural advisor (fluent in Arabic with a background that allows him to understand the Middle East). Typically there would be about ten people total working for a PRT. The PRTs were designed to further the U.S. mission in Iraq by helping to advance the political process of reconstruction in a variety of ways. Top-down change was characteristic of the PRTs: they would work with such political entities as city councils and the policymaking portion of a city's department of public works.

The EPRTs are different. Rather than operating separately from and parallel to the military, they are embedded within the military structure. Six EPRTs operate in Baghdad, three in Anbar, and one in Babil. Their structure is similar to that of the PRTs (run by a foreign service officer, featuring a U.S. Army deputy, a USAID member, a bicultural advisor, and other staffers) but rather than functioning in the top-down manner of the PRTs, the EPRTs are designed to make more of a difference at what the official called the "granular" level. That is, the EPRTs are integrated into the military's tactical operations, and are designed to advance reconstruction efforts on a street by street, neighborhood by neighborhood basis. I previously noted that the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery (with which I was embedded) has four lines of operation in the districts it patrols: security, governance, economy, and essential services. It is at this tactical level -- the level of how these lines of operation can be furthered -- that the EPRT is supposed to have an impact in helping to set the course for the units with which it works. The EPRTs help set this course all the way down to the platoon level.

The source working with the EPRT said that their job is as much "problem avoidance" as anything else. Moreover, because the EPRTs have only been active in Iraq for about six weeks, it's too early at this point to assess their effectiveness. However, I'll be interested to check in with people working with the new EPRTs several months down the line to see how this intriguing idea is working in practice.

Thanks to Public Multimedia Inc. for its assistance in organizing my embedded reporting from Iraq. You can support my embed and independent reporting through donations to the Counterterrorism Foundation.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Service Support… It Ain’t as Easy as it Looks

Service Support… It Ain’t as Easy as it Looks
2BT Newsletter: Daggers Edge V1, Iss14
1st Lt. Chris Lowry
May 30, 2007

Flashback: So there we were, southern California at the National Training Center (NTC). This was supposed to be the ultimate test of our platoon. It was supposed to be the culmination of all of our training as a Forward Support Company (FSC). We were wellrehearsed and trained to standard in all aspects of Service Support, everything from vehicle load plans to Combat Logistic Patrol (CLP) battle drills. According to NTC standards we did exceptionally well. We were ready for deployment… Or were we?

Fast-forward to present day. As you may have already guessed, things did not turn out the way we had planned. Instead of running CLP, we were instructed to do something that none of us had ever done before. We were told that we were to be one of the battalion’s infantry platoons.

I know what you are thinking, “what does a service support platoon know about operating in the combat arms world?” Well, to be quite honest, we did not know much at the time. We had been training for the past year and a half doing nothing but combat logistic patrols. We had to cram a year of training into a little less than 10 days, because we were to augment an infantry company as it conducted route reconnaissance and observation missions for Arrowhead Strike IX. Since we were only operating at night, it was mandatory that we work only in blackout conditions. Luckily, we were already well trained in night operations from conducting our CLPs, so we incorporated that experience into our new mission of dismounted patrols. We went straight from the crawl phase to the run phase and were expected to function as a fully-trained infantry platoon. The standards were set forth by the infantry company Commander we were to operate under, all we had to do was meet them.

On the first night of operations, I could tell the guys were a little nervous and to be quiet honest, I was nervous myself. I had butterflies the size of a 10K generator flying around in my stomach. It felt like the night of the big game, and for us it was the big game. This was the time to show all those people who think the service support branches should be “in the rear, with the gear” that we could hang with the big dogs. And you know what? That is exactly what we did. We ran with the big dogs and not only met the standard, but exceeded it on multiple occasions.

First Platoon / G Company is now a full-time maneuver element, conducting the full spectrum of “combat arms” missions. We do everything the combat arms guys do with not only less training, but different equipment and a variety of different MOSs. We all have different types of backgrounds and schooling within the platoon. We have communications specialists, truck drivers, mechanics, and cooks, as well as fuel, wrecker, and crane operators. Some might look at that as a disadvantage, but I look at it as a major advantage. We are a wide assortment of Soldiers put into an extraordinary situation, but we have risen to the challenge and exceeded everyone’s expectations.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Featured Report from Iraq: A look at the surge from Baghdad (The Fourth Rail)

Featured Report from Iraq: A look at the surge from Baghdad
The Fourth Rail
By: Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
May 29, 2007

Journalist Daveed Gartenstein-Ross was embedded with Pat's group --

U.S. strategy is not just military in nature. Rather, it is designed to eliminate some of the underlying conditions that sap the average Iraqi’s faith in the country’s civil society. For example, in the districts that 2-32 patrols -- Yarmouk and Hateen -- there are four lines of operation: security, governance, economy, and essential services. According to Major Brynt Parmeter, who works at the brigade level, the overall goals are to reduce sectarian fighting, increase the Iraqi security forces’ capabilities, and improve local government to empower it to provide the services that Iraqis need. The Iraqis lack a number of essential services. Right now the U.S. focus is on food centers, financial institutions, fuel, and medical needs—but the Iraqis are also lacking in trash collection, reliable sewers, electricity, and other services. The effect of the lack of essential services on Iraqis should not be underestimated. Gas cost 5 cents a liter under Saddam Hussein; now the official price has skyrocketed to about 70 cents a liter. But in practice it is far higher than that: according to Lieutenant Patrick Henson, there is only one government-run gas station in the Yarmouk district. When the long lines around the station are coupled with security concerns, it should come as no surprise that many Iraqis buy their gas from the black market, where prices can reach $2 a liter. In other words, Iraqis may be paying more for their gas than Americans -- and the average Iraqi income is substantially lower than the average American income.


Featured Report from Iraq: A look at the surge from Baghdad (The Fourth Rail)

Friday, May 25, 2007

Baghdad: Patrolling Yarmouk (part1)

Baghdad: Patrolling Yarmouk
Counterterrorism Blog
By Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
May 25, 2007

On May 23 and 24, I went on a couple of evening patrols in Baghdad's Yarmouk administrative district. I went with a platoon from the U.S. Army's 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery, with which I am embedded; they are working with the 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division while in Iraq. The battalion of which 2-32 is a part is responsible for a large section of northwest Baghdad, which includes a couple of districts that have been hot lately, Kadamiyah and Mansour. But the districts that 2-32 patrols -- Yarmouk and Hateen -- are relatively quiet. The most dangerous aspect of patrols in those districts is the drive to reach them.

In a briefing earlier this week, I learned that 2-32 has four lines of operation: security, governance, economy, and essential services. During Wednesday night's patrol, the main objective was for the soldiers to introduce themselves to Iraqis on a couple of blocks and get the residents to fill out security surveys with basic information about themselves. The troops would also speak with the Iraqis, with the help of a translator, asking about their basic needs as well as follow-up questions geared to ferreting out a possible insurgent presence in the neighborhood.

On Wednesday's patrol I caught my first glimpse of Baghdad outside the wire in the daylight. The fact that a war is raging in this city is apparent at first glance, yet life goes on. Some of the areas we passed were composed of abandoned ruins and burned-out shells of buildings -- areas where nobody should want to set foot, not even in the daylight. Other areas were residential, with large handsome estates right next door to bombed-out buildings that must have been equally handsome years ago, before the American invasion. Some Iraqis walked down the streets casually, some were standing and conversing. Some -- particularly those with kids -- waved at the American Humvees as they passed, while others glared with manifest anger. All of the women I saw on the streets wore either burkas or heavy hijabs, and had male escorts. Although the roads themselves were relatively clean (almost certainly to reduce the chance of an IED attack), the sides of the roads were littered with trash.

I was told that there are subtle signs of whether a neighborhood is safe. One of the signs of a safe neighborhood is the presence of kids, and there were a large number of kids running around in the first neighborhood we visited. Some of the soldiers secured the street to make sure we didn't get ambushed, while the platoon leader, the translator, and a few soldiers went into houses to speak with the residents. While having a bunch of heavily armed American soldiers show up at your door unannounced must be a shock, the translator (who identified himself only as "Mo") did a good job of explaining what was going on to the residents. In every instance, the troops were invited in without incident.

At the first house we visited, the Iraqi men immediately said in English: "This is good neighborhood! It is safe neighborhood!" Lieutenant Kevin Mills of 2-32 would later tell me that this is the first thing Iraqis always tell them, "even if they're right next door to a couple of bombed-out buildings." He noted that for many, claiming the neighborhood is safe is a matter of honor: often it's only in the second or third line of questioning that you get a better read on the actual security situation, such as the fact that they heard mortar fire nearby or that a lot of strange men have been going in and out of a neighboring house at odd hours.

But this really did seem to be a safe neighborhood. The kids came right up and spoke to us with the raw enthusiasm that small children can have. When they realized that I spoke some Arabic, a throng of about five kids surrounded me. We made basic conversation, but mainly they asked me to give them things. The first thing they wanted was a football; when they realized I didn't have one, they decided they could settle for a lesser ball, and asked for a baseball. They then asked for money, for my helmet, for my anti-ballistic goggles.

The people in both of the neighborhoods we visited Wednesday were friendly. The neighborhoods were cosmopolitan, with a mix of Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds. A couple of men we encountered claimed to have been generals in the old Iraqi army. ("We run into a lot of former generals," one U.S. soldier told me. "They must have had a lot more generals than our military does.") I particularly enjoyed watching one of the servicemen, Specialist Rene Hernandez, interacting with the Iraqis. One of the other soldiers explained that Hernandez was on his third tour in the Middle East and could speak enough Arabic to joke around with Iraqis. When I drew a bit closer to investigate, I found Hernandez speaking a mix of Arabic, English, occasional Spanish, and often just plain gibberish -- at one point impersonating a donkey, which drew raucous laughter from the young men he was speaking with.
(continued..)

Baghdad: Patrolling Yarmouk (part2)

Baghdad: Patrolling Yarmouk
Counterterrorism Blog
By Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
May 25, 2007

The residents had a standard battery of complaints in both neighborhoods we visited. Trash wasn't being picked up; the residents weren't receiving electricity from the city and had to rely on private generators; the price of gasoline was skyrocketing (it was 5 cents a liter under Saddam Hussein, and is now up to 70 cents a liter). I asked one of the platoon's senior men what they would do about these complaints, and he said that they would probably contract out things like trash collection and other services. Consistent with their goal of growing the country's economy, their preference is to contract these jobs out to Iraqis wherever possible.

The soldiers were proud of the difference they had made in the areas they were patrolling. Sergeant Vince Passero said that if I had been here when they first arrived in February, I would see how pronounced the change was: when they first arrived, there were more IEDs, more attacks, and the areas were less safe.

That first day of patrol, of course, does not represent the full picture of Iraq. According to recent opinion polls, about 60% of Iraqis think it's okay to kill U.S. troops. The second day of patrol provided a bit more of a glimpse of that other side of Iraq, as we were targeted by small arms fire a couple of times. The shots were far off the mark the first time; the second time, hours later, a bullet fired at us near the JSS ricocheted off a concrete barrier about eight feet away from our Humvee.

The people we encountered on the second patrol were also more distressed than the Iraqis we ran into the first night. One man, a white-haired gentleman who looked to be in his mid-fifties, had just lost his brother. "Iraq has no government, no government," he said emphatically. "In two years we are all dead. Nobody will protect us." Others spoke of the deteriorating security situation -- a point that was underscored when the soldiers tried to get information about a recent mortar attack that seemingly originated nearby. Most of the residents could provide nothing useful, explaining with a shrug that they hear mortars fired all the time.

At one point that night, we heard the sudden crackle of gun shots a few blocks away. Heavy gunfire continued for a short time, at least 20 to 30 seconds. After a quick effort to assess whether we were being attacked, the soldiers quickly determined that it was the Iraqi army firing their guns. "If they see something they don't like, they usually just fire their guns straight up in the air, sometimes for a very long time," one of the soldiers told me. "We've tried to get them to do it differently, but they haven’t listened to our tactical advice."

In a briefing on Thursday, Ambassador John Bennett told me that while many larger factors will determine the future of Iraq, patrols occur at a granular level. Wednesday and Thursday were a chance for me to step back from the big picture and get a better look at that granular level.


Thanks to Public Multimedia Inc. for its assistance in organizing my embedded reporting from Iraq. You can support my embed and independent reporting through donations to the Counterterrorism Foundation.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

The Back-Street Front Lines

The Back-Street Front Lines
US News and World Report

By Linda Robinson
Posted 5/20/07

BAGHDAD-Since the Baghdad security plan began on a rolling start in February, many neighborhoods have been cleared of insurgents by U.S. soldiers in armored Stryker vehicles. The second, "control" phase is underway in many areas. "We are very good at clearing areas," says Maj. Gen. Joseph Fil, commander of the division carrying out the plan, "but that does not count for anything unless you hold it afterward. This time we have forces in place to stay."

Most of the 37 combat outposts and 29 joint security stations (JSS) planned for Baghdad have been set up. Concrete barriers are being erected in markets and seven neighborhoods, along with other traffic and population control measures. Fil's deputy, Brig. Gen. John Campbell, choppers around the city monitoring progress daily. "Everyone agrees that the top priority is to get the violence down," he says.

The picture remains mixed. Sectarian deaths are down by half, but areas of the city remain violent, and the car bomb plague continues. Officials are debating where to put the fifth and final U.S. brigade when it arrives next month. If it is diverted to trouble spots outside Baghdad, some fear that will leave the capital-the declared main focus-with too few U.S. troops.

Sewage problems. A tour of several outposts found some well advanced and others still warding off attacks. A month-long clearing operation in West Baghdad has enabled soldiers to establish JSS Yarmouk in relative tranquillity. In northeast Baghdad, soldiers from 2d Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division arrived at JSS Sulakh in February. Two platoons of artillerymen rotate into the compound every four or five days. One platoon guards the blue-and-white police station while the other patrols with Iraqi soldiers and policemen. Capt. Andrew Artis and his men have finished sandbag defenses, but they have not yet figured out an answer for the stinking sewage system.

U.S. soldiers man an MK-19 grenade launcher on the roof at all times, but Artis credits frequent foot patrols with deterring the sniper who had targeted the police station. Many Iraqis are horrified that the Americans are working with the local police, who are widely mistrusted. But since the Americans moved into JSS Sulakh, a trickle of residents now approach the front gate to report problems.

Farther south, in Adhamiya, Lt. Col. Eric Schacht's 1-26 Infantry Task Force has had a much rougher time in this longtime haven for Sunni insurgents. In early March, Schacht's men set up JSS Adhamiya in the police station a few blocks from Baghdad's main Sunni mosque. A platoon rotates in every 24 hours. For three weeks the soldiers came under intense attack from grenades, molotov cocktails, mortars, and gunfire. They still receive fire daily, but an extra perimeter of concertina wire staves off grenades. With Shiite militias moving in, Schacht's battalion has suffered heavy losses since last August: 17 killed and 71 wounded out of 800 men.

Schacht tries hard to win over Adhamiyans. He meets regularly with the local District Advisory Council, but two of its past four chairmen have been killed, and a third was jailed for killing his successor. Schacht has also reached out to the senior imam at the mosque. But the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government refuses to pick up trash in the area, as evidenced by the garbage-strewn streets. Government rations of rice, beans, and coffee are not reaching Adhamiya. By contrast, across the Tigris River in the Shiite neighborhood of Kadamiya, streets are being paved, gardens planted, and sewage lines fixed.

The battalion will continue its daily patrols and meetings and small-scale fixer-upper projects such as repairing schools and clinics. But its grass-roots effort alone will not turn the tide. Schacht, who has served a total of 33 months here, offers a sobering assessment: "If reconciliation doesn't occur at the government-of-Iraq level, and resources aren't cut loose to help this part of the city, we will end up with the status quo." And that status quo, the inexorable asphyxiation of this Sunni enclave, might be the fate of Iraq writ large.

This story appears in the May 28, 2007 print edition of U.S. News & World Report.

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides
Dagger Brigade Combat Team Official Site
Week: May 14 - May 20
Slides: 24, 25

2-32 FA Soldiers Train Their Iraqi Counterparts
Alpha Battery
CPL Vaughn Welcomes Addition to Family on R&R

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Iraqi, MND-B troops discover abandoned house used for violence

BlackAnthem Military News
Iraqi, MND-B troops discover abandoned house used for violence

1st Lt Charles Bloomfield, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

May 19, 2007

Blackanthem Military News, BAGHDAD, Iraq – Iraqi Security Forces and Soldiers from the Multi-National Division – Baghdad discovered a “torture house” in the Yarmouk neighborhood of the Iraqi capital May 16. The house was one of two sites found that day containing evidence of criminal activity in the western Baghdad Mansour District.

U.S. Soldiers from Battery B, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, along with Iraqi troops from the 2nd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division, investigated a site where U.S. forces had previously discovered a weapons cache containing nitric acid, as well as other bomb making materials.

The troops revisited the site in hopes of another discovery and found some human skeletal remains in the yard outside of the house. Inside the house, the Soldiers found other disturbing signs as they continued their search.

An upstairs room had the tools and layout of an interrogation room. Two metal mattress springs were laid against the wall near bare electrical wires, a table with odd markings from fire and chemical burns and triangle racks were hung from the ceiling. This evidence, and knowledge of the area’s history of extrajudicial killings, led the patrol leader, 1st Lt. Patrick Henson, of Orlando, Florida, and his Soldiers to conclude that the house had been used for illegal detentions, and possibly for the abuse or interrogation of kidnapped victims.

Expanding his investigation, Henson questioned the neighbors and learned that Coalition Forces had raided the house earlier this year, killing two men, but unusual activity had continued until the surge of forces into the Mansour District enabled security forces to clear many of the buildings in the vicinity.

While searching the suspected torture house, the Soldiers received a tip from a local Iraqi leading to another weapons cache nearby. At this second location, the troops discovered a weapons cache concealed in an air duct behind a picture hung on the wall. The cache consisted of 10 AK-47 magazines, more than 300 rounds of ammunition, three AK-47 assault rifles, an improvised grenade, a large roll of detonation cord, a camcorder, seven washing machine timers, three cell phones and numerous 9-volt batteries. Iraqi Army troops recovered one bag of ammonium nitrate and two propane tanks from the yard, as well.

Taking explosives, weapons and munitions out of the hands of extremists relies heavily on the support of each local community, said Capt. David Levasseur, public affairs officer for the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division.“

The Iraqi people are the key to our success,” he said. “Only their resolve and determination to help us by talking to security forces will allow us to deny anti-Iraqi forces places to hide.”

Levasseur added that the assistance provided to Coalition Forces in this predominately Sunni neighborhood demonstrates that its residents recognize their role and are committed to helping restore peace to their community.

U.S. Army photo by 1st Lt. Patrick Henson, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

The Patriot Call: Iraq Edition, Vol 1, Issue 4

The Patriot Call: Iraq Edition
Volume 1, Issue 4
May 16, 2007

Includes:

'Coach Gadson' by MAJ James MacGregor

'LTC Gadson, Calling the Plays'

'In The Shadow of His Wings' by CH Troy Parson

'Becoming a Platoon Leader' by 1LT Ryan Stidum

'A Finely Orchestrated Few' by 1LT John Nguyen

'Tip of the Spear' by Adam Wojcik

'Support From Home' by 1SG Frederick Johnson

'Keys to Retention' by SSG Danelle Magalit

'Service Support' by 1LT Christopher Lowry

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Where the Sun Don’t Shine: HQ Platoon—The Unsung Heroes of the Battle

Where the Sun Don’t Shine
HQ Platoon—The Unsung Heroes of the Battle
2BT Newsletter: Daggers Edge V1, Iss13
1st Lt. Neal Rice
May 15, 2007

Headquarters Platoon, historically loathed as a duty position, is turning the tide. Never ending inventories, detailed battle tracking, mind boggling maintenance schedules and endless days within the confines of the Battery CP - all where the sun don’t shine - is finally paying off. With the help of Alpha Battery’s best in the business headquarters team, the world is beginning to recognize the added value of the ‘silent warriors’ of the Headquarters Platoon.

Every morning, not later than 0530, Sgt. Matthew Woodburn of Owego, NY, makes the trek from his sleep tent to the confines of the Alpha Battery, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Command Post. Sgt. Woodburn runs the daily operations within the command post. A Chemical Specialist by training, Woodburn anxiously awaits the month that chemical protective masks are included in the cyclic inventories. As he runs the show for Alpha Battery, Woodburn dreams about his planned move to Lancaster, Pa., where he will finally become a citizen of the great Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. But for now, he has duties to tend to. With the help of his headquarters team, the Alpha Battery “Aces” are on the ball.

Soon after Woodburn’s arrival, the battery supply team punches the clock. Sgt. Michael Evans, of Concord, Calif., and Spc. Carlos Caraballo of Ponce, Puerto Rico, work tirelessly to ensure Alpha Battery has everything needed to accomplish any mission. Evans brings the cunning wisdom of a seasoned supply sergeant to the fight. There is no question, Evans’ work is essential in allowing Alpha Battery to meet any task. When he isn’t working his supply magic, Evans is thinking up new culinary creations. Schooled in hospitality management, he looks forward to enjoying his leave by preparing dinner with his wife, Nicole, a trained pastry chef.

Spc. Caraballo lets a little sun in. As the Alpha Battery Supply Specialist, he works hand in hand with Evans to track equipment, order supplies and keep the maneuver platoons well stocked with all they need to perform their tasks. More than that though, Caraballo brings a spirited and infectiously positive attitude to the team. To find the lighter side of the situation, the Aces need only call on him. On April 12, Caraballo and his wife, Ashley, welcomed the birth of their first child, Carlos Isaiah. The headquarters team and all the Aces have greatly enjoyed Caraballo’s pictures from home, showing the happy and healthy little one.

Together, the Alpha Battery Headquarters Platoon is making a tremendous impact. When the headquarters runs smoothly, the maneuver platoons can focus solely on their immediate tasks. In Alpha Battery, the headquarters is smooth and the platoons are getting the job done.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Friday, May 11, 2007

Cache found near JSS Torch

Cache found near JSS Torch
BlackAnthem Military News
By 1st Lt. Charles Bloomfield, 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment
May 11, 2007

BAGHDAD, Iraq — Soldiers in western Baghdad found a large cache of mortar rounds near a joint security stations May 9.

Once the cache was identified, Iraqi troops from 2nd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division secured the area and waited for an Iraqi explosive ordnance team to inspect the site.

The Iraqi Army requested assistance from the 2nd Battalion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, located at Joint Security Station Torch.

1st Lt. Christopher Lowry, of Lee’s Summit, Mo., responded to the request for support with 1st Platoon, Company G and called for EOD support to work alongside the Iraqi forces. EOD determined that there were 46, 57mm mortar rounds.

The wired mortars did not have timers with them; however, a cache from the same location was uncovered last week that included the necessary timers to convert the rounds into roadside bombs.

EOD did not detonate the mortars on site due to the high risk of collateral damage. They removed the mortar rounds from the site for disposal.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Iraqi general touts area turnaround

Iraqi general touts area turnaround
USA TODAY

By Rick Jervis
May 8, 2007

BAGHDAD — Yassir Layth, 12, whose favorite sports are soccer and "push-ups," used to pedal his bike past human corpses each day on his way to school.

Today, the two-block path from his home to Nablus Primary School is not nearly as scary, he said. The shooting has stopped, car bombs have quieted and, most noticeably, the dead bodies have gone away.

"My friends were too scared to come to class, and so was I," Yassir said inside his classroom, crowded with other students. "Now everyone comes to school."

The school is in the mainly Sunni neighborhood of Yarmouk, which the Iraqi military showcased Monday as a sign the nearly 3-month-old Baghdad security plan is working. Yarmouk used to be one of the city's worst battlegrounds for sectarian violence, but a flood of Iraqi troops into the area has made things better, Iraqi Brig. Gen. Qassim Atta al-Mousawi said.

A large Iraqi army checkpoint, reinforced with blast barriers, mortar bunkers and concertina wire, stood at one of the main entrances to the area. Other streets had been blocked off. A large Iraqi armored vehicle, known as a Badger, was parked next to one of the public squares.

With support from U.S. troops, the Iraqi military focuses its efforts on specific, violent areas around the city. That is why some neighborhoods seem subdued, while nearby districts are engulfed in shootouts and car bombs, al-Mousawi said.

"We have a strategy. Now we're attacking the terrorists here," said al-Mousawi, flanked by a company of Iraqi soldiers and armored Humvees. "Then our strategy will shift to another district. It's step by step."

Several similar efforts to secure Baghdad have failed because violence flared up after troops rotated into a new area. Iraq's government hopes a recent increase of U.S. and Iraqi troop levels will help keep the peace in more neighborhoods.

Judith Yaphe, an Iraq expert at the National Defense University in Washington, described efforts such as the one in Yarmouk as "a sign of progress, but no one knows for how long (it will last)." Longer-term success "depends on how long we maintain the presence and how much progress the Iraqis make in reconciling their differences and establishing an effective government," she said.

Once an affluent area lined with plush villas and wide squares, Yarmouk became one of the deadliest battlegrounds in Baghdad after the U.S. invasion. Shootouts and explosions occurred nearly daily, residents said.

Husham Qassim said his neighborhood has become safer, though lack of electricity and clean water remains a problem. Two of Qassim's sons recently returned from Syria, where they fled from Baghdad's violence. "Thank God, it's better," said Qassim, 60, a retiree. "Now I can finally go to the market. We hope it stays this way."

Children at the Nablus Primary School down the street used to constantly dodge gunfire and car bombs on their way to and from school, said Widad Ahmed Azid, the school's headmaster. Students often located bodies on the streets around the school and ran back to their teachers to report them, she said. Last year, one student was killed by a car bomb explosion down the street. Half of the school's original 1,000 students fled Baghdad, she said.

The situation drastically improved after the start of the security plan, Azid said. The classrooms began to refill with students as the shootings and explosions stopped, she said.

"As soon as you left the school, there were shootings, explosions; it was like a war zone," Azid said. "The situation has greatly improved. I only hope it stays that way."


Sunday, May 6, 2007

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides

Dagger Brigade Weekly Slides
Dagger Brigade Combat Team Official Site
Week: April 30 - May 6
Slides: 24-27

Patriots Integrate at JSS Torch

Bravo Battery Soldiers Build Relationships With Local Citizens
LT Patrick Henson
PVT Johneric Brown
Gladiators On The Job
SPC Joseph Green
SPC Shawna Yost
Golf Company
Proud Americans Re-Enlist
SPC Terrill Welge
SPC Daniel Holtz
1LT Joseph Schoen