Saturday, December 03, 2005

One Iraq Operation Ends, Another in Final Stages

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Dec. 3, 2005 - Operation Shank wrapped up today, officials in Iraq announced.

The operation, conducted in central and southern Ramadi, was the fifth in a series by the Iraqi army and coalition forces engaged in combined clearing operations to disrupt terrorism and set conditions for a successful Dec. 15 election in the provincial capital of Anbar.

Shank primarily involved targeted raids conducted by Iraqi soldiers and U.S. forces against terrorist safe houses in the area. The raids resulted in the detention of four suspected members of al Qaeda in Iraq, who were held for questioning.

About 200 Iraqi soldiers from 1st Brigade, 7th Division, and 300 Marines from 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, assigned to the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, took part in Shank.

Officials also announced today that Operation Iron Hammer was in its final stages, with the completion of construction of a long-term basing in the Hai al Becker region on the eastern side of the Euphrates River across from Hit and about 170 kilometers west of Baghdad.

Long-term Iraqi-U.S. security presence was established in Hit last summer as part of Operation Sword. Now the villages on the eastern side of the Euphrates River will benefit from the security and stability brought by Iraqi soldiers and U.S. forces, officials noted.

About 500 Iraqi soldiers from 2nd Brigade, 7th Iraqi Army Division, and 1,500 Marines and sailors from the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit, along with 500 soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 114th Field Artillery Regiment, have taken part in Iron Hammer.

No Iraqi Army or U.S. forces reported casualties during Iron Hammer. No air strikes or use of lethal force occurred during the operation. In addition, no reports of civilian casualties or disruption of basic services, such as water and utilities, occurred.

Related Site:

Multinational Force Iraq [http://www.mnf-iraq.com/]

_______________________________________________________
NOTE: View the original version of this web page on DefenseLINK,
the official website of the U.S. Department of Defense, at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec2005/20051203_3531.html.

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Kidnapping Victims Rescued During Vehicle Search

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Dec. 3, 2005 - Task Force Baghdad soldiers rescued two kidnapping victims during a routine vehicle search at a checkpoint in western Baghdad on Dec. 1, military officials in Iraq said today.

Soldiers from 1st Squadron, 71st Cavalry, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, found two Iraqi civilians bound and gagged in the trunk of a white sedan. The two individuals, employed by an American contractor, claimed they had been taken hostage and were to be murdered.

The car's driver and a passenger had false Iraqi police badges and were carrying pistols. They were detained.
In the north-central region of Iraq, Iraqi and U.S. forces detained 18 terrorists on Dec. 1.

Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team apprehended two terrorists near Daquq. The terrorists were attempting to emplace an improvised explosive device that detonated, injuring both men. They were taken to a local hospital, where one later died of his wounds.

The soldiers searched the terrorists' vehicle and found a second IED, which an explosives team detonated.

Soldiers from the 2nd Brigade of the Iraqi army's 5th Division conducted a search of the Dali Abbas market near Muqdadiyah to eliminate an IED cell operating in the area. Their search yielded 10 suspects detained.

Another detachment from the same Iraqi army unit detained two men in a raid near Baqubah. The suspected terrorists were taken for questioning.

Task Force 5-7 Cavalry troopers detained four terrorists near Balad after catching them with IED-detonating devices.
North of Baghdad, soldiers from 3rd Brigade, 1st Armored Division, discovered a sizable weapons cache while performing combat operations Dec. 1.

Soldiers of 4th Battalion, 1st Field Artillery Regiment, were conducting a cordon-and-search operation when they found the cache. The Task Force Baghdad troops unearthed five rocket-propelled-grenade launchers and ammunition. They also found 22 mortar rounds, eight artillery shells ranging in size from 60 mm to 16 mm, seven rockets of varying sizes, a wire-guided antitank missile, 200 rounds of machine-gun ammunition and various bomb-making components.

The soldiers secured the munitions and a military explosives team destroyed them on site.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq and Task Force Baghdad news releases.)

Related Site:

Multinational Force Iraq [http://www.mnf-iraq.com/]

_______________________________________________________
NOTE: View the original version of this web page on DefenseLINK,
the official website of the U.S. Department of Defense, at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec2005/20051203_3530.html.

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Visit the Defense Department's Web site "America Supports You" at http://www.americasupportsyou.mil, that spotlights what Americans are doing in support of U.S. military men and women serving at home and abroad.

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U.S. Command in Kuwait Supplies the Sinews of War

By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

CAMP ARIFJAN, Kuwait, Dec. 3, 2005 - Imagine what it takes to provide the essentials to a city of 160,000 people. Now imagine that as you supply those needs, the constant danger of improvised explosive devices, car bombs or small-arms fire lurks.

Then imagine the typical trip covering about the distance from Washington, D.C., to Dallas and back.

Both situations are real: Servicemembers in Iraq couldn't do much without the logistics support their compatriots based in Kuwait provide through convoys.

Kuwait, liberated from Saddam in 1991 in the Persian Gulf War, is the hub for all the "beans and bullets" that move "up north" - into Iraq, said Army Maj. Gen. Bruce Casella, commander of the 377th Theater Support Command based here. It is, of course, not just beans and bullets that move to Iraq. It is water, fuel, equipment, armaments, vehicles, maps and thousands of other individual items. It is also the process of moving people, their equipment and baggage into the country precisely so they marry up with their tools of war.

The 377th has seven subordinate components and, while an Army command, works closely with Navy and Air Force units and personnel, Casella said. The command also supports the more than 25 coalition partners in Iraq.

The 377th is part of the Coalition Forces Land Component Command of U.S. Central Command. The largest part of the unit is in Kuwait, but elements in Iraq, Djibouti, Afghanistan and other portions of the U.S. Central Command area of operations comprise the command.

Some "gee whiz" facts about the 377th: The truckers in the command have driven more than 80 million miles since the beginning of Operation Iraqi Freedom - for comparison, the sun is 93 million miles from the Earth. Over the next six months, the command will move 300,000 people into and out of theater. This includes servicemembers going on rest and recreation.

The command will also work to deploy and redeploy almost 25,000 coalition members. "We work on getting them in country, downrange and then back out," Casella said. The command also - as part of prior agreements - works to supply the coalition units and help their maintenance efforts.

Coalition servicemembers are embedded in the 377th "and they have been since Day 1," Casella said.

The largest organization in the command is the 143rd Transportation Brigade. The organization is an "enduring unit," meaning it has been deployed to the region since before Operation Iraqi Freedom. Servicemembers assigned have deployed into and out within the command. That includes assigned transportation units and drivers, mechanics and dispatching personnel from all over the Army, Navy and Air Force.

"Right now we have almost 300 drivers from the Air Force in the unit," Casella said. "They have been a tremendous help."

The airmen receive the same training as the Army drivers and serve alongside the soldiers. In a previous rotation, Navy drivers supplemented the soldiers.

Navy personnel help in other ways as well. Sailors man small gunboats at the port, they load and unload ships arriving in Kuwait and, in a nontraditional job, sailors handle customs inspections for seaborne materials.

The troops in the 377th, of course, bring supplies in. But they also bring out vehicles for redeploying units or vehicles that need maintenance.

"We do almost all direct support here," Casella said. "Contractors here can also do some depot-level maintenance so we don't have to ship the vehicle back to the United States. It allows us to get the vehicle back to the fight quicker."

The convoys can be dangerous. The soldiers talk about "green trucks" and "white trucks." Green trucks are regular military vehicles manned with military crews. The white ones are civilian contractor trucks that carry food, water, fuel and other commodities. And they, like the military vehicles, must be convoyed into Iraq.

The transportation brigade has up-armored humvees and "gunships" for convoy protection. The gunships are trucks outfitted with extra armor and heavier weapons. They are interspersed within convoys and have been extremely successful in discouraging enemy fighters from challenging the convoys, the general said.

The American military in Kuwait has a full-up medical establishment - including a Navy hospital - that is part of the 377th. The unit handles U.S. casualties in Iraq. But the medics here also handle an innovative program that brings them servicemembers from Iraq who need minor surgery.

"They get the routine surgery they need, rest and recuperate, and then go back to Iraq," Casella said. "If they had to go back to Europe or the United States for the treatment, we would have to replace them. This allows them to get back into the fight."

Casella, an Army Reservist from California, leads a unit that is mostly active-duty personnel. He estimates a 60-40 split in the command between active and the reserve components.

"But the point of fact is that if you were just walking around the command, you wouldn't know who the active-duty personnel are and who is in the Reserve or National Guard," he said. "And at the soldier, sailor and airman level, it really doesn't matter. All they are concerned with is getting the job done, and they work together to accomplish it."

Related Site:

377th Theater Support Command [http://www.usar.army.mil/USARC/DRC/0377TSC/Overview.htm]

_______________________________________________________
NOTE: View the original version of this web page on DefenseLINK,
the official website of the U.S. Department of Defense, at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec2005/20051203_3529.html.

====================================================

Visit the Defense Department's Web site "America Supports You" at http://www.americasupportsyou.mil, that spotlights what Americans are doing in support of U.S. military men and women serving at home and abroad.

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