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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Operation Rock Reaper Clears al-Qaida Strongholds West of Baquba

From Multi-National Force-Iraq:



Soldiers from Company B and Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment, 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division negotiate their way through a wall during clearing operation Rock Reaper in Hadid, Iraq, just west of Baqubah. The Soldiers clearing the town had to negotiate their way though deep canals and over high walls to reach their objectives. Photo by Pfc. Kirby Rider, 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division.



HADID — A dim blue light pierced the darkness as someone yelled “one-minute out”, but the voice was drowned out by noise from the rotating blades of a CH-47 Chinook helicopter.

The helicopter, carrying Soldiers from Company B, 1st Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment, approached its landing zone near the town of Hadid, 65 miles northwest of Baghdad.

As the light went out, the Soldiers braced themselves for a hard landing. Threats of anti-aircraft guns hidden in the palm groves surrounding the landing zone forced the helicopter pilots to land faster than they normally prefer to land.

Once the helicopter was on the ground, the Soldiers immediately dismounted and the helicopter began its return trip to pick up more Soldiers.

In a single,silent motion after the dust in the air settled, the Soldiers stood up from where they were lying in the field and began moving toward their first objective; securing a palm grove just outside the town.

“It was a tough mission. Bayonet Company had the main effort of the assault,” said Capt. Duane Bailey, commander of Company B, 1-38th Inf. “We cleared the town and really focused on target houses, looking for al-Qaida operatives.”

The Soldiers had already begun clearing the palm groves by the time the sun appeared over the horizon. They looked for improvised explosive devices (IED) and weapon caches. By the time the sun was completely in the sky, the Bayonet Co. Soldiers were ready to assault their first target house, looking for a man accused of placing IEDs on the nearby roadways.

After the Soldiers completed a thorough search of the house, they determined the man was not there and no weapons were found. The Soldiers were given five minutes to rest before moving to the next house down the road where they searched for another man wanted for placing IEDs.

The Soldiers were greeted kindly by local citizens as they went from house-to-house through the village of Hadid. The men of the houses constantly offered to make chai tea and cook flat bread for the Soldiers who found refuge from the heat in their living rooms and on their patios.

After a short break, the Soldiers continued with their mission of capturing wanted individuals and removing weapons from the town.

“It was nice to be greeted so nicely; the children are friendly and everyone is smiling and waving,” said Sgt. Johnny Walker, a team leader in Bayonet Co.

The Soldiers continued moving from house-to-house looking for weapons, contraband and IED making materials, only taking breaks if they finished clearing their room before their counterparts.

Toward the end of the day, the Soldiers returned to a central meeting location to give their detainees to the military police (MP) officials. The MPs verified the identities of the detainees and transported them to a secure holding area on Forward Operating Base Warhorse.

After the detainees were dropped off, an informant from the town offered to help the Soldiers find wanted men who used fake identification cards and to find weapons that may have been missed.

The Soldiers went house-to-house again with the informant, who pointed out the men that were wanted. The informant also gave information on a possible weapons cache.

After the informant was done giving information, the Soldiers took the newly captured detainees to the MPs for identity verification and transportation to FOB Warhorse.

While the detainees were being processed, the Soldiers started looking for a place to sleep. Some of the Soldiers found refuge in a nearby house while others slept outside in Stryker vehicles and wood lines keeping watch for their fellow team members.

After a short rest, the sun started looming over the horizon and the Soldiers packed up their gear to load it onto the Strykers that were parked in front of their sleeping areas.

Once their gear was loaded, the Soldiers linked up with Iraqi Army Soldiers, who helped the exhausted Soldiers clear the remaining part of Hadid.

On the second day of the mission, an al-Qaida in Iraq training camp was found. While searching the camp, Company B Soldiers found two suicide vests that were completely made and ready be put on, grid coordinates of Iraqi police stations in the area, grid coordinates of Coalition force bases and combat outposts in the area, 18 large-caliber mortar shells filled with explosives and three fire extinguishers filled with explosives.

The Soldiers also found five potential car bombs in the town of Hadid and took in a total of 13 detainees.

“The mission was a huge success, several IEDs were taken off of the roadways and there were no casualties on the Iraqi side and on our side,” Bailey said. “The mission will be a bigger success when the Iraqi police force and the Iraqi Army can setup fighting positions to keep the town secure.”

(Story by Pfc. Kirby Rider, 2nd Infantry Division)

In Other Recent Developments Here:
FORWARD OPERATING BASE HAMMER — Two extremists were detained after members of Troop C, 3rd Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment observed the men acting suspiciously near Jisr Diyala on a road frequently used by Coalition forces, Dec. 26.

BAGHDAD — Coalition forces captured a suspected Special Groups leader during operations to disrupt criminal element networks in the Al-Husayniyah area.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Operation Rock Wrench clears industrial section of Baqouba

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Photo Release# 092507-01
Sept. 24, 2007

Multinational Division – North PAO


Three Iraqi army soldiers from the 5th IA Division begin movement for their objectives during Operation Rock Wrench Sept. 22. Iraqi forces focused on clearing structures while U.S. forces provided security for the mission in the industrial section of southern Baqouba. (U.S. Army Photo by 1st Lt. Richard Ybarra, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)


Spc. Garrett Vogland of 1-12 Combined Arms Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, provides security for Iraqi soldiers during Operation Rock Wrench Sept 22. Iraqi forces focused on clearing structures while U.S. forces provided security for the mission in the industrial section of south Baqouba. (U.S. Army Photo by 1st Lt. Richard Ybarra, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)


Pfc. Michael Strausbaugh and Spc. Carlos Livingston of the 1-12 Combined Arms Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, hurry through an intersection during Operation Rock Wrench, a joint mission with the 5th Iraqi Army Division Sept 22. Iraqi forces focused on clearing structures while U.S. forces provided security for the mission in the industrial section of southern Baqouba. (U.S. Army Photo by 1st. Lt Richard Ybarra, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)


5th Iraqi Army Division soldiers secure a street before clearing the buildings in the industrial section of southern Baqouba during Operation Rock Wrench Sept 22. Iraqi forces focused on clearing structures while U.S. forces provided security. (U.S. Army Photo by 1st Lt. Richard Ybarra, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)


A Soldier from the 1st Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment, 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, provides rear security as a weapons cache consisting of grenades and hand-held radios, discovered by soldiers of the 5th Iraqi Army Division, burns. Iraqi forces focused on clearing structures while U.S. forces provided security for the mission in the industrial section of southern Baqouba. (U.S. Army Photo by 1st Lt. Richard Ybarra, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)


An automatic weapons team from the 5th Iraqi Army Division moves through the industrial section of southern Baqouba, Sept. 22. Iraqi forces focused on clearing structures while U.S. forces provided security for the mission. (U.S. Army Photo by 1st Lt. Richard Ybarra, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Soldiers work to build trust in Rashid

From MNF-Iraq:


Wednesday, 11 July 2007
By Spc. Shea Butler
7th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

BAGHDAD — The East Rashid Security District has long been known as stomping ground for members of al-Qaida, but with the help of coalition forces, hopefully not for much longer. Coalition forces routinely clear neighborhoods of weapons caches, search for insurgents and maintain a presence in these neighborhoods.

After conducting a patrol in one neighborhood of East Rashid, the Soldiers from Company C, 1st Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division, chose to “pop smoke” -- literally, using smoke canisters to help cover their exit.

When they returned the next day, the troops discovered the smoke canisters they used had caused some damage to a local resident’s home, starting a small fire, which had been quickly extinguished.

Capt. Andre Yee, Co. C’s commander, took a few Soldiers back to some of the homes they visited the day before. A friendly local family welcomed the Soldiers with open arms and showed them the damage to the house.

Yee immediately offered to pay the family so they could fix their home.

“The gentleman was hesitant to take the money at first, but I explained to him it was the right thing to do,” Yee said. “If we damage something we are going to fix it.”

After the men finished their business, the wife and daughter of the household began to prepare food for the Soldiers.

The troops joined the Iraqi family for brunch in their living room. The husband and wife with their four children each voiced their concerns for their neighborhood and their gratitude toward the Soldiers.

“Do you think there is any hope for the neighborhood?” Yee asked the husband.

“If there are more people like you and your Soldiers, then there is hope,” the man replied through an interpreter.

Because of the recent violence and coalition and Iraqi security forces’ efforts to bring it under control, East Rashid is under a strict curfew. No military-age males are allowed to wander the neighborhood. However, no one really goes outside because of fear of insurgents, the local family explained.

“Can I just go outside and play?” the youngest of the children asked Yee.

“No, not yet,” Yee said.

“Give us time to secure the area. Bullets don’t have names on them,” Yee explained in terms the young boy could understand. “If the insurgents are targeting us (coalition forces) you might get caught in the middle and get hurt.”

After their meal was over and the conversation wound down, it was time for Yee and his troops to get back on the road. The family and Soldiers exchanged hugs and handshakes. Yee’s interpreter gave the family a phone number and told them to call if they had any problems, and said they would return to check up on the family in the following days.

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Friday, June 29, 2007

BOMB-MAKING MATERIALS, WEAPONS SEIZED FROM TWO RASHID DISTRICT MOSQUES

6/29/2007


Release Number: 07-01-03P

BAGHDAD — Iraqi Security Forces and Multi-National Division – Baghdad Soldiers entered two mosques in the Rashid District of the Iraqi capital June 27-28 and uncovered two weapons caches.

Early in the morning June 27, Company A, 1st Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment, and Iraqi Security Forces entered the Al Mahada Mosque in the Saydiyah portion of the city and found eight AK-47s with 40 magazines and body armor.

On June 28, the same company entered Al-Sadiq Mosque in the same neighborhood and found six AK-47s and one bag of hand grenades buried in the courtyard.

Inside the mosque, they found one PKM machine gun, one PKC machine gun, one drum of PKM ammunition, 22 assault rifle magazines, one expended rocket-propelled grenade booster, seven demolition boosters, 30 feet of detonation cord, one stick of dynamite, two RPG warheads, 10 blocks of TNT, one 122mm mortar round, one sniper scope, three RPG fins, 14 blasting caps, more than 500 loose 7.62mm rounds, six pressure switches, six timers, 12 9-volt batteries, one 6-volt battery and assorted communications devices.

The cache, enough to build numerous roadside bombs, was destroyed by an explosive ordnance disposal unit.

Under Iraqi law, citizens are allowed one assault rifle and one 30-round magazine for protection.

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