Posted on 06/03/2005 1:31:39 PM PDT by BushisTheMan
AL-JAZIRAH DESERT, Iraq Two young cavalry leaders rode hard through the western border country, pushing their Fort Lewis troops nearly 185 miles from Tal Afar to the Euphrates River, then back again. Their faces caked with dust stuck to a weeks worth of sweat, Capts. Keith Walters and Vince Maykovich watched the horizon unfold at 35 mph from the rear hatches of their Stryker.
Their troop of 15 vehicles rumbled over scrubland and dry lake beds, slowing now and then to clamber across the wadis narrow desert gorges where water flows during the rainy season. The longtime friends joked about seeing a mirage in the distance. It was Safeco Field.
Right-field seats. Second row. Garlic fries, said Maykovich, 35, of DuPont.
Walters agreed. Five days into a six-day mission across parched wasteland, and what he thirsted for were Mariners box scores.
A long-distance trek across the desert is the kind of mission theyve been doing since the earliest days of the U.S. cavalry defend the outlands and probe the frontier. A century and a half ago they did it across the American West; today its Iraq.
I think this is what they had in mind when they started us up, said Walters, 30, from Browns Point, who will soon relinquish command of Blackjack Troop of the 2nd Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment to his friend Maykovich.
A cav without boundaries the wide-open spaces, said
Capt. Kevin Beagle, from Headquarters Troop. Its nice to come out here and do our own thing where nobody messes with us.
The scouts convoyed south May 26 to make a belated showing in a part of Iraq where smugglers have long trafficked in sheep, cigarettes and fuel. Now guns, explosives and foreign fighters move across the porous Iraq-Syria border, all intended to attack coalition soldiers.
The 2-14s only contact with the enemy on this trip happened Sunday, when Charger Troop killed four men and captured four others north of the Euphrates. The men, who fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a Stryker, were from Saudi Arabia, Syria, Jordan, Algeria and Morocco, according to cavalry officials. One Iraqi civilian, taken as a hostage, also died.
American and Iraqi officials identified the man as Anbar Province governor Raja Nawaf Farhan al-Mahalawi. Foreign fighters abducted him May 10 and demanded that U.S. and Iraqi forces halt their offensive around the border city of Al Qaim.
A U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad said al-Mahalawi died of blunt trauma at the hands of his abductors and was not struck by the gunfire.
Maj. Bryan Denny, executive officer of the Fort Lewis squadron, said the encounter and the whole six-day operation were faithful to the heritage of the U.S. cavalry.
It might be called a legacy mission, but it is relevant to what we do today: We go out and fight for information, we dont just collect it and bring it back in, said Denny, 38, of Lacey.
A cavalryman does his best work when he is stealthy and unobserved, but the reality today is that its easier said than done.
RATTTLESNAKES ON RECON
This weeks foray was only the second time the 2-14 scouts they call themselves the Rattlesnakes have ventured out on a multiday reconnaissance mission since they arrived in Iraq last fall.
The urban focus of this war has required all units of the 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, including the cavalry and the field artillery, to work like a front-line infantry battalion. The 2-14 has had responsibility for Tal Afar: patrolling neighborhoods, going on house-to-house raids, hunting for weapons caches then returning to base the same day for a shower, a hot meal and an air-conditioned room.
On a traditional cavalry mission, troopers wear the same dirt for days, eat prepackaged meals and sleep inside or on top of a Stryker.
When this ones over, the 2-14s nearly 500 scouts will be back to the urban landscape, rejoining the rest of the brigade in Mosul. Denny acknowledges that his Rattlesnakes will feel a little caged in.
Theyve turned over Tal Afar and the western border area to the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment from Fort Carson, Colo. The 3rd ACR has about seven times more soldiers in Tal Afar, giving it a potentially longer reach into areas heretofore barely touched. But some say the increasingly volatile city will dominate its time and attention, as it did the 2-14 Cav.
We could have done a lot more good if we had the manpower to come out here more, while still looking after Tal Afar, said Staff Sgt. Jacob Powell, a Stryker gunner from Spanaway. We can make it all the way to the Euphrates in two days if we have to. Thats the one thing we bring to the battlefield: mobility and range.
A LOT OF GROUND TO COVER
The ground covered by Fort Lewis troops in Iraq is exceedingly vast for a force of only 4,000 soldiers.
Thats a point made repeatedly in a report last December by the Center for Army Lessons Learned, based on the experiences of the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. The first Fort Lewis Stryker brigade replaced the 101st Airborne Division in northern Iraq in January 2004.
The brigades 5,000 or so soldiers replaced the divisions 20,000 to cover 23,500 square miles.
Consequently, the brigade faced significant command and control and support challenges, the report said.
The second group of Strykers inherited the same chunk of Iraq last fall, with virtually the same number of soldiers and other assets. The 2-14 scouts represent about one-eighth of the brigades total personnel, yet theyre responsible for more than 10,500 square miles nearly half the brigades battle space.
All the more reason this weeks mission to the hinterlands was important, and arguably overdue. The Rattlesnakes even moved beyond their own normal boundaries, exploring a zone north of the Euphrates thats supposed to be the responsibility of the U.S. Marines.
Several Iraqi Army trainees came along to show villagers the future face of security. When the coalition eventually leaves, several battalions of Iraqi soldiers will remain in the western border cities and natives will come to realize they dont have to relent to smugglers and terrorists, Walters said.
Another objective of the mission was to take an informal census of small villages that might have been mapped but rarely if ever visited by Americans.
Part of what were doing is like a National Geographic expedition, said Maj. Tim Gauthier. Were trying to find out who lives there, who their muqtars and other leaders are, what tribes they belong to. Well roll up to a small village and it wont even have a name.
Lt. Ed Mikkelsen, executive officer of Blackjack Troop, said the soldiers visited 18 villages. None had schools, mosques or reliable local sources of water, electricity and sanitation. Few had established leaders the soldiers could talk to.
The information they collected will be passed on to the 3rd ACR so its civil affairs teams can possibly pursue humanitarian projects.
It will be useful to them if they can ever afford the combat power to go down to this area, said Mikkelsen, of Lacey. You really dont have to do much down here to win the peoples affection.
Blackjack Troop did have at least one encounter with locals whod clearly already been exposed to U.S. soldiers and dietary customs.
We found Girl Scout cookies in one town, Walters said. We thought, How in the world did they get Girl Scout cookies all the way down here?
A note left behind indicated the natives had received guests from the 2nd Battalion, 8th Field Artillery Regiment, another arm of the Stryker brigade.
COILED TO DEFEND
As the sun started to go down early this week, the soldiers of Blackjack Troop finished their meals-ready-to-eat and tossed the brown plastic pouches into a fire pit they dug in the desert.
Their Strykers were arranged in coil formation, like covered wagons circled together for protection.
Lt. Lanelle Pickett daydreamed about going back to base in a few days. He rested on the back ramp of a Stryker, his shaved head so encrusted with dust from the Al-Jazirah Desert, it looked like hed dyed the roots yellow.
I look forward to the silliest stuff, Pickett said. Handwritten letters theres nothing like ink on paper. Powdered Kool-Aid. Just being on the phone, even if I have to wait an hour to get on. Warm water so I can shave.
Maykovich said a long cavalry operation is hardest on the families back home. The soldiers cant tell them much, only that theyll be out of contact for several days.
Sgt. Donald Rummer and Lt. Keith Neanover dropped to the dirt in an impromptu moment of Wrestlemania, with Rummer quickly pinning his smaller friend. Pent-up aggression got the best of several other soldiers, too, as they made a dogpile on top of Spc. Alex Scott in honor of his 25th birthday.
It was nearly dark when an Iraqi soldier approached the troop medic and reported he might have a scorpion bite. U.S. soldiers clustered together and told stories about the giant camel spiders theyve spotted with flashlights.
They started to bed down for the night, some in the troop compartments of the Strykers, others sprawled atop the steel roofs. Iraqi soldiers crawled under blankets on the desert floor.
Over the next two days the Rattlesnakes would pursue one of the most-wanted smugglers in western Iraq, a man theyd had on their black list for six months.
This would likely be their last chance to find him. They would need their rest.
A U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad said al-Mahalawi died of blunt trauma at the hands of his abductors and was not struck by the gunfire.
Disputes an earlier report that said he was killed by falling debris. The terrorists killed him as we all suspected.
My father-in-law is the oldest living "Rattlesnake 6" at this time, he is 90 1/2 now. After the unit was formed at Ft Lewis he talked to the current commander and explained the history of "Rattlesnake" to him. At that time they were known as "Palehorse." When the new commander arrived at Ft Lewis the name "Rattlesnake" came with him and they have been "Rattlesnake" ever since. The name comes from several sources: quickness, their time on the Mexican Border and their lethality.
Awesome story SLB.........
The day they met, they spent almost 12 hours together. My FIL had stories that could have filled days. Last fall right before they left for Iraq, the Squadron Operations Officer came here on TDY and stopped in a gave my FIL a full deployment briefing in the dining room. Made the day for an old retired trooper. The entire unit is a class act following in the steps on the commander.
Couldn't of broke the grin on yer mug with a hammer if we'd have tried I suppose.......pride'n performance is golden SLB........Tradition held up well.
Well done....
Outstanding!
A well put together video from the troopers of 2/14th Cav. I hope you enjoy it like we did.
http://www.lewis.army.mil/214cav/videos/One Long Day.wmv
Thanks for the ping. I was in 3/14 Cav for a little while in 1971.
Thanks for the post!
I served in the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment in the early 1980's. Wanted to serve longer in the regiment, but got sent to a school and never returned. All the cav is great, and the 3rd ACR is the best unit in the United States Army! Best wishes to all my brothers and sisters serving in western Iraq! Brave Rifles!
Outstanding illustration! It warmed this old 3rd Cav trooper's heart! Hoo-ah!
BTTT
Thanks for the ping...and your father in law's story...
Ping, in case you're not in #8.
Their troop of 15 vehicles rumbled over scrubland and dry lake beds, slowing now and then to clamber across the wadis narrow desert gorges where water flows during the rainy season. The longtime friends joked about seeing a mirage in the distance. It was Safeco Field.
Thank you very much!
Cavalry ~ Bump!
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