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New Soldiers in Town Provide Security

They smile at the Iraqi citizens on the streets, but at the same time they will kick the doors in on the insurgents who plan to spread upheaval.


U.S. Army Spc. Aaron A. Ebbert (left), radio telephone operator, 3rd Platoon, Company B, 4th Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment, Fort Richardson, Alaska, and 1st Lt. Anthony E. Cerullo, platoon leader, 3rd Plt., call in a report to their higher headquarters during a patrol Oct. 21, 2005, in Mosul, Iraq.

By Spc. Jeremy D. Crisp Multi-National Corps - Iraq Public Affairs Office

MOSUL, Iraq, Nov. 22, 2005 —They’re the new guys on the block, and they’re not hard to spot. Not because they rumble through the streets in their Stryker light-armored vehicles, for those have been there before. It’s a new attitude; it’s a new uniform on smiling faces with determination to get the job done.

The soldiers of Company B have assumed responsibility for one sector of the streets of Mosul. They smile at the Iraqi citizens on the streets, but at the same time they will kick the doors in on the insurgents who plan to spread upheaval.

“We are out here doing what we like to call PR – public relations,” said Sgt. 1st Class Thomas M. Pickerel, platoon sergeant, 3rd Platoon, Company B, 4th Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment, Fort Richardson, Alaska. “Our patrols are designed to let the citizens of Iraq know we are here for them, and we are out here every day.”

The unit spends parts of their days in their vehicles, driving around with a “hey, we’re here,” attitude before dismounting to walk the streets on foot.

“We get on the ground as much as possible because that’s really the only way you get to know the people in the area,” Pickerel said. Company B recently replaced soldiers from the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team of Fort Lewis, Wash., and has hit the ground running.

“This used to be called the Wild Wild West, but the unit ahead of us did a lot of work here,” said Pickerel. “We’ve got all the kinks worked out, and things have calmed down quite a bit since we’ve moved in.”

Patrolling streets of New York fame named “Canal,” “Broadway,” and an area known as “Yankee Stadium,” complete with alleys called “1st Base Line” all the way around to “Home Plate,” doesn’t come easy.

Along with shaking hands and giving candy to kids, the soldiers of Company B move up and down miles of concrete laden with weapons, ammunition and forty pounds of armor strapped to their backs. Despite temperatures rising into the 130 degree range, all that gear is essential when the troops have to get down to the business of being infantrymen.

“We’re out here looking for the bad guys,” said 1st Lt. Anthony E. Cerullo, platoon leader, 3rd Platoon.

And the bad guys are out there. The unit takes on sporadic gunfire when loading into their vehicles and has to deal with drive-by shootings and improvised explosive devices on an almost daily basis, said Cerullo.

“We take intelligence that has been gathered, and we look for certain vehicles that we know are to be possible insurgent vehicles. We do standard patrols where we look for suspicious activity – anything out of the ordinary,” Cerullo said. “We do IED sweeps where we look for IEDs before they go off, and we also take care of guys we catch emplacing them.

“We talk to citizens in the neighborhoods and do random searches to see if we can find anything, information or otherwise,” he said.

"It’s a dual-facet mission,” said Staff Sgt. Austin S. Fernandez, a squad leader with 3rd Platoon. “We let the citizens know we are here to help them, but we are also here to let them know that we don’t take any (mess).” On top of the patrol mission, a day isn’t complete without a trip to see their counterparts-in-arms. The platoon stops in daily to speak with the Iraqi army and Iraqi police, seeing what they need and talking about future missions.

“We’ve done joint patrols with the IA and the IP, and we are going to do even more now because it’s their country, and they are going to be the ones doing it after we leave here,” Cerullo said. “The more we can teach them how to do it the right way and help them along in that process, the better off they’ll be.”

Helping the cause is a soldier in the platoon with the ability to speak Arabic. Fernandez has picked up the language from interpreters, and it has helped tremendously with relations, he said.

“I don’t have any kids, but I can speak Arabic pretty well and the kids come to me naturally,” Fernandez said. “It helps out a lot with relations, being able to talk to the Iraqis a little.”

A recent patrol had a gaggle of 20 Iraqi children hanging onto and holding hands with Fernandez; the M-4 assault rifle was put out of harm’s way for the time being. The infantrymen had parents lining the streets with smiles on their faces and gestures of “thumbs up” for blocks.

8 posted on 11/22/2005 3:59:54 PM PST by Gucho
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Saddam's Hometown Palace to Transfer to Iraqis

By Donna Miles - American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 21, 2005 – In what's being regarded as a highly symbolic development in Iraq, coalition forces will turn over former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's palace in Tikrit to the new Iraqi government during Nov. 22 ceremonies.

The sprawling palace complex in Saddam's hometown, 90 miles north of Baghdad, is the largest and most elaborate of his presidential sites, a senior military official in Iraq said today on background.

The U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division initially secured the complex in 2003, dubbing it Camp Iron Horse. The camp served as the division's headquarters when its members captured Saddam in December 2003, explained Army Lt. Col. Barry Venable, a Pentagon spokesman.

The 1st Infantry Division renamed the camp Forward Operating Base Danger when it assumed authority for the camp in 2004.

Venable said the Nov. 22 ceremonies mark far more than the turnover of a single, albeit significant, property. The camp is the 29th of 110 forward operating bases to be either transferred to the Iraqis or closed, he said. Iraqi security forces are using 15 of the bases.

"These transitions, taken individually, don't appear significant," Venable said. "But in a collective sense, they show evidence that progress is being made in handing over responsibility for Iraq to the Iraqis."

Venable called this a cornerstone of the campaign plan to successfully complete the mission in Iraq.

The transfers help dispel any misperceptions that the situation in Iraq remains static, Venable said.

"In reality, the opposite is true," he said. "Aside from transferring bases to Iraqi security forces and the Iraqi people, we're also in the process of handing over security responsibility to Iraqi forces."

Today, one Iraqi division, five brigades and 36 battalions have taken the lead in their areas, compared to one brigade and 11 battalions just five months ago, Venable said. Iraqis now have the lead in roughly 90 square miles of Baghdad, an entire Iraqi province and more than 450 square miles in other provinces, he said.

The 42nd Infantry Division assumed control of the base in February 2005 and began the process of returning the complex to the Iraqis in July. The Nov. 22 ceremony marks the end of that process, Venable said.

Once reserved for the Saddam regime's elite, the complex will now benefit all Iraqis, as it is transferred to Iraq's Ministry of Finance, the official in Iraq said today. He called the transfer a landmark event that showcases the Iraqi government's sovereignty and the increasing ability of Iraq's security forces to ensure their country's security.

"We are committed to turning this property over to the Iraqi government as the Iraqi security forces prove their readiness for us to consolidate our forces, reduce our footprint, and in many cases, deliberately get a bit farther outside of cities, because we think that's beneficial for us to do that," the official said.

The sprawling complex stretches over 1,000 acres of land on the banks of the Tigris River, and includes 136 buildings with 1.5 million square feet of administrative and living space and 40 support structures, Venable said. It also includes 14 palace structures, a three-story hospital, a small crematorium, two mosques, an unused mausoleum and two artificial lakes.

Iraq's Ministry of Defense is using the island portion of the complex as a regional training center, Venable said.

12 posted on 11/22/2005 4:08:18 PM PST by Gucho
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