Saturday, September 29, 2007

U.S. Statement on Baghdad Air Strike

News in balance

News in Balance:

Media outlets report the U.S. military confirmed on Saturday it carried out an air strike in the Doura district of southern Baghdad on Friday, saying it had targeted men firing mortars into a neighboring area.

Here is the official word on the action:

Statement by Multi-National Force - Iraq regarding air strike in southern Baghdad

BAGHDAD, Sept. 29, 2007 (MNF-I) -- Coalition forces conducted an air strike on a group of criminals who were firing mortars from the Doura neighborhood in Baghdad Thursday evening.

On the evening of September 27, Coalition forces surveillance elements observed a group of men setting up and firing mortars in the Doura neighborhood of southern Baghdad. After they fired the mortars, the men hid the mortar tube nearby.

The criminals were also observed firing their weapons toward their neighbors to the north earlier in the evening.

Responding to this hostile action, Coalition forces called for air support and engaged the terrorists.

Coalition forces target terrorists and Al-Qaeda in Iraq continues to place innocent Iraqis into harm’s way while conducting acts of terrorism.

“These criminals continue to deliberately place innocent Iraqi women and children in danger by targeting Iraqi and Coalition forces from inhabited areas,” said Maj. Winfield Danielson, MNF-I spokesman. “We will continue to go after any criminals who commit hostile actions and oppose security and stability in Iraq.”
(From the MNF-I press desk.)

Related media sources: Reuters, Yahoo News.

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Combat Camera: Jungle Warfare Training Evolution

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OKINAWA, Japan (27, Sept. 2007) - Steelworker 3rd Class Benjamin Hickok, with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7, traverses a mud-filled trench during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees' will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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OKINAWA, Japan (27, Sept. 2007) - Culinary Specialist 3rd Class Gao Xiong, with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7, negotiates a rope bridge during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees' will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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OKINAWA, Japan (Sept. 27, 2007) - Seabees with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7 repel down a cliff during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees' will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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OKINAWA, Japan (27, Sept. 2007) - A Seabee with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7 negotiates through a mud filled trench during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees' will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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OKINAWA, Japan (27, Sept. 2007) - Seabees with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7 work together to climb over a wall during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees' will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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OKINAWA, Japan (Sept. 27, 2007) - Seabees with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7 work together to exit a mud-filled trench during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees’ will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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OKINAWA, Japan (27, Sept. 2007) - Builder 1st Class Eric Elliot, with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 7, low crawls through a stream during a jungle warfare training evolution hosted by Marines with the Jungle Warfare Training Command (JWTC). The JWTC endurance course tests the Seabees' will, stamina and the ability to work together as a team. NMCB-7 is deployed to the Far East to provide construction support to shore installations in support of the global war on terrorism. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Paul D. Williams (RELEASED)

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Senate Confirms New Top Defense Officers

News in balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Sept. 28, 2007 -- The U.S. Senate voted this morning to confirm four senior military officers to serve as the next the chief of naval operations and commanders of U.S. Africa Command, U.S. Strategic Command and U.S. Joint Forces Command.

The vote followed a hearing yesterday before the Senate Armed Services Committee, with the full Senate today confirming the nominations of:

  • Navy Adm. Gary Roughead as chief of naval operations;

  • Army Gen. William E. “Kip” Ward as commander of U.S. Africa Command;

  • Air Force Gen. Kevin P. Chilton as commander of U.S. Strategic Command; and

  • Marine Corps Lt. Gen. James N. Mattis for promotion to general and appointment as commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command and NATO’s supreme allied commander for transformation.

Adm. Michael G. Mullen, the current chief of naval operations, is expected to hand the top Navy military position this weekend to Roughead, who currently commands U.S. Fleet Forces Command. Mullen will become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Oct. 1, to replace retiring Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace.

Specific assumption-of-command schedules are not yet available for the three new combatant commanders.

Ward, deputy commander of U.S. European Command in Stuttgart, Germany, will stand up the new Africa Command as its first commander. He is charged with bringing the command to initial operational capacity as a command subordinate to EUCOM. AFRICOM is slated to be established as a separate unified command by Sept. 30, 2008.

Chilton, who currently commands Air Force Space Command at Peterson Air Force Base, Colo., will take the helm at Strategic Command, with headquarters at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb.

The former STRATCOM commander, Marine Gen. James E. Cartwright, became the eighth vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Aug. 31.

Mattis, commanding general of 1st Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton, Calif., and commander of U.S. Marine Forces Central Command, will receive his fourth star as he becomes the Joint Forces Command chief. In that capacity, he also will serve as NATO’s supreme allied commander for transformation. Mattis will replace Air Force Gen. Lance Smith, who announced his retirement this summer after a 38-year-career.

(AFPS story by By Donna Miles.)

Related: Senate Armed Services Committee Mulls Four Key Defense Posts

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Combat Camera: Comrades Tackle First Month of Combat

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Spc. Daniel Liles of Tehachapi, Calif., an infantryman with Company G, 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, stationed out of Vilseck, Germany, covers a comrade as he maneuvers across the street during a clearing mission in Baghdad’s East Rashid district, Sept. 21. The young trooper recently celebrated his 22nd birthday in the Iraqi capital, Sept. 19. Photographer: Spc. Jeff Ledesma, Headquarters, 1st Cavalry Division Public Affairs

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Pfc. Reuben Gonzales of Modesto, Calif., an infantryman with Company G, 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, stationed out of Vilseck, Germany, keeps his sight on an area his unit received heavy machine-gun fire from the day prior during a clearing mission in Baghdad’s east Rashid District, Sept. 21. The 21-year-old and his wife, Erin, have a son, Gabriel, who is going to be celebrating his first birthday in November. Photographer: Spc. Jeff Ledesma, Headquarters, 1st Cavalry Division Public Affairs

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Spc. Daniel Liles of Tehachapi, Calif., an infantryman with Company G, 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, stationed out of Vilseck, Germany, pulls overwatch on the second story of an abandoned church during a clearing mission in Baghdad’s East Rashid District, Sept. 21. The young trooper recently celebrated his 22nd birthday in the Iraqi capital, Sept. 19. Photographer: Spc. Jeff Ledesma, Headquarters, 1st Cavalry Division Public Affairs

BAGHDAD, Sept. 28, 2007 -- Two comrades with Company G, 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, stationed out of Vilseck, Germany, experiences the first of 15 months in their unit’s deployment as the Iraqi capital’s quick-reaction force.

Pfc. Reuben Gonzales and Spc. Daniel Liles’ first month on the ground was not exactly what they expected. For Gonzales, training back at home station was helpful, but a little different.

“We might get into direct contact every other day which is a lot different than what we trained for. We trained everyday, it was a constant ‘Go, go, go,’” Gonzales said of Modesto, Calif.

The 21-year-old infantryman described his first month as being “Tiring and hard.” He explained that everyone expected everyday to be big and crazy – firefight after firefight.

“I don’t think (combat here is) as ruthless as it was before because now it’s more focused on the people,” Gonzales said. “During the training it was kicking in doors and running in. There were no people.”
However, clearing homes in the East Rashid district the young troopers have already had plenty of interaction with the Iraqi people in their own neighborhoods.

“We’ve mingled with some of the Iraqis and most of them are great people that are willing to work with us,” said Liles of Tehachapi, Calif.

Prior to deploying they received words of wisdom for the Soldiers that led them into combat.

“Our squad leaders, who were over here the first time, told us their personal views on the situation here. They said to gain your own perspective of what Iraq is about and what the culture is like,” Liles said. “[But,] the only way to know what it’s really like is to actually be over here first hand.”
Liles said he has seen so many things in this first month that he won’t see anywhere else.

“(So far,) we’ve had our fair share of firefights. I’ve seen (improvised explosive devices) go off. I know what to expect now,” said the 22-year-old, who celebrated his birthday on Sept 19.

Something Soldiers prepare for is the separation from their families during deployments and it’s one of the toughest things to go through, Gonzales said.

“You don’t get to talk to them as much so you talk to everyone else here. That’s all you got. You just talk to each other,” Gonzales said. “All of us bring our own little unique blend to the squad.”
Although the camaraderie between the Soldiers in his platoon has grown throughout his time in the service, Gonzales said the upcoming months without his wife, Erin, and his 10-month-old son Gabriel are going to be rough.

Both Soldiers try to maintain as much contact with their families back home as possible.

Liles said he tries to communicate just enough information that people back home can take it and gather from news channels to piece it all together so they have a concept of what is happening here and what he is facing on today’s battlefield.

The infantryman added that everyone should know that their sons and daughters are in a dangerous place because they are, but also that they are bravely doing their jobs and playing their part on a grand scheme to keep Iraq a safer place.

With one month down, the two Soldiers have 14 months until they redeploy to Germany. Liles said he thinks the best way to tackle the rest of the deployment is to concentrate on doing his job and doing it well.

“Going out and coming back alive, making sure all these homes are cleared (and) all the weapons caches are found,” Liles said.

Gonzales or “Gonzo” as known by his platoon, said that he will try to keep his mind off things by playing video games and hanging out with his brothers in arms.

“You can’t really have a set plan because 15 months is 15 months no matter how you look at it,” Gonzales said. “But, plenty of packages from my wife and pictures of my family will hopefully help me through the days.”
Liles, who originally wanted to enlist as a tanker, said he really can’t say what the year is going to bring. For now, Gonzo will play his Metallica and Static X to get mentally ready to roll out on missions.

“It’s definitely a start of an experience I’ll never forget,” Liles said.

(Story by Spc. Jeffrey Ledesma, 1st Cavalry Division Public Affairs.)

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Friday, September 28, 2007

Update: Coalition Kills Senior al Qaeda Leader in Iraq

Dispatches from the Front
A photo released by Multinational Corps Iraq officials of foreign al Qaeda leader Abu Usama al-Tunisi, who was killed Sept. 25 in an air strike on a building south of Baghdad. Courtesy photo

Dispatches from the Front:

Media outlets reported Friday that the U.S. military in Iraq has killed a senior leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq who was responsible for bringing foreign fighters into the country and kidnapping U.S. soldiers in 2006.

UPDATED POST

Here is the latest official report from MNF-I.

Coalition Forces kill likely successor to Abu Ayyub al-Masri

BAGHDAD, Iraq; Sept. 28, 2007 -- Coalition forces positively identified a foreign terrorist killed in an operation Tuesday in Musayyib as a senior al-Qaeda in Iraq member.

Abu Usama al-Tunisi was in the inner leadership circle of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq and was a likely successor to him. Al-Tunisi was the military emir of Baghdad’s southern belt and took over the role of emir of foreign terrorists when al-Masri became the overall leader.

Al-Tunisi facilitated foreign terrorists and helped equip them for improvised explosive device attacks, car-bombing campaigns and suicide attacks throughout Baghdad. Foreign terrorists conduct most of the high profile attacks in Iraq. Over 80 percent of the suicide attacks are conducted by foreign terrorists.

During an operation Sept. 25, Coalition forces targeted al-Tunisi and other al-Qaeda in Iraq leaders. Credible intelligence from several previous operations led Coalition forces to the location of a known al-Qaeda in Iraq meeting and supporting aircraft attacked the time sensitive target. Al-Tunisi and two other terrorists were killed during the attack.

Reports indicate that al-Tunisi was involved in the planning and operation of numerous attacks on Coalition forces and is believed to have operated in Yusufiyah since the second battle of Fallujah in November 2004.

Al-Tunisi, like the other top leaders of al Qaeda in Iraq, was not Iraqi. He was Tunisian and had been in Iraq since at least 2004.

“This is one more al-Qaeda in Iraq criminal who will never kill another innocent civilian,” said Maj. Winfield Danielson, MNF-I spokesman. “We will relentlessly pursue all terrorist leaders who threaten Iraqi citizens, their elected government, and Iraqi and Coalition forces.”
(From the MNF-I press desk.)

ORIGINAL POST

Coalition Kills al Qaeda Leader Who Coordinated Foreign Terrorists in Iraq

WASHINGTON, Sept. 28, 2007 (AFPS) -- A top al Qaeda leader who coordinated efforts of foreign terrorists in Iraq was killed this week, a senior official in the region announced today.

Abu Usama al-Tunisi, a foreigner who brought al Qaeda terrorists into Iraq, was killed Sept. 25 in an air strike on a building south of Baghdad where he was meeting with other al Qaeda operatives, Army Brig. Gen. Joseph Anderson, Multinational Corps Iraq's chief of staff, said in a briefing to reporters in the Pentagon.

The meeting was near Musayyib, in Babil province, about 35 miles south of Baghdad. An Air Force F-16 bombed the building. A video provided by defense officials shows a large explosion and the building leveled. Two other al Qaeda members were killed in the blast, and two were detained, Anderson said.

Tunisi was a close associate, and part of the inner circle of advisors to Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the overall leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, Anderson said. Officials believe he may have been tapped to succeed Masri.

Originally from Tunisia, Tunisi was the emir of foreign terrorists in Iraq, responsible for overseeing foreign terrorists' movements into Iraq and partnering them with terrorist cells. More than 80 percent of suicide bombings are carried out by foreign terrorists, Anderson said.

Tunisi has been operating in Yusufiyah, southwest of Baghdad, since November 2004 and became emir of the area in 2006. Tunisia's group is believed responsible for the June 2006 kidnappings of two U.S. soldiers who later were found dead.

Anderson said Tunisi's death was the culmination of a series of operations that began Sept. 12 when coalition forces captured a close associate to Tunisi. During the following days, forces ramped up operations and detained several other key associates of Tunisi in separate operations south and west of Baghdad. One was said to have identified Tunisi at the meeting, Anderson said.

The two others killed were Abu Abdullah, reported to be the new emir of the southern part of Baghdad's Karkh region, and Sheikh Hussein, an al Qaeda in Iraq facilitator, Anderson said.

A handwritten letter found at the site indicated that Tunisi's operations were cut off by coalition forces in the area and that he was trying to get direction from leaders, Anderson said.

"We are so desperate for your help," the letter reads.

"This was a dangerous terrorist who is no longer a part of al Qaeda in Iraq," Anderson said. "His death deals a significant blow to their operation."
Abu Yakub al-Masri, another inner-circle leader, was killed Aug. 31 near Tarmiyah, north of Baghdad. Of Abu Ayyub al-Masri's inner circle of four foreign leaders, only two remain at large, Anderson said.

(AFPS story by Fred W. Baker III.)

Related media sources: The Washington Post, CNN World, Reuters.

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Coalition Kills Senior al Qaeda Leader in Iraq

Dispatches from the Front
A photo released by Multinational Corps Iraq officials of foreign al Qaeda leader Abu Usama al-Tunisi, who was killed Sept. 25 in an air strike on a building south of Baghdad. Courtesy photo

Dispatches from the Front:

Media outlets reported Friday that the U.S. military in Iraq has killed a senior leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq who was responsible for bringing foreign fighters into the country and kidnapping U.S. soldiers in 2006.

Here is the official report.

Coalition Kills al Qaeda Leader Who Coordinated Foreign Terrorists in Iraq

WASHINGTON, Sept. 28, 2007 (AFPS) -- A top al Qaeda leader who coordinated efforts of foreign terrorists in Iraq was killed this week, a senior official in the region announced today.

Abu Usama al-Tunisi, a foreigner who brought al Qaeda terrorists into Iraq, was killed Sept. 25 in an air strike on a building south of Baghdad where he was meeting with other al Qaeda operatives, Army Brig. Gen. Joseph Anderson, Multinational Corps Iraq's chief of staff, said in a briefing to reporters in the Pentagon.

The meeting was near Musayyib, in Babil province, about 35 miles south of Baghdad. An Air Force F-16 bombed the building. A video provided by defense officials shows a large explosion and the building leveled. Two other al Qaeda members were killed in the blast, and two were detained, Anderson said.

Tunisi was a close associate, and part of the inner circle of advisors to Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the overall leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, Anderson said. Officials believe he may have been tapped to succeed Masri.

Originally from Tunisia, Tunisi was the emir of foreign terrorists in Iraq, responsible for overseeing foreign terrorists' movements into Iraq and partnering them with terrorist cells. More than 80 percent of suicide bombings are carried out by foreign terrorists, Anderson said.

Tunisi has been operating in Yusufiyah, southwest of Baghdad, since November 2004 and became emir of the area in 2006. Tunisia's group is believed responsible for the June 2006 kidnappings of two U.S. soldiers who later were found dead.

Anderson said Tunisi's death was the culmination of a series of operations that began Sept. 12 when coalition forces captured a close associate to Tunisi. During the following days, forces ramped up operations and detained several other key associates of Tunisi in separate operations south and west of Baghdad. One was said to have identified Tunisi at the meeting, Anderson said.

The two others killed were Abu Abdullah, reported to be the new emir of the southern part of Baghdad's Karkh region, and Sheikh Hussein, an al Qaeda in Iraq facilitator, Anderson said.

A handwritten letter found at the site indicated that Tunisi's operations were cut off by coalition forces in the area and that he was trying to get direction from leaders, Anderson said.

"We are so desperate for your help," the letter reads.

"This was a dangerous terrorist who is no longer a part of al Qaeda in Iraq," Anderson said. "His death deals a significant blow to their operation."
Abu Yakub al-Masri, another inner-circle leader, was killed Aug. 31 near Tarmiyah, north of Baghdad. Of Abu Ayyub al-Masri's inner circle of four foreign leaders, only two remain at large, Anderson said.

(AFPS story by Fred W. Baker III.)

Related media sources: The Washington Post, CNN World, Reuters.

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Troops Capture Suspects, Sieze Weapons in Iraq

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

Coalition Troops Nab 7 Suspects, Seize Weapons in Iraq

WASHINGTON, Sept. 28, 2007 (AFPS) -- Coalition troops captured seven suspected terrorists and found two weapons caches today during operations targeting al Qaeda in Iraq, officials reported.

Coalition forces detained a suspected terrorist in Bayji believed to be associated with attacks in the city by al Qaeda. Intelligence reports led coalition forces to the suspect's location, where he identified himself and was captured without incident.

In two other operations conducted in Tarmiyah and Baghdad, coalition forces detained three suspected terrorists in raids targeting al Qaeda senior leaders and associates. During another Baghdad raid, coalition forces seized three more suspected terrorists.

"We're steadily chipping away at the al Qaeda in Iraq network," said Army Maj. Winfield Danielson, Multinational Force Iraq spokesman. "The disruption to their operations and supply of information hinders al Qaeda in Iraq's ability to attack innocent Iraqis."
In another anti-insurgent operation that ended today, U.S. soldiers seized two weapons caches in the Arab Jabour area southeast of Baghdad.

The first cache was found by soldiers of Company C, 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division. The cache contained three 60 mm mortar rounds, 12 mortar fuses, three 81 mm rockets, a 120 mm rocket, and 35 pounds of homemade explosives.

The second cache was discovered by members of an Iraqi citizens group. The Iraqis told U.S. soldiers of Company D, 1-30th Infantry Regiment who were in the area guarding a key travel route. The cache contained a 155 mm artillery shell, 10 feet of detonation cord, a rocket base plate and a timer with a battery. Both caches were destroyed.

In other operations this week:

  • Coalition forces detained three extremists yesterday in an early morning raid at the Baghdad International Airport. The detainees are believed to have positioned themselves in several high-level jobs at the airport so they could conduct kidnapping operations against Iraqi security forces and civilians. The men are also suspected of attacking Iraqi and coalition force with improvised explosive devices and mortars.

  • U.S. soldiers detained four men who'd been found harboring suspicious materials during a search operation conducted yesterday in the town of Hawr Rajab, south of Baghdad.

Paratroopers of Troop B, 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, detained the men after finding suspicious material in their house. Materials confiscated included an AK-47 assault rifle with three loaded magazines, two ski masks, seven cell phones and a pound of white powder. An explosive ordnance disposal team is assessing the powder, which could be a homemade explosive used in insurgent bombings, officials said.

The paratroopers, attached to the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team, are conducting missions in support of Operation Marne Torch II to interdict insurgent operations in the region.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq and Multinational Corps Iraq news releases.)

Related media sources: CNN World, AP, Yahoo News.

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USS Carr Aids Vessel in Distress in Arabian Gulf

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ARABIAN GULF (September 26, 2007) - Boarding team members from the guided-missile frigate USS Carr (FFG 52) rendered assistance to a United Arab Emirates-flagged fishing dhow in the Central Arabian Gulf (CAG) Sept. 26. The fishing dhow was having engine problems and an engineering team from Carr was able to get the dhow running again. Carr also provided the dhow’s crew with fresh water, food and a medical kit. Carr is currently in the (CAG) conducting Interaction Patrols (IPATS). IPATS are an element of MSO, which help generate support and awareness amongst commercial vessels sailing in the region of the Coalition’s efforts to ensure a safe and secure maritime environment. Coalition forces also conduct MSO under international maritime conventions to ensure security and safety in international waters so that commercial shipping and fishing can occur safely in the region. Carr is on a regularly scheduled deployment in support of MSO as part of the Kearsarge Expeditionary Strike Group. U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communications Specialist 2nd Class Oscar Espinoza

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ARABIAN GULF (September 26, 2007) - Boarding team members from the guided-missile frigate USS Carr (FFG 52) rendered assistance to a United Arab Emirates-flagged fishing dhow in the Central Arabian Gulf (CAG) Sept. 26. The fishing dhow was having engine problems and an engineering team from Carr was able to get the dhow running again. Carr also provided the dhow’s crew with fresh water, food and a medical kit. Carr is currently in the (CAG) conducting Interaction Patrols (IPATS). IPATS are an element of MSO, which help generate support and awareness amongst commercial vessels sailing in the region of the Coalition’s efforts to ensure a safe and secure maritime environment. Coalition forces also conduct MSO under international maritime conventions to ensure security and safety in international waters so that commercial shipping and fishing can occur safely in the region. Carr is on a regularly scheduled deployment in support of MSO as part of the Kearsarge Expeditionary Strike Group. U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communications Specialist 2nd Class Oscar Espinoza

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SUEZ CANAL (Aug. 26, 2007) - Sonar Technician Surface 3rd class Brian Mahoney mans a .50-caliber machine gun aboard guided-missile frigate USS Carr (FFG 52) during the transit through the Suez Canal. Carr is on a scheduled deployment in support of maritime operations. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd class Oscar Espinoza (RELEASED)

Dispatches from the Front:

USS Carr Helps Vessel in Distress in Central Arabian Gulf

USS CARR, At Sea --The guided-missile frigate USS Carr (FFG 52) while conducting Maritime Security Operations in the Central Arabian Gulf provided assistance to a United Arab Emirates-flagged fishing dhow in distress Sept. 26.

Shortly after 8:30 a.m., the fast combat support ship USNS Supply (T-AOE 6), spotted the distressed vessel and requested Carr investigate. Carr immediately launched their boarding team in a 7-meter rigid-hull inflatable boat (RHIB) and proceeded to the drifting vessel. As they approached, the fishing vessel’s crew members signaled their appreciation that the Coalition was lending assistance and invited them aboard.

“Despite the language barrier, we could tell by the master’s expression and body language that he was grateful for our assistance and felt comfortable with our presence,” said Ensign Christopher Cornish, Carr’s boarding officer.

Three members of the team immediately went to work on the dhow’s engine. Engineman Chief Michael Doleski, Electrician’s Mate Chief Todd Steiner and Engineman 1st Class Shawn Etheridge worked with the dhow’s crew to troubleshoot the motor and get it running again.

“The dhow’s engine was extremely clean and their crew was very knowledgeable,” said Doleski. After ninety minutes onboard, the engine was operational again.

The boarding team members also left the dhow with a medical kit and food and water. The dhow’s crew repeatedly shook the hands of boarding team members and thanked them as they prepared to depart.

“We are trying to build a cooperative partnership with the local maritime community,” said Cornish. “Gaining their trust is a vital step in this process.” Coalition forces have a long-standing tradition of helping mariners in distress by providing medical assistance, engineering assistance and search and rescue efforts.

Carr is currently on a regularly scheduled deployment as part of the Kearsarge Strike Group conducting Interaction Patrols (IPATS). IPATS are an element of MSO, which help generate support and awareness amongst commercial vessels sailing in the region of the Coalition’s efforts to ensure a safe and secure maritime environment. Coalition forces also conduct MSO under international maritime conventions to ensure security and safety in international waters so that commercial shipping and fishing can occur safely in the region.

(From USS Kearsarge Strike Group Public Affairs.)

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Thursday, September 27, 2007

Combat Camera: Soldiers Operate Outside Hawijah

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U.S. Army Soldiers from Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, get into position to pull security outside of a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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An Iraqi army soldier searches buildings for hidden weapons in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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U.S. Army Spc. David Branton, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, walks away from a home he searched in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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Iraqi army soldiers patrol a street in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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Iraqi men wait to be entered into a Handheld Inter-agency Identity Detection Equipment (HIIDE) system, which will gather identification information on the men in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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U.S. Army 2nd Lt. Edward Park, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, checks a list of villagers names against a list of wanted individuals in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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U.S. Army Pfc. Pete Danielson, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, hands out food to Iraqis who are waiting to be processed into a Handheld Inter-agency Identity Detection Equipment (HIIDE) system in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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U.S. Army Pfc. Pete Danielson, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, passes out information pamphlets to Iraqis in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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An Iraqi man talks to U.S. Army Capt. Charles Romero, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, with the assistance of an interpreter in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

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U.S. Army Capt. Charles Romero, Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, talks to Iraqi men in a village near Hawijah, Iraq, Sept. 6. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, Joint Combat Camera Center

More Combat Camera Imagery on THE TENSION

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Soldiers Clear Former Insurgent Stronghold

Dispatches from the Front

Dispatches from the Front:

Coalition Forces Clear Former Insurgent Stronghold

WASHINGTON, Sept. 27, 2007 (AFPS) -- For the past four months, coalition forces have battled to take control of a former insurgent badland south of Baghdad that had no Iraq security forces, a senior commander in the area said today.

For the past two years, the predominately Sunni areas around Arab Jabour and Hawr Rajab have served as a thriving haven for al Qaeda terrorists who used the Tigris River valley to funnel bombs, weapons and ammunition into Baghdad.

Since June 15, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, has -- for the most part -- driven out the insurgency, and a recent rallying of locals against al Qaeda promises a more secure future for the area, said Army Col. Terry R. Ferrell, the unit’s commander.

“We are building from ground zero. As we occupied the battle space, it truly was (an al Qaeda) sanctuary. There was no army; there was no police; there was no governance,” Ferrell said.

The brigade combat team was the last of the surge forces to deploy to Baghdad. Since June, the unit has cleared 1,300 buildings, destroyed 81 weapons caches, detained 443 suspects, and encountered more than 80 bombs, Ferrell said.

“It’s been a challenging operation, to say the least. But the soldiers … continue to take the fight every day, and it’s phenomenal what you see these kids doing,” Ferrell said.

Earlier this month, officials launched Operation Marne Torch II, which combines airpower, ground forces and locals fighting alongside the coalition for fast-moving raid operations on al Qaeda strongholds. Since then, more than 600 local citizens have sided with the coalition forces and have begun providing security for their villages. Already this month, nine insurgents were killed and 71 captured, 14 bombs and 12 weapons caches were recovered, and nearly 200 buildings have been cleared.

Coalition forces have one patrol base set up in Arab Jabour and are increasing their presence in the area by building a new patrol base. At the same time, they are working to build a local security force.

Ferrell said officials there are working fast to get locals streamlined into the Iraqi security-force system. A recruiting drive is planned for November, he said, adding that a long-term Iraqi security force presence in the area is necessary for continued stability there.

“Security forces have to come into our area and replace us,” the colonel said. “If our presence is not here, then al Qaeda will come back.”
(Story by By Fred W. Baker III.)

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Thanks to Concerned Locals, al Qaeda in Iraq Losing

News in balance

News in Balance:

Here is one of the many positive stories out of Iraq overlooked by the mainstream media.

Al Qaeda in Iraq Losing, Thanks to Concerned Local Citizens

WASHINGTON, Sept. 27, 2007 (AFPS Special) -- Iraqi citizens are helping coalition forces hunt down al Qaeda terrorists in a vast rural area south of Baghdad, a military commander said today.

“As the summer went along, we started building the confidence of the people,” Army Lt. Col. Ken Adgie told online journalists and “bloggers” from Patrol Base Murray, which is situated beside the Tigris River in the mostly agricultural region of Arab Jabour.
With its desolate location, rugged terrain, thick palm groves and almost-exclusively Sunni population, the region is a perfect breeding ground for terrorism, Adgie said.

“There is no Iraqi army here. There is no Iraqi police here. And there’s no governmental structure here,” he said. “What you had was a petri dish for al Qaeda to grow.”
Earlier this month, Adgie and the soldiers he commands in 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division, of Multinational Division Center launched Operation Marne Torch II. The ongoing mission aims to stop the flow of weapons, including improvised explosive devices, that local citizens have been manufacturing with al Qaeda funding.

“The al Qaeda that’s here is not guys … from Syria or Somalia. They are local people who grew up here,” Adgie said. “They were bad, bad teenagers who stole cars, … and (with) the lure of fast money from al Qaeda … they joined al Qaeda, and they carry out al Qaeda’s bidding.”
These home-grown terrorists employed “ultra-violence” against their fellow villagers to “strike fear in their hearts,” the colonel explained. Coalition forces from the final phase of the U.S. troop surge streamed into the region earlier this summer.

“In early August, we started seeing the first of the concerned local citizens come forward,” Adgie said. “And they started providing us with just a lot of information on who the bad guys were.”
The “concerned citizen” movement was greatly bolstered last month, the colonel explained, when a retired brigadier general from Saddam Hussein’s former army encouraged more local people to assist the coalition effort.

“(He) decided, ‘Enough is enough. I’ll be the leader,’” Adgie said. “He stepped up, stepped out into the light of day and helped us recruit this concerned citizen organization.”
That organization has grown from 87 to 538 people in just seven weeks, the colonel explained, and its members provide crucial information.

“Al Qaeda operates under a veil of secrecy. No one knows who al Qaeda is,” Adgie said. “Well that’s no longer possible when the guy you went to high school with is a concerned citizen, and he can look you in the eye and say: ‘You’re al Qaeda.’”
Information provided by Iraqi citizens is always corroborated by a second source, the colonel explained, such as video from unmanned aerial vehicles. But without that initial human intelligence, he said, the mission would be far more difficult.

“It allows us to take that … needle in a haystack and make it into a much smaller haystack,” Adgie said.

A select, highly vetted group of concerned citizens actually lives on post with coalition forces, wears military uniforms and accompanies troops as they raid suspected al Qaeda safe houses, the colonel explained.

“If there’s 10 guys in a house and one’s bad, (the concerned citizens) can say: ‘That’s the guy you want.’” Adgie said.

Since the beginning of Operation Marne Torch II, coalition forces have killed nine enemy fighters, captured 71 detainees, located 14 IEDs, and uncovered 12 weapons caches according to Multinational Division Center officials.

“Al Qaeda is losing right now,” Adgie said. “And that’s a good thing for Iraqi citizens.”
(By David Mays, New Media branch at American Forces Information Service.)

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