Forces in Iraq Make Largest Weapons Find to Date
Dispatches from the Front:
HADITHA, Iraq, Sept. 28, 2008 -- Almost 9,000 pieces of ordnance lined the recently excavated trenches. Iraqi Police (IP) officers and Marines smiled and congratulated each other on preventing such a large cache from falling into the enemy’s hands.
The IP officers discovered the large ordnance cache near Haditha on a combined patrol with the “Warlords” of 2nd Platoon, Company E, Task Force 2nd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 5, Sept. 22.
“This is the biggest [cache] we’ve ever found,” said Muhammad Jassim Muhammad, a member of the National Iraqi Intelligence Agency. “When we arrived, there was a 70-meter wide hole dug, but [the insurgents] had not finished burying everything.”
“We are extremely happy to find this cache,” Muhammad said. “We scored a victory on the bad guys and prevented upwards of two-hundred possible vehicle-borne-improvised-explosive-device attacks. With every find we make, Iraq becomes a safer place.”
Through the help of local Iraqi citizens looking out for the safety and well being of their community, the police received information on the location of the cache.
“The Iraqi Police are 100 percent responsible for finding this cache,” said Staff Sgt. Robert Fertal, 26, platoon sergeant with 2nd. Plt., Co. E. “Their hard work and sacrifice has created an environment where
Iraqi nationals freely offer information. This information has led to several smaller caches and explosive remnants of war (ERW) finds, as well as the large one.”
The ordnance Co. E normally finds is less in quantity than this one. Finds are commonly linked to preceding disposal attempts of enemy munitions by Coalition forces.
“We have never uncovered this amount of ordnance in the same location,” said Fertal, who is from Cleveland. “Our typical finds are usually five to 10 rounds and almost always classified as ERW. On average, we find ERW about twice a month. We also find unexploded ordinance (UXO) from previous controlled detonations. UXO is found more frequently.”
With the quick response time of the IP and the help of citizens in the area, Iraqis are preventing insurgency operations in Iraq. Step by step they are becoming self-reliant and completely capable of protecting their people and their freedoms.
“This find demonstrates the post [Provincial Iraqi Control] capabilities of an Iraqi Police force in the lead, using its own intelligence to take the fight to the enemy by depriving him of a significant supply of ammunition,” said Lt. Col. Steven J. Grass, the battalion commander of TF 2nd Bn., 2nd Marines. “It was a big win.”
(Story by Lance Cpl. Joshua Murray, Regimental Combat Team 5.)
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