[Vision2020] Iraq in the Rear-View Mirror

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Thu Aug 19 05:56:33 PDT 2010


Courtesy of today's (August 19, 2010) Spokesman-Review.

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

 

Last U.S. combat brigade in Iraq is headed home

 

KHABARI CROSSING, Kuwait - As their convoy reached the barbed wire at the
border crossing out of Iraq on Wednesday, the soldiers whooped and cheered.
Then they scrambled out of their stifling hot armored vehicles, unfurled an
American flag and posed for group photos. 

 

For these troops of the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, it was a
moment of relief fraught with symbolism. Seven years and five months after
the U.S.-led invasion, the last American combat brigade was leaving Iraq,
well ahead of President Barack Obama's Aug. 31 deadline for ending U.S.
combat operations there.

 

When 18-year-old Spc. Luke Dill first rolled into Iraq as part of the U.S.
invasion, his Humvee was so vulnerable to bombs that the troops lined its
floor with flak jackets.

 

Now 25 and a staff sergeant after two tours of duty, he rode out of Iraq
this week in a Stryker, an eight-wheeled behemoth encrusted with armor and
add-ons to ward off grenades and other projectiles.

 

"It's something I'm going to be proud of for the rest of my life - the fact
that I came in on the initial push and now I'm leaving with the last of the
combat units," he said.

 

He remembered three straight days of mortar attacks outside the city of
Najaf in 2003, so noisy that after the firing ended, the silence kept him
awake at nights. He recalled the night skies over the northern city of Mosul
being lit up by tracer bullets from almost every direction.

 

Now, waiting for him back in Olympia, Wash., is the "Big Boy"
Harley-Davidson he purchased from one of the motorcycle company's
dealerships at U.S. bases in Iraq - a vivid illustration of how embedded the
American presence has become since the invasion of March 20, 2003.

 

That presence is far from over. Scatterings of combat troops still await
departure, and some 50,000 will stay another year in what is designated as a
noncombat role. They will carry weapons to defend themselves and accompany
Iraqi troops on missions (but only if asked). Special forces will continue
to help Iraqis hunt for terrorists.

 

So the U.S. death toll - at least 4,415 by Pentagon count as of Wednesday -
may not yet be final.

 

The Stryker brigade, based in Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state,
lost 34 troops in Iraq. It was at the forefront of many of the fiercest
battles, including operations in eastern Baghdad and Diyala province, an
epicenter of the insurgency, during "the surge" of 2007. 

 

Before the Aug. 31 deadline, about half the brigade's 4,000 soldiers flew
out like most of the others leaving Iraq, but its leadership volunteered to
have the remainder depart overland. That decision allowed the unit to keep
360 Stryker vehicles in the country for an extra three weeks.

 

It took months of preparation to move the troops and armor across more than
300 miles of desert highway through potentially hostile territory.

 

The Strykers left the Baghdad area in separate convoys over a four-day
period, traveling at night because the U.S.-Iraq security pact - and
security worries - limit troop movements by day.

 

Along the way, phalanxes of American military Humvees sat at overpasses,
soldiers patrolled the highways for roadside bombs, and Apache attack
helicopters circled overhead as the Strykers refueled alongside the highway.

 

Chief Warrant Officer 3 Gus McKinney, a brigade intelligence officer,
acknowledged that moving the convoys overland put soldiers at risk, but said
the danger was less than in past.

 

The biggest threat was roadside bombs planted by Shiite extremist groups who
have a strong foothold in the south, McKinney said.

 

But except for camels straying into the road, and breakdowns that required
some vehicles to be towed, there were no incidents.

 

The worst of the ride was conditions inside the Strykers - sitting for hours
in a cramped space - and the temperatures outside that reached 120 degrees.

 

The driver's compartment is called the "hellhole" because it sits over the
engine and becomes almost unbearably hot. The vehicle commander and gunner
can sit up in hatches to see the outside world. At the tail end are hatches
for two gunners. Eight passengers - an infantry squad in combat conditions -
can squeeze in the back.

 

When the convoy finally reached the sandy border, two soldiers, armed and
helmeted, jumped off their vehicle and raced each other into Kuwait.

 

Once out of Iraq, there was still work to be done. Vehicles had to be
stripped of ammunition and spare tires, and eventually washed and packed for
shipment home.

 

For Dill, who reached Kuwait with an earlier convoy, the withdrawal
engendered feelings of relief. His mission - to get his squad safely out of
Iraq - was accomplished.

 

Standing alongside a hulking Stryker, his shirt stained with sweat, he
acknowledged the men who weren't there to experience the day with him.

 

"I know that to my brothers in arms who fought and died, this day would
probably mean a lot, to finally see us getting out of here," he said.

 

--------------------------

 

A column of U.S. Army Stryker armored vehicles cross the border from Iraq
into Kuwait on Wednesday.

 

http://media.spokesman.com/photos/2010/08/19/iraq-crossing0819_t620.jpg

 

--------------------------

 

4th Stryker Brigade rides out of Iraq

 

The 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infrantry Division was officially designated
the last combat brigade to leave Iraq under President Barack Obama's plan to
end combat operations by Aug. 31. Named for the vehicle that delivers troops
into and out of battle, the brigade was at the forefront of many of the
fiercest battles in Iraq and lost 34 troops there. The unit is based at
Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state.

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

 

Although 6,000 combat troops remain in Iraq for cleanup/recovery operations,
they will be home by the established deadline of August 31st.

 

Welcome home, Four-Deuce.

 

Seeya round town, Moscow.

 

Tom Hansen

Moscow, Idaho

 

"Patriotism is not a short and frenzied outburst of emotion but the tranquil
and steady dedication of a lifetime."

 

-- Adlai E. Stevenson, Jr.

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/attachments/20100819/fd30a48f/attachment.html 


More information about the Vision2020 mailing list