Archive for August, 2006

18 Aug 06

August 24, 2006

Early in the afternoon, I left my base for my fourth convoy escort mission. Several Humvees basically escort more than 15 semi trucks and trailers driven by third country nationals and Kellog Brown and Root employees that haul anything from wood to fuel. We were enroute to Baghdad International Airport. Not even 10 minutes out of the gate I was sweating profusely because of the wearing of my helmet and body armor that weighs close to 40 pounds. The Humvees are air conditioned but the vent for the rear passenger is about the size of a silver dollar. It is located in the middle of the Humvee blowing air on a soldier’s side. I learned later that it was 105 degrees in the Humvee during the day and 75 degrees around 2 a.m. It was a pretty uneventful trip except for a suspicious pickup parked facing the trafic and our discovery of an artillery round placed in the middle of the highway (another roadside bomb). The two Humvees in front of us spotted a man in the truck drop suspiclous black bags from the truck’s bed to the shoulder of the road. My truck’s commander and another soldier searched the truck and occupants. I mean the occupants were standing in front of their truck with their hands up. In the truck’s bed also was a bamboo rug that stuck out a good four feet from the bed. This was searched and the occupants were forced to show what was in the bags. I saw one of them put his hands to his mouth which meant food. New plumbing supplies also were in the bags. The Soldiers gave the occupants water bottles and we were on our merry way.

Several hours later and several miles outside BIAP, we heard on the radio that an improvised explosive device was discovered not very far north of where we were. We decided to stop and investigate our area. This meant the vehicle I was in was responsible for driving up and down the shoulders looking for suspicious items. We were checking out bags. You name it. Of course this country is full of trash everywhere. In front of our scout vehicle, the soldiers spotted a blast hole with fresh sand and asphalt in it. We called this in to the explosive ordnance disposal team. Three hours later, the EOD arrived and their Buffalo vehicle discovered the round. We arrived at our destination at 4 a.m. after leaving my base at 4 p.m.

August 24, 2006

10 Aug 06

August 11, 2006

The Al Batha Park trip

Late in the morning we took a little trip in Humvee gun trucks to Al Batha, north of Nasiriyah, Iraq. My mission was to research good locations for the Iraqi media to set up and conduct their interviews for an upcoming grand opening celebration of a park near a school. The 1/34 Brigade Combat Team had assisted in this project which was completed by local laborers. It is very cramped in the back seat of a Humvee and about the only way to take photos is to use a telephoto zoom lens. And the Army furnished the perfect one, a 70-200 with a silent wave motor (one mode is made specially for shooting out of moving vehicles). Along the way we observed young children, some I would guess were maybe 4 years old, running from their tents and mud huts to wave to us as we were rolled by. I also noticed children playing in very dirty water alongside the road. I also photographed a white camel. After walking around the park and getting some ideas where the media should be, I along with several other Soldiers walked down a street en route to the police station. We were followed by several Iraqi children walking and riding bicycles. Some of the bicycles were old and some were pretty fancy, including a BMX bicycle. One little boy kept asking me if I played football and had a football (football over here means soccer). I knew enough Arabic to keep a conversation with these children too. Once we reached the police station, some of the BCT civil military operations officers met with city officials. As the meeting drew to a close, an Iraqi man approached the group with a coffee pot and two small coffee cups (about the size of shot glasses). He would pour coffee into a cup present it to someone and pour another cup of coffee. He did this for the whole group. What I’m getting at is the two same cups were used for the whole group. There was another tradition. If you didn’t want another cup of coffee you were supposed to shake the cup back and forth when you gave it back to the pourer. Needless to say I had two cups of this hot and strong coffee efore finding this out. After this visit, we walked a little ways down a dirt road to tour a water plant. Once again the children followed us. I took some photos of these children. Immediatley after taking their photos, I had to show them the image on my camera’s monitor. Later we drove along the Euphrates River to visit a sheik. Here I tasted raw dates for the first time. They were gold in color and had a pit like a cherry. They were pretty sweet. We also were served hot Chai tea with a lot of sugar in the glass. The CMO officers and us also were invited to sit in the sheik’s motif. It was kind of like a long lean too. We sat on rugs in once again were served coffee in those little cups.

6 August 06

August 10, 2006

I talked to an Australian soldier in the barbershop who was wearing civilian clothes but still carrying his military issued helmet. This is unique for American Soldiers to see this because we either wear our Army Combat Uniforms or physical fitness training uniform. He said Australian soldiers are allowed to wear civilian clothes. Minutes later as I walking back to my trailer I heard two men in civilian clothes behind me saying that they weren’t going to wait for the shuttle bus (they had just walked back the bus stop). Seconds later I heard a horn. I turned around and saw this Australian armored vehicle pull over to the side of the road. I couldn’t help but notice the soldier in the passenger seat was wearing civilian clothes and no helmet. Sure enough, the men behind me jumped in the back of the vehicle. By the way the temperature when I got back to the trailer around 2:30 p.m. was 118.6 degrees in the shade.

4 months in Iraq

August 7, 2006

As I walked from the Tallil Air Base or Logistical Support Area Adder dining facility to my trailer earlier this week as the sun and hot wind beat down on me, I reflected on being in Iraq for four months. First you all have heard Soldiers describe this heat as being surrounded by a hair dryer on full power. This is true. Another comparison is like walking in back of a C-130 transport plane that has both engines running. To back up, I’m among the more than 2,600 Minnesota Army National Guard Soldiers of the 5,000 1st Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry Division, deployed to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. I’m also a Brainerd, Minn., Dispatch photographer and motorsports writer. I have to admit the first four months have gone fast and I have several stories to tell already. Of course stories are my specialty. I’m the supervisor or noncommissioned officer in charge of the BCT’s public affairs office. We take photographs, write stories and shoot videos in covering this BCT’s deployment for several outlets, including hometown newspapers and television stations and our number one goal of CNN. We arrived at this base late one night on a C-17 transport plane from a base in Kuwait. Our first hint that we were entering a combat zone was when the plane’s interior lights were turned off early in the flight. Only red lights lit up the soldier’s faces. The next hint was the combat landing. Let’s just say you can definitely feel the plane making some evasive maneuvers. The first month saw our BCT learn from the Georgia BCT that it was replacing. Basically, we watched the Georgia soldiers do their job for the first week. On the second week, they watched us. In this time period, I was able to cover a medical assistance mission where BCT Soldiers provided items like shoes, water and clothes to children at a school. The Soldiers also provided medical care to the adults that lived in a village near by. It was here that the clock was turned back 100 years sans the satellite dishes on the mud huts and the children wearing jeans and shirts. I also learned that the children are familiar with digital cameras (especially that little nifty monitor on the back of every one of them). This mission didn’t seem that different from the ones that I covered while I was deployed to Bosnia two years ago except that I was always watching over my shoulder for the unexpected and my M-16 rifle was locked and loaded (a round was in the chamber). Later that month, we visited a school that that was made out of mud and bamboo. Unfortunately, it wasn’t in session. The next month I decided to do a story on a mother spending her Mother’s Day as Humvee gunner on a convoy escort mission (see the Dispatch’s archives for the story on Sgt Schilling). Events that I didn’t put in this story included seeing the countryside through night vision goggles from the back seat of the Humvee and being halted on a main highway in the middle of the night. A possible roadside bomb was observed further up the road. Minutes later, we heard the explosion. I don’t know to this day if it was an actual bomb or the explosive ordnance disposal team blew up the suspicious item with C-4. I still remember the truck commander yelling, “IED” (Improvised Explosive Device). Another mission I had was to do a story for the Mahnomen newspaper on two Soldiers from that area. They were stationed at a Marine Corps base named Camp Al Taqqadum. I flew on a C-130 transport plane from Tallil to the same Kuwait base we flew out of to get to Tallil. This was my first and definitely not last C-130 ride. C-130s are very loud and you sit on a webbed seat that is 20 inches across at the most. Otherwise my first ride was uneventful (of course we weren’t flying into a combat zone). From the Kuwait base, I flew another C-130 to Taqaddum or TQ. I felt at home here because once a Marine always a Marine. And the Marines know how to live. They eat on china plates and use silverware compared to us at Adder who eat with plastic silverware on plastic plates. I also covered a patrol that went out to three small towns near the camp to deliver Iraqi newsletters. This included traveling across the desert that looked like the South Dakota Badlands in the Humvees (to avoid IEDs). The Soldiers stopped at these little shops to deliver the newsletters. I chose the wrong Humvee to be in so I had to walk back several 100 meters to where the shops were. On one of these treks, two Iraqi boys showed me their supper in a small plastic bag. All I know there was something white with feathers in the bag. At this same town, gunfire was heard in the distance so we ditty maued. So to get back to Adder from here, I had to fly on another C-130 to the Kuwait base and then catch another C-130 to Adder. At Kuwait, because of my rank, a sergeant first class, I was assigned to be in charge of all the other Soldiers and civilians flying. This meant keeping accountability of them. When it came for an accountability roll call, one of the civilians came up missing. I checked the latrine, waiting tents and calling center. I thought to myself, I hope nothing happened to him. Come to find out, he was smoking in a distant smoking area. The middle of that month was very exciting. My mission was to prepare how to escort a Fox Sports Net North television crew that would be arriving in Iraq in June for several days. I flew from Tallil to the same Kuwait air base on an Army Sherpa plane. The Sherpa is a unique airplane. Some have called it a flying boxcar. It is not pressurized so my ears popped continuously. We flew at about 5,000 feet. It has huge windows so you can really see the flat countryside. You’re probably guessing by now that I know this base pretty well. You’re right; it has a Kentucky Fried Chicken, Pizza Hut and even a McDonald’s. Then I flew from Kuwait to Baghdad International Airport (BIAP) on another C-130. From there I flew on a Blackhawk helicopter from BIAP to the heavily fortified International Zone (this is where the reporters would receive their press credentials). From the IZ, I hopped on another Blackhawk to Balad Air Base or Logistical Support Anaconda (this is where the reporters would do all of their interviews and live footage). Instead of flying back to Adder, I rode along on a convoy escort mission. I had to get back to Adder ASAP to photograph and cover a memorial ceremony for a BCT Soldier who was killed in action. We left Anaconda at dusk, escorting several tanker trucks. 40 minutes after we left Anaconda, we stopped when we saw taillights in the middle of the road. It came across the radio that the road was blocked. A little while later, it came across the radio that there was a tank ahead. Sure enough, minutes later a tank came rumbling by us. We figured it was an EOD team looking for IEDs. We stopped at least twice more for possible IEDs. I remember one time stopping near an overpass. Through night vision goggles, I could see three people on top of the bridge. This was 4 a.m. Several days later, I flew down to the Kuwait base to meet the FSN crew. The next day, they filmed several shout outs around the base, including one the flight line. I remember looking in the Chevy Suburban’s mirror and the temperature read 135 degrees. An Air Force public affairs officer said the temperatures on top of the wings have been read at 160 degrees. Just as before, I made it safely to the IZ to get the crew their media credentials. While there, we were able to take photos of the famed Crossed Sabers Memorial Field. This memorial was the Iran/Iraq War memorial. Two days later as we left for our helicopter ride to Anaconda, we heard gunfire in the distance. While at Anaconda, this crew was busy. They did stories on six BCT Soldiers plus they filmed more than 50 shout outs, the ceremonial first pitch and the singing of the National Anthem by two BCT female Soldiers. We did six live interviews with Channel 9 morning news and several Twins pre game shows (most of these were filmed at 4 a.m. Iraq time). The crew’s week culminated in a commercial free Twins game that allowed the six Soldiers to talk to their wives and families. The families who were given free tickets to the Twins game also were able to see them. Instead of commercials, American Forces Network aired footage of the families talking to each other. This was all possible by a portable satellite system (Digital Video and Imagery Distribution System) mounted on the roof. My task was to hook up the satellite modem, click a few windows on a laptop and presto, we were live from Iraq. The crew left early July. Sgt Kent Westberg, my broadcast journalist and I flew back on a C-130 several days later to Adder. But our flight to the Kuwait base was delayed. The reason we might have to transport a detainee who was recently captured and two guards. who was recently captured. So we were told to debark the plane and go wait in an air conditioned bus. Sounded like a good idea to me. Sweat was rolling down my face because it was hot in the plane (the back cargo door was closed and the only air was from the side door). One person stayed on the plane, a Marine sergeant with a large knife strapped on his body armor. He told me seconds after boarding the plane that he was stationed at Falluja and this was his second time in Iraq. He was with the Marines in the invasion in 2003. When I mentioned I read about that invasion in the book “Generation Kill” he said he threw the book away after reading half of it. About a half hour later, the pilot decided to get the heck out of dodge and we left without the detainee. The rest of the month I’ve stayed on Adder where for six straight days, the temperature was above 130 degrees at 3 p.m. daily. This was unofficial because they were read from a thermometer on a post in the sun. Late in the month, I nearly went on a mission to Nasiriyah (remember this is where Jessica Lynch’s convoy was ambushed and she was kidnapped). Our BCT civil affairs team was going to drop off goods for a refuge camp. Minutes before we were scheduled to leave, the trip was cancelled. The team’s commander received a call telling him it wouldn’t be a good idea to go. Later it was learned that there were two IEDs planted on our route.