.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

A forum of support, sharing, caring and friendship for family and friends of those in the 3/25.

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Iraqi Civilian Life Not Disrupted by 'Operation New Market'

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 29, 2005 – Marines, sailors, and Iraqi security forces are capturing and detaining terrorists throughout the Iraqi city of Haditha. However, officials said, for ordinary Iraqis, life there continues essentially unchanged.

Indeed, U.S. military officials in Baghdad reported, no essential civilian services have been disrupted as a result of Operation New Market. Water and power services apparently have not been affected. Hospital services, though, are still degraded due to a May 8 suicide car-bomb attack.

U.S. Marines from the 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, and Iraqi security forces working in tandem initiated Operation New Market was on May 24. The intent, officials said, is to keep terrorists on the run and on the defensive. Operation Matador, they noted, took place May 7-14 in western Iraq. Operation New Market is a continuation of that earlier effort.

The troops have since killed 14 terrorists while detaining more than 30 terrorist suspects. Routine patrols have unveiled four machine guns in a neighborhood school and numerous weapons caches, including 313 mortar rounds, two 155 mm artillery rounds, five machine guns, and rocket-propelled-grenade launchers and ammunition.

Regimental Combat Team 2 initiated a precision air strike on May 26 against terrorists who were firing at them from an occupied building. One laser-guided bomb was dropped on the building, leveling it to rubble and killing the terrorists inside.

In other news from Iraq, a U.S. Marine assigned to 2nd Force Service Support Group (Forward), 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward), was killed when the vehicle he was riding in struck an improvised explosive device about six miles from Haqlaniyah May 28.

The name of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

In western Anbar province, Marines and Iraqi Security Forces returned to a safe house in Ubaydi an Iraqi man whom foreign fighters had taken hostage and tortured.

Out of concern for his safety, the man asked not be identified. He had been severely beaten, and military doctors treated him for his wounds.

Officials say coalition and Iraqi security forces are working diligently to end the campaign of intimidation that is being waged against the people of Iraq, especially the hard-hit citizens of Anbar province.

Elsewhere, a suspected weapons smuggler detained by troops from Task Force Liberty led soldiers to a pair of hidden caches near Tuz May 28, officials said. Soldiers from the 278th Regimental Combat Team then reportedly recovered 75 60 mm mortar rounds, two 81 mm mortar rounds, two mortar tubes, one rocket-propelled-grenade launcher, 17 RPG rounds, and five anti-tank mines.

The suspected weapons smuggler reportedly was detained after being found May 27 with another suspected weapons smuggler. Officials said the two individuals were sitting on a donkey outside of Tuz, in the Diyala province. They were said to be in possession of weapons and materials used to make IEDs.

Two mortar tubes, two RPG anti-tank rounds, four mines, and a large number of devices used to trigger IEDs were packed onto the donkey, officials said.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq news releases.)

U.S. Helo Crash Claims Two Lives; Marine Killed in Operation

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 27, 2005 – Two soldiers died May 26 after a U.S. helicopter crashed near Baqubah, Iraq, officials reported today, and a U.S. Marine was killed May 25 by enemy small-arms fire in Haditha during Operation New Market.

One helicopter crashed, and the second landed safely at a coalition forces base after sustaining damage from small-arms fire. According to news reports, the helicopters were OH-58 Kiowa reconnaissance models supporting combat operations.

Coalition forces responded to the scene and secured the crash site.

The Marine who was killed was assigned to Regimental Combat Team 2, 2nd Marine Division, 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward). The names of the deceased soldiers and Marine are being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

U.S. Marines and sailors from Regimental Combat Team 2 and members of the Iraqi security forces conducted anti-insurgent operations in and around the city of Haditha May 25-26.

Marines from 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, and Iraqi forces spearheaded Operation New Market, successfully disrupting terrorist activity in the vicinity of Haditha. The mission's purpose was to maintain pressure on terrorists that began with Operation Matador, conducted in western Iraq May 7-14.

"The operation is successful to this point," said Col. Stephen Davis, the combat team's commanding officer. "We were able to achieve what we believe is total surprise, and we continue to do our series of coordinated searches for insurgents and for caches of munitions and weapons."

Five men with possible information on terrorist activity in the area have been detained for questioning.

About 120 kilometers away, in Ubaydi, multinational forces rescued an Iraqi man early May 26 during a raid on a suspected terrorist safe house.

The construction worker, recently employed to build an animal hospital, was found blindfolded and beaten in a house. The house also contained various improvised explosive device-making materials and communication devices. He explained to his rescuers that terrorists kidnapped him from his vehicle while he was driving to pick up medication for his young child. The man said terrorists repeatedly beat and whipped him on his exposed back, legs and arms while he was being held hostage.

Coalition forces are treating the man's wounds and will return him to his home after treatment, officials said. After analyzing his wounds, doctors believe he was held for nearly three days.

Terrorist presence and activity have recently increased in the area. During the last three months, since the arrival of coalition and Iraqi forces, numerous roadside bombs have been discovered in the vicinity of Haditha and numerous indirect-fire attacks have been launched against coalition forces assigned to protect the area.

In a separate operation, Iraqi army and U.S. soldiers from Task Force Baghdad captured 11 terror suspects, including two specifically targeted individuals, during four early-morning raids in western Baghdad May 26. The U.S. and Iraqi soldiers teamed up to take down the two specifically targeted terror suspects in a pinpointed cordon-and-search operation.

One target seized is thought to be involved with a terror cell that assassinates or kidnaps Iraqis working with the Iraqi army, police or coalition forces. The other target captured was a police officer under the previous regime. The suspect is now thought to be involved in two terror cells. Officials believe he watches a main road in the area for coalition convoys, then initiates and participates in attacks against them. Both men were taken into custody for questioning.

"The Iraqi army had the lead in this operation," said Army Lt. Col. Clifford Kent, a Task Force Baghdad spokesperson. "They executed the plan flawlessly. The capture of these two men may have saved the lives of many innocent Iraqi citizens."

Elsewhere in Iraq, a terrorist wounded during fighting died at about 5 p.m. local time today after being transported to a coalition medical-treatment facility. Officials released no further details on the incident.

In southern Baghdad May 26, two masked terrorists fired at a U.S. soldier manning an installation checkpoint, then fled in a vehicle. Ground patrol units and AH-64 Apache attack helicopters pursued the vehicle. The helicopters observed the terrorists exit the vehicle and enter a building. The ground patrol then arrived and took 12 terrorists in custody. All 12 are currently being held for questioning.

South of Baghdad, local Iraqis tipped off U.S. soldiers about a possible weapons cache. Upon searching the house, an ammunition cache was discovered and two residents were found with explosive material. They have been held for further questioning.

In southern Baghdad, a 155 mm round was located on the side of a highway. After clearing the area, the device was detonated harmlessly.

U.S. forces located and disarmed three improvised explosive devices at one potential bomb site in western Baghdad, two 155 mm rounds at another, and a bomb of unknown ordnance at a fourth site.

Multinational forces from 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division (Stryker Brigade Combat Team), detained one suspected terrorist and seized a cache during operations in northern Iraq May 25. The soldiers, from the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment, detained one individual suspected of terrorist activity during a raid in southern Mosul May 25. Suspects are in custody with no MNF injuries reported.

Soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry Regiment, had a weapons cache turned over to them in an area southeast of Mosul May 25. The cache consisted of mortar rounds, rocket propellant, sticks of plastic explosives, and an explosives detonator.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq press releases.)

America Honors its Slain Veterans, Current Troops

President Bush:
America Honors its Slain Veterans, Current Troops
By Petty Officer 3rd Class John Guardiano, USN
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 28, 2005 – At the onset of the Memorial Day weekend, President Bush used his weekly radio address to pay tribute to American veterans, past and present. They have "given their lives for our nation," Bush said. "Our citizens live in freedom because patriots are willing to serve and sacrifice for our liberty."

Memorial Day is in remembrance of the nation's war dead. Bush noted, "This year marks the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II." Some 400,000 Americans, he observed, died in that conflict.

Today, the nation is again at war -- in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. "A new generation of Americans is making its own sacrifice on behalf of peace and freedom, and some have given their lives," Bush said.

To honor the nation's war dead, the president said he will lay a wreath at Arlington National Cemetery on May 30, Memorial Day.

"We mourn their loss, and we honor their sacrifice," Bush said. "We pray for their families. And we take heart in knowing that these men and women believed deeply in what they were fighting for."

The president noted that he gave the commencement address at the U.S. Naval Academy May 27.

"These new officers will soon be serving on ships, flying combat missions, and leading our troops into battle against dangerous enemies," Bush said. But, he added, "they are prepared for the challenges ahead -- morally, mentally, and physically. The American people can be confident that their freedom is in good hands."

The president cited the example set by two recently slain veterans: Sgt. Rafael Peralta, a Mexican immigrant who enlisted in the Marine Corps the day after receiving his "green card," which allows immigrants to legally work in the United States; and Sgt. Christopher Swisher, a native of Lincoln, Nebraska, who joined the Army a year after graduating from high school.

Before the battle of Fallujah, Iraq, Peralta wrote to his 14-year-old brother. "We are going to defeat the insurgents. Be proud of me. I'm going to make history and do something that I always wanted to do."

A few days later, Bush said, "Sergeant Peralta gave his life to save his fellow Marines."

Bush said Swisher was "killed in an ambush while on patrol in Baghdad." Before dying, Swisher told his loved ones: "If anything happens to me, I'm doing what I what I want to be doing: I'm protecting my family and my home."

In their hometowns, Bush said, "these soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines are more than names on a roll of honor. They were friends and neighbors, teachers and coaches, classmates and colleagues. Each was the most important person in someone's life. Each had hopes for the future, and each left a place that can never be filled."

Today, as in many times throughout its history, America is at war "not to conquer but to liberate," Bush said. "We go to war reluctantly because we understand the high cost of war."

The U.S. military, he added, is "training Iraqi and Afghan forces so they can take the fight to the enemy and defend their own countries." When that happens, Bush said, "our troops will return home with the honor they have earned. ... (They) have the respect and gratitude of our entire nation."

Monday, May 30, 2005

"Care Package Poker "

Sunday, May 29, 2005

Fundraiser for the Priestly Family (Staff Sgt. Priestly)

This fundraiser is to raise money for the Priestly Family of Parma. Dan was severely injured in Iraq on May 7th and is currently at Bethesda Naval Hospital where he has begun his long road to recovery that will require the use of a wheelchair for an undeterminded amount of time. Modifications will likely be needed to make the family's home wheelchair accessible. The money raised will be used for modifications and to provide for Sgt. Priestly, his wife Lisa, and their two children Garrett and Tyler.
Where: Jimmy J's - 1854 Snow Road, Parma, Oh 44134

When: Sunday, June 19, 2005 - 2:00pm-5pm
(Yes, we know it's Father's Day but we hope you'll join us to honor this brave father and the fathers who can't be home this year.)

Cost: $20 a ticket.
Includes wings, pasta, hot dogs, pop, beer, wine and music. There will also be raffles and sideboards.

Prizes include: Cedar Point Tickets, Geauga Lake Tickets, Gift Certificates, T-shirts, CDs, DVDs, and more!

Direct Donations can be made at any Fifth Third Bank Branch.
Please make checks payable to Dan Priestley

For more information and for tickets, contact:
Laurie Meadows 216-952-3698 lmeadows@sbcglobal.net
Hilary Phipps 440-376-7052 hilary.phipps@case.edu

http://www.wgar.com/priestly.html

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Marines press fight in insurgency hotbed

IRAQ IN TRANSITION: OPERATION NEW MARKET

By Michael Martinez
Tribune correspondent
Published May 27, 2005

HADITHA, Iraq -- Guerrillas kept up their resistance Thursday night to an offensive by about 1,000 Marines and Iraqi forces seeking to quash an insurgent stronghold in the country's far western reaches.

A firefight with extensive explosions unfolded after nightfall in the southern part of town, but casualty reports were unavailable early Friday morning, said Maj. Plauche St. Romain, intelligence officer of the 3rd Battalion of the 25th Marine Regiment.

To continue this story click here...

Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune

Sunday, May 22, 2005

3/25 discovers weapons, roots out insurgents

Submitted by: 2nd Marine Division
Story Identification #: 20055196824
Story by Cpl. Ken Melton




HAQLANIYAH, Iraq (May 19, 2005) -- Marines with 3rd Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment began a house-to-house search in the city here that turned into a game of cat and mouse with insurgents.

The Marines succeeded in finding multiple weapons caches and rooting out insurgents here while conducting operations under fire.

Weapons Platoon, Company L was the first unit to discover a weapons cache filled with small arms, RPGs and IEDs ready to be detonated.

“This was one of the first buildings we cleared,” said Sgt. Robert A. Davis, a squad leader with weapons platoon. “We were hoping to find the weapons cache sometime in the day, but we were fortunate to find these this early in the mission.”

The Marines were able to gain information on where the person who had stashed the weapons was located and set off to detain him for questioning.

As the Marines were nearing the location, an RPG was fired and barely missed the vehicles. The Marines set up security and began questioning people in the area.

“We were disoriented for a few seconds, but then our Marines snapped into action and began to assess the situation with perfection,” said Davis.

A second RPG was launched at the Marines as they began searching houses and damaged the property of innocent civilians.

“We were able to trace the point of origin quicker on the second RPG because our Marines on the ground were more alert for another attack,” Davis said.

While assessing the damage, a Marine noticed suspicious activity in a nearby yard where a buried weapons cache was later found.

“The owner of the house at first wouldn’t dig, saying that there was a water main in the ground,” Davis said. “Later we went back and made him dig deeper and found there was no water main, but two bags of firearms underneath the freshly dug earth.”

At the end of the day, the Marines detained 20 people and confiscated numerous weapons and explosives. To the Marines with 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines this was yet another successful operation toward their overall mission of providing the Iraqis with a safe and stable community in which to prosper.

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

Marines find foes flee before them

SEEKING BATTLE:
Marines find foes flee before them

By ELLEN KNICKMEYER
Los Angeles Times

ARABI, Iraq - Cpl. Alexander Kalouf snapped an ammunition clip into his M-16 assault rifle and strapped grenades to his chest in the crowded hold of an armored vehicle, bursting into excited snatches of songs with other Marines as they headed into hoped-for battle.

Two seats away, Cpl. Jason Dominguez shouted as he led the fighters in prayer.

"This is your chance to rid the world of these evil bastards," he began, struggling to be heard over the rumble of the Amtrac armored vehicle's engine and the roar of the exhaust.

"We ask the Lord God to help us and Jesus to protect us," Dominguez, in black sunglasses, camouflage and body armor, yelled hoarsely as huddled Marines clenched their hands and bowed their heads over the muzzles of their rifles.

...click here to read the rest of the article.

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Marines Wrap Up Assault in West Iraq

Troops estimate they killed 125 fighters and captured 39 suspects in their weeklong offensive that sent the remaining rebels fleeing into Syria.

By Solomon Moore
Times Staff Writer

May 15, 2005

QAIM, Iraq — Marines concluded their offensive into insurgent strongholds in western Iraq on Saturday, saying they had pushed guerrillas out of villages and towns where they had become entrenched but acknowledging that many of the fighters had escaped.

Marine officials said Operation Matador, among the largest military deployments since last year's battle against insurgents in Fallouja, had disrupted the guerrillas' capacity to coordinate attacks elsewhere in Iraq.

They also said the assault sent a clear message that the U.S. military would brook no insurgent havens in Iraq, even in the remote badlands of Al Anbar province along the border with Syria.

But Marines expressed regret that they had not captured more insurgents and said they had no illusions that the guerrillas would not soon return.

"We got brought here to catch lots of insurgents. That's what we thought we were here for," said Maj. Kei Braun, executive officer of Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment, which took part in the offensive. "But as it turned out, it didn't quite work out that way."

To continue this story, click here...

Saturday, May 14, 2005

Operation Matador Ends...

<>...Marines Continue to Monitor Area

By Jim Garamone

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 14, 2005 – Operation Matador is over, Marine officials in Iraq announced today.

The seven-day operation concentrated on cities near the border with Syria. Pentagon officials said many foreign fighters allied with terrorist mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi slip across the porous Syrian-Iraqi border. The operation concentrated on the Euphrates River cities of Karabilah, Ramana and Ubaydi, a Marine statement said.

Nine Marines assigned to Regimental Combat Team 2 died in the operation. Forty more were wounded. The statement said the joint-service team's Marines, soldiers and sailors "killed more than 125 terrorists, wounding many others and detaining 39 terrorists of intelligence value."

Coalition officials were concerned about the region even before fighting in Fallujah in November. The area - part of Iraq's Anbar province - is laced with smuggling routes that go back generations. Tribal loyalties extend on both sides of the border, and families often control smuggling "territory" and charge for services, said Pentagon officials.

Marine officials said terrorists use the area as a staging ground for attacks against Iraqi and coalition targets in Ramadi, Fallujah, Baghdad and Mosul.

The operation began May 7, and Marines killed about 70 terrorists in the first 24-hour period. "Operation Matador confirmed existing intelligence assessments focused on this region north of the Euphrates River, including knowledge of numerous cave complexes in the nearby escarpment," the Marine statement said.

The Marines will continue to monitor the area, officials said. Servicemembers discovered numerous weapons caches containing machine guns, mortar rounds and rocket materials in towns along the Syrian border. "Six vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices and material used for making other improvised explosive devices were also found," the statement said.

"Regimental Combat Team 2 started and ended this operation as planned, accomplished its mission and secured all objectives," said Maj. Gen. Richard A. Huck, 2nd Marine Division commander, quoted in the statement. "Coalition and Iraqi security forces will return again to this area in the future."

In the northern part of Iraq, soldiers of 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division's Stryker Brigade Combat Team seized a large weapons cache May 12. Soldiers found the weapons during a cordon-and-search operation southwest of Qayyarah. The cache included 16 rocket-propelled grenade rounds, a mortar round, one case of fuses, two bags of charges, one pound of C4 explosives and a case of ammunition.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq news releases.)

From : Press Service
Reply-To : defense-press-service-html-l-request@DTIC.MIL
Sent : Saturday, May 14, 2005 5:00 PM
To : DEFENSE-PRESS-SERVICE-HTML-L@DTIC.MIL
Subject : Operation Matador Ends, Marines Continue to Monitor Area

Bush: Nation to Keep Countering Terror, Promoting Democracy

WASHINGTON, May 13, 2005 – The United States will be "unrelenting" in seeking out terrorists while continuing to help spread democracy, President Bush reaffirmed here today.

"I have an obligation as your president to remind people about the realities of the world we live in," Bush told members of the National Association of Realtors. "There are still people out there who would like to inflict harm on our people. We will be unrelenting in trying to find those who would harm our people and bring them to justice."

Bush said the country will also "be unrelenting in our desire to spread freedom, because America understands that free societies are peaceful societies."

Just returned from a trip to Europe commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Allied victory there during World War II, Bush said it's important not to forget the lessons learned there.

"When we see tyranny, we must resist and free people from tyranny," he said.

Nations that were at war are now free and at peace "because of the spread of democracy," he said. "Democracies are able to live peacefully side by side."

Similarly, the spread of democracy today in the greater Middle East "will yield a more peaceful world for our children and our grandchildren," Bush said.

By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

First the Insurgents, Then Marines

Villagers in west Iraq are glad troops swept out rebels. But they're also wary of the U.S.

By Solomon Moore
Times Staff Writer

May 14, 2005

RIBAT, Iraq — After he served the Marines tea and sat them in his garden, the former Iraqi government official pulled up his shirt and showed his scars.

There were brown welts on his back where he had been flogged. There were small circular burns on his legs. He lifted his upper lip and revealed broken teeth. He held out his hands and displayed red lines where handcuffs had cut into his skin during eight days of captivity.

"The terrorists frighten and hurt the people here. They do checkpoints and patrols. Anyone they catch going to Al Qaim they will kill with a knife and throw him by the road," said the former official, who asked a Los Angeles Times reporter traveling with the Marines not to publish his name for fear that insurgents would kill him and his family.

"Frankly, I don't like the American occupation," he said. "But I prefer the American occupation to occupation by Al Qaeda."

A mission of more than 1,000 Marines, one of the larger deployments since the battle of Fallouja in November, has pressed this week through villages along the Euphrates River near the border with Syria looking for insurgent strongholds.

The Marines launched the campaign Sunday and were immediately engaged in sharp fighting. They have come across few insurgents since, but they have found plenty of people who complain about the guerrillas.

To read the full story, click here...

Friday, May 13, 2005

Comm. from RJ, Thurs May 12

I got a call at 5:45am yesterday morning from RJ. It was a very quick call, only a few minutes really, but he called to say he was "ok".

It was so good to hear his voice. He sounded off but that was to be expected with all they have going on around them right now. It's a very tough battle they are a part of over there. He said he was tired and sad at the loss of a very good friend recently. You could hear it in his voice. But true to RJ style he was able to find a good spot to compliment it...he was able to go visit a friend in the hospital and also that a staff sargent was going to be able to keep his legs. I don't know the extent of that man's injuires but I guess it was lingering on the possibility of the loss of his legs. RJ was glad for his good news.

He obviously could not tell me any details as to where they've been but those of us who paruse the news online can figure it out or at least narrow it down. They have been in the news a lot lately. Colonal Ollie North is with them now. My sister said yesterday she saw him speak yesterday on the news with a member of the 3/25. She caught the last moment of it but did not get the name of the Marine. She too keeps an eye out for anything to do with the 3/25. (Thanks, Melly!)

I'm so proud of RJ and his fellow men and women. They are working under hot and nasty conditions (they could certainly be worse but still, they're bad compared to our everyday lives!) and with all they have to wear to protect themselves and all that they do so they can protect us and others...well, proud and honored are the best words I have to describe my feeling for them.

In a recent 3 part series by Steve Harrigan of Fox News was about the military medics, their jobs and the people they've saved along with the teams of medical staff at the military hospitals, the series showed that the medics not only work on Americans but Iraqis that are fighting side-by-side with them against the insurgents. They are there to not only help those in need but fight alongside those troops with whom they have developed a close bond. I recently heard an injured member of the Army say she was eager to get back to her unit and within the same breath she said, "There's nothing like the closeness of a military bond...". I'm sure that's true for many in the military, especially those that have gone through war together.

In the last few moments of the call I was telling him I missed him etc. and he followed that up with a "I'll be fine". And the phone cut out just then.

Semper Fidelis. God speed.
You are always in our thoughts and prayers.

Carrie Ann

Lima Company...

Every member of Marine squad killed or wounded
(Lima Company)
Ellen Knickmeyer,
Washington Post
May 12, 2005


HABAN, IRAQ -- The explosion enveloped the armored vehicle in flames, sending orange balls of fire bubbling above the trees along the Euphrates River near the Syrian border.

Marines in surrounding vehicles threw open their hatches and took off running across the plowed fields, toward the blackening metal of the destroyed vehicle. Shouting, they pulled to safety those they could, as the flames ignited the bullets, mortar rounds, flares and grenades inside, rocketing them into the sky and across pastures.

To read the entire story click here...

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Marines Fight Near Syria Border

Associated Press
May 11, 2005



BAGHDAD, Iraq - Capitalizing on a lull in fighting Tuesday, hundreds of U.S. Marines pushed through a lawless region on the Syrian frontier after intense battles along the Euphrates River with well-armed militants fighting from basements, rooftops and sandbag bunkers.

For the complete story, click here...

Marines, Azerbaijani Army dam insurgent activity


Approximately 150 troops from the oil-rich former Soviet satellite state are currently here providing security to one of Iraq’s key infrastructures, freeing the Marines to conduct security and stability operations in the Hit-Hadithah corridor. Prior to beginning their tour at the dam in January, the Azerbaijanis completed six months of basic training in their native country.  Azerbaijani soldiers serve either six months or one year in Iraq, depending on their enlistment.  Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc Fencil
Marines, Azerbaijani Army dam insurgent activity
Submitted by: 2nd Marine Division
Story Identification #: 20055852333
Story by Lance Cpl. Marc Fencil



HADITHAH DAM, Iraq (May 8, 2005) -- Nearly two months have passed since the Marines and Sailors of 3rd Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment made Hadithah Dam their home. However, America’s warriors are not the only ones calling the dam “Home-Sweet-Home”.

Their fellow residents’ green camouflage uniforms in the middle of the desert and heel-driving march sets them apart from their Marine comrades-in-arms.

The Marines simply call these neighbors the “AZ’s.” The letters “AZ” are not the Greek letters of a new sorority on deck. Rather, it is the nickname of the Azerbaijani soldiers, whose sole responsibility is keeping the walls and waters of Hadithah Dam secure.

“Having the Azerbaijani Army unit at Hadithah Dam, allows the Marines of my battalion to be on the roads and in the Al-Anbar cities and towns. That's where the terrorists are and that's where we have to go to provide security for the innocent Iraqi people,” said Lt. Col. Lionel B. Urquhart, the battalion commander.

Approximately 150 troops from the oil-rich former Soviet satellite state are currently here providing security to one of Iraq’s key infrastructures, freeing the Marines to conduct security and stability operations in the Hit-Hadithah corridor.

Prior to beginning their tour at the dam in January, the Azerbaijanis completed six months of basic training in their native country. Azerbaijani soldiers serve either six months or one year in Iraq, depending on their enlistment.

“Our soldiers received all the training that make them successful here in Iraq; marksmanship, crowd control, communications, and setting up checkpoints,” explained 39-year-old Maj. Elkhan Shalbuzov, the Azerbaijani company commander. The major is from Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan.

Relations between the Marines and Azerbaijani’s are amicable. However, a language barrier exists between the communities.

"We use hand gestures instead of verbal communication to better understand each other,” explained Cpl. Daniel K. Smith, a 23-year-old food service specialist with H&S Company. “I try not to use facial expressions when I talk with them so they don’t wrongly interpret what I’m saying,” added the Cleveland Heights, Ohio native.

The vast majority of Azerbaijanis speak Azeri and a small number have knowledge of Russian and English. Most Azerbaijanis know at least a few simple, everyday English greetings to use with the Marines.

Language isn’t their only barrier though. The two forces live in separate areas of the dam. One wing of the dam is Azerbaijani territory while the Marines occupy the other wing.

The segregation is due to the need for accountability and unit integrity.

There are some things enjoyed by everyone no matter what uniform a soldier puts on in the morning.

Both Marines and AZs alleviate boredom by working out in the dam’s sparsely equipped gym and using Instant Messenger in the Segovia Internet café to talk with friends back home.

“I workout all the time and I notice that the Azerbaijanis will copy some of the exercises that Marines are doing in the gym and vice versa,” observed Lance Cpl. Eric M. Montgomery, a 21-year-old a field radio operator with Company L.

This time that these troops do spend together leave some Marines curious about the AZ’s, who gained their independence in 1991 following the collapse of the Soviet Republic and are eager to inquire about their weaponry, customs and home country.

“I’m curious to know how much funding their military receives in comparison to ours,” said Sgt. Carl D. Nelson, H&S Company’s 24-year-old admin chief from Niles, Ohio.

Marines are also perplexed by the Azerbaijani rank structure, which gives the impression of “too many Indians and not enough chiefs.” The Marines are used to a highly structured system of ranks easily discernable by their chevrons. The junior enlisted soldiers who make up the bulk of the Azerbaijani Army don’t wear rank on their utilities.

“It’s hard to tell the enlisted soldiers from the officers since they don’t wear chevrons like we do,” stated Lance Cpl. Sean M. Hathaway, a 21-year-old field radio operator with H&S Company.

Another aspect of the Azerbaijani Army that the Marines find curious it that they are not an all-volunteer force like the Marine Corps. The central Asian nation requires military service from eligible males. Males enrolled in a university serve one year and all others serve a year and a half.

Though members of each country’s military service have their own unique traditions and procedures, their cooperation demonstrates that these two allies work effectively together.

“The Azerbaijani soldiers take their mission of protecting Hadithah Dam very seriously, whether on patrol or guarding an entry control point. Well disciplined and ever vigilant, the Azerbaijanis are a formidable deterrent to would be attackers of this important source of Iraqi electrical power,” stated Urquhart.

“We have a good relationship. The Americans send a military delegation to my country every couple months,” Maj. Shalbuzov said. “They have provided my army with mine detectors, hundreds of radios, and other equipment.”

These young Americans and Azerbaijanis have come together in Hadithah long enough to realize that they are here for the same reason; the common desire for a free and stable Iraq that began as a mutual alliance at the outbreak of Operation Iraq Freedom in March 2003 in support of the global War on Terrorism.

-30-

Photos included with story:

Approximately 150 troops from the oil-rich former Soviet satellite state are currently here providing security to one of Iraq’s key infrastructures, freeing the Marines to conduct security and stability operations in the Hit-Hadithah corridor. Prior to beginning their tour at the dam in January, the Azerbaijanis completed six months of basic training in their native country.  Azerbaijani soldiers serve either six months or one year in Iraq, depending on their enlistment.  Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc FencilApproximately 150 troops from the oil-rich former Soviet satellite state are currently here providing security to one of Iraq’s key infrastructures, freeing the Marines to conduct security and stability operations in the Hit-Hadithah corridor. Prior to beginning their tour at the dam in January, the Azerbaijanis completed six months of basic training in their native country. Azerbaijani soldiers serve either six months or one year in Iraq, depending on their enlistment.
Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc Fencil


Hadithah, Al Anbar, Iraq.-- Azerbaijani private Habib Ezizov sorts fresh oranges in the dam's mess hall.  The Azerbaijanis provide soldiers to help serve breakfast and dinner in addition to their guard duties.  At least one Marine works with them on the chow line to coordinate work.    Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc FencilHadithah, Al Anbar, Iraq.-- Azerbaijani private Habib Ezizov sorts fresh oranges in the dam's mess hall. The Azerbaijanis provide soldiers to help serve breakfast and dinner in addition to their guard duties. At least one Marine works with them on the chow line to coordinate work. Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc Fencil


Hadithah, Al Anbar, Iraq.-- Azerbaijani Army private Abdulkerimov Ilvan scans the water of Qadisiyah Lake.  The lake presents a terrorist threat from approaching watercraft.  The AZ's man a series of observation posts along both the river and the lake side of Hadithah Dam.  Their sole responsibility is keeping the dam and the perimeter secure.    Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc FencilHadithah, Al Anbar, Iraq.-- Azerbaijani Army private Abdulkerimov Ilvan scans the water of Qadisiyah Lake. The lake presents a terrorist threat from approaching watercraft. The AZ's man a series of observation posts along both the river and the lake side of Hadithah Dam. Their sole responsibility is keeping the dam and the perimeter secure. Photo by: Lance Cpl. Marc Fencil


Operation Matador Continues in Iraq's Anbar Province

From : Press Service
Reply-To : defense-press-service-html-l-request@DTIC.MIL
Sent : Wednesday, May 11, 2005 12:10 PM
To : DEFENSE-PRESS-SERVICE-HTML-L@DTIC.MIL
Subject : Operation Matador Continues in Iraq's Anbar Province

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 11, 2005 – Operation Matador reached its fourth day today, as Marines, sailors and soldiers from Regimental Combat Team 2, 2nd Marine Division, continued combat operations in the northwestern part of Iraq's Anbar province.

According to military officials, three Marines have been killed in the course of the operation, as well as "a significant number of terrorists, anti-Iraqi forces and foreign fighters." The offensive is aimed at eliminating terrorists and foreign fighters from the area.

Officials said information gathered before the operation about the presence of foreign fighters in the region has been confirmed by clothing, identification, dialect, and by admissions from detainees, but the number of foreign fighters in the Qaim area is not known.

The region is used as a staging area for foreign fighters who cross the Syrian border illegally through smuggling routes known as "rat lines." It is there that these foreign fighters receive weapons and equipment to conduct attacks, such as suicide car bombs and assassination or kidnapping of political or civilian targets, in the more populated key cities of Baghdad, Ramadi, Fallujah and Mosul, military officials said.

East of Husaybah on May 10, AH-1W Super Cobra helicopter crews saw three armed males digging holes into the road to place explosives. The helicopters engaged and killed the terrorists.

In Husaybah overnight, half a mile south of Camp Gannon, Marines killed several terrorists armed with AK-47 automatic rifles. The enemy was brought down by Marine light-machine-gun fire, officials reported.

The night of May 9, at a vehicle checkpoint five kilometers southeast of Ubaydi, the scene of the initial fighting and in the area where terrorists launched the suicide-vehicle attacks against a convoy, Marines fired on a car that continued toward the checkpoint despite warnings to stop. The driver was unharmed, but a woman and child in the vehicle died as a result of the incident, officials said.

The driver approaching the checkpoint ignored the posted warning signs to stop and, bypassing an obstacle barrier, continued toward the post. At 200 meters from the checkpoint, Marines used hand and arm signals, and then fired a warning flare toward the vehicle. The Marines next fired warning shots in front of the vehicle when the driver didn't stop.

The driver then jumped out of his moving car and fled away on foot, leaving his car and its passengers, to continue toward the checkpoint. The Marines then fired at the vehicle's engine block to disable it. The vehicle rolled to a stop in front of the checkpoint. At the time the vehicle was heading toward the checkpoint, the Marines were unaware of the gender of the passenger or that there was a child in the vehicle. The Marines said they believed the vehicle was a suicide car bomb, officials reported. The driver was apprehended and is being held for questioning in a nearby detention facility.

Task Force Liberty soldiers discovered a munitions cache east of Kirkuk at about 10:30 a.m. May 10. The cache contained more than two dozen artillery rounds and blasting caps. Multinational Force Iraq explosive ordnance disposal personnel secured the site for future destruction.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq news releases.)

Don't mess with the bull...you're gonna get the horns! Go USA, go! Get 'er done and get 'er home!

Insurgents in western Iraq fight to finish

‘They came here to die,’ Marine sergeant says.
An Image released by the US Marines 10 M
USMC via AFP - Getty Images

An image released Tuesday by Marines shows mortar rounds and a BMW automobile, the making of a car bomb, discovered in Anbar province.
By Ellen Knickmeyer
May 11, 2005

JARAMI, Iraq, May 10 - Screaming "Allahu Akbar'' to the end, the foreign fighters lay on their backs in a narrow crawl space under a house and blasted their machine guns up through the concrete floor with bullets designed to penetrate tanks. They fired at U.S. Marines, driving back wave after wave as the Americans tried to retrieve a fallen comrade.

Through Sunday night and into Monday morning, the foreign fighters battled on, their screaming voices gradually fading to just one. In the end, it took five Marine assaults, grenades, a tank firing bunker-busting artillery rounds, 500-pound bombs unleashed by an F/A-18 attack plane and a point-blank attack by a rocket launcher to quell them.

The Marines got their fallen man, suffering one more dead and at least five wounded in the process. And according to survivors of the battle, the foreign fighters near the Syrian border proved to be everything their reputation had suggested: fierce, determined and lethal to the last.

Read the rest of the story here...

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Rebels in Western Iraq Under Siege

U.S. assault aims to clean out a border region believed to be a haven and training ground for insurgents and foreign guerrillas.

By Solomon Moore

Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

May 10, 2005

RIBAT, Iraq — The casualties mounted Monday in remote Iraqi desert villages near the Syrian border after U.S. troops launched their largest offensive since last year's invasion of Fallouja.

Insurgents have killed at least three Marines and wounded 20 American troops trying to cross the Euphrates River in western Iraq since the offensive began Sunday. Marine commanders estimate they have slain more than 100 guerrillas.

From a hilltop overlooking Ribat, a Times reporter traveling with members of the 2nd Marine Division could see insurgents driving to houses on the northern edge of the town, filling trucks with AK-47s and rocket-propelled-grenade launchers and ferrying them to the south side of the village where the battle was taking place.

to continue the story click here.

Monday, May 09, 2005

Courtesy of The Red, White, and Blue

By Toby Keith

American Girls and American Guys
We’ll always stand up and salute
We’ll always recognize
When we see Old Glory Flying
There’s a lot of men dead
So we can sleep in peace at night
When we lay down our head

My daddy served in the army
Where he lost his right eye
But he flew a flag out in our yard
Until the day that he died
He wanted my mother, my brother, my sister and me
To grow up and live happy
In the land of the free.

Now this nation that I love
Has fallen under attack
A mighty sucker punch came flyin’ in
From somewhere in the back
Soon as we could see clearly
Through our big black eye
Man, we lit up your world
Like the 4th of July

Hey Uncle Sam
Put your name at the top of his list
And the Statue of Liberty
Started shakin’ her fist
And the eagle will fly
Man, it’s gonna be hell
When you hear Mother Freedom
Start ringin’ her bell
And it feels like the whole wide world is raining down on you
Brought to you Courtesy of the Red White and Blue

Justice will be served
And the battle will rage
This big dog will fight
When you rattle his cage
And you’ll be sorry that you messed with
The U.S. of A.
`Cause we`ll put a boot in your ass
It`s the American way

Hey Uncle Sam
Put your name at the top of his list
And the Statue of Liberty
Started shakin’ her fist
And the eagle will fly
Man, it’s gonna be hell
When you hear Mother Freedom
Start ringin’ her bell
And it feels like the whole wide world is raining down on you
Brought to you Courtesy of the Red White and Blue

Reminder Publication's Letter

(edited)
04/25/05

Dear Family and Friends,

A little while ago, I had the experience of traveling to Camp ___. We visited Company K, 3/25 out of Moundsville, VW. On the way, we stopped by to see Company L out of Columbus, OH, who was in the field, and the Regimental Combat Team-2 headquarters...... RCT-2 commands 3/25 here in Iraq. Lieutenant Colonel _____ told each of the staff members that we had to make a trip to Camp ____ to get a feel for how the Marines are living.....there. Then we can bring that information back .......and support them better. Mobile Assault Platoon (MAP) 7, the great team that escorted us, originally comes from Headquarters and Service Company from Brook Park, OH. They began training for combat missions with Weapons Company, who are based out of Akron, OH and now work for them. I spent the next two days in the last vehicle of MAP 7 helping to provide security. Well actually, I just road along like a nice quite passenger, Lance Corporal _____with his M249G Machinegun really provided the security.

Before you step into any vehicle, the MAP commander always provides a brief of the current situation, threats, and actions upon contact. As in a boat, there may be many bosses, chiefs, and cooks…but there is only one “Captain.” Staff Sergeant _____has earned the respect throughout the Battalion as a no-nonsense, get the job done commander. He is reflective of most of the MAP Marines who daily face the threat of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs), mines, and the enemy. They clear the roads, conduct combat missions, and basically get overworked for one purpose…to help Iraq to get on its feet and provide its own security. As I entered my HMMWV, the vehicle commander........says with a smirk, “Hey sir, glad to have you. Just one thing, your door latch is broken. No problem though, just hold on.”

MAP 7 headed out ......... Of course, we head into a turn going about 35 mph and my door snaps wide open. I look down and envision everyone seeing Captain _____trying to imitate a dysfunctional super hero flying over the sand trying not to land on his head.

I quickly grab the door and swing it shut and the driver, Corporal ________ from XXX yells back, “Still with us, Sir?” They all start laughing. Marines like that sort of humor.
“Roger, drive on.” They laugh again.

We end up at a place called the ........ By comparison, it’s a rather nice neighborhood. However, 3/25 also knows it houses insurgents, so Company L got the call to clear it. Major ________ from Dayton, OH and 1st Sergeant ______ trained Co L into one of the best infantry companies in Iraq. They had the area well in hand. I spoke to several Iraqi’s in the only store in the area while the Battalion Commander toured the area with the Marines. Some liked Americans, some did not. I ended up using a smart, confident, 14 year old boy as a translator. He summed it up, “Iraqis do not like Americans when they make everyone pull over while they pass. It’s our highways not theirs.” Later he goes on to say, “I love America and want to visit Los Angeles and go to school in New York.” The complexity of Iraq amazes everyone all the time.

After a few hours we get back on the road. Another hour of radio checks, security halts, and more “Let’s lose the Captain,” and we stop at an intersection waiting for another convoy to go by. In that time, Sergeant _____ and I spot a vehicle behind us slowing and the driver looking at us. We make a mental note and then 10 minutes later we see the vehicle do it again. Thinking it may be the enemy, Staff Sergeant____makes the call to stop them. Our HMMWV immediately goes off road and tries to capture the vehicle the next time it comes down the highway. The driver seems to have gotten the hint, and we don’t see it again. After a little while, we move out and arrive at _____.

Camp ____ living conditions are different than those at _____. In some ways it is more primitive, in others a lot better. ....... Most families of Company K and the Camp ___Marines will get more phone calls home than those ____. However, ___ has some better facilities...... When Marines move into combat phase outside both camps, day-to-day life basically become equal. After five hours of liaison work with my Administration Clerk, Sergeant ___ and gathering in some of the needs of Camp ___, we head out ......for the Transfer of Authority ceremony ....... C_______ and I all made contact with our counterparts at the Regimental Headquarters to go over day-to-day issues. I think after many hours as RCT-2’s houseguests, we all wanted to get back “home” to ____.

Another convoy rolls in and it’s Capt ____ and his hardy veterans from Company L to give us a ride back. SgtMaj ____ arranges for them to get a few hours sleep and some hot chow before we roll. The convoy is again escorted by MAP 7. Another few hours and we all arrive safely ...... After 2.5 days I get back to a lot of unfinished work, a hot shower, and clean socks. Even today, I keep thinking of that trip and realize one thing that keeps me focused on the mission. I spent a little while out of my month on the road; our companies and MAPs do it everyday! We, in support of the 3/25 combat units, remember the constant missions they do, and it drives us to better support their everyday needs. Headquarters and Service Company, Weapons Company, Company L, Company K, and Company I conduct operations professionally time and time again. Their families can be proud.

Capt ______

http://www.thereminder.com/marine/marine.html

Saturday, May 07, 2005

Military Spouse Appreciation Day...

If the military had wanted you to have a spouse, they would have
issued you one." Remember those words? Well, that was then and this
is now. America's military has realized and acknowledged the
significance of the military spouse. In 1984 President Reagan
proclaimed the Friday before Mother's Day of each year to be
Military Spouse Appreciation Day. It is your day to stand up and be
honored.

For the times you've stood and watched a ship sail from the harbor,
an aircraft disappear into the clouds, or a truck convoy pull out of
sight, not sure when they would return, we thank you.

For the countless household moves you've made from a place you know
to one that's strange and different -- often by yourself -- we thank
you.

For the families you've held together, for the anniversaries,
birthdays, and holidays you've celebrated alone, we thank you.

For the hand you've extended to another military spouse when the
need was there, truly creating a military family, we thank you.

For the spirit and strength you've shown when your service member
has gone into harm's way, we thank you.

For the pride you've displayed while serving as an ambassador of the
military spouse to the rest of the world, we thank you.

Far too frequently, the sacrifices and dedication of the military
spouse have gone unnoticed and unappreciated. In our nation's recent
history, thousands of service members have been placed in harm's way
as they stood watch as freedom's guardian. You too have stood watch
at home, facing challenges alone. You have waved flags and held
banners high to express your support. You have kept the candles
burning on the home front as a reminder of our deployed military.

You have made difficult sacrifices of your own, and have called upon
your inner reserves to nurture family life so your service member
can focus on the business at hand.

Even in times of relaxed alert status for our military, you have
stood ready and alert for the slightest of signs, perhaps overlooked
or ignored by your civilian counterparts, signaling a potential
change in the status of our military forces. As a military spouse,
you have willingly packed up and relocated countless times, and may
have been separated from your own parents and siblings for several
years at a time.

Quite often, you have been placed in an unfamiliar ethnic or
cultural setting, or a remote location. You have met this challenge
with confidence and pride, making your nation proud of you. By the
same token, you have extended your hand and hospitality to visitors
to our country.

A country cannot count itself strong by its armed services alone,
but must also depend on its civilians. With military wives and
husbands setting a superior example through devotion, courage, and
commitment, we are a nation of strength.

Military spouses; stand tall, stand proud; we salute you, you are
truly our unsung heroes.

Thursday, May 05, 2005

If it weren't for them.

"I believe with all my heart if it were not for the men and women of our armed forces, fighting terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan right now, we'd be fighting it at home."
- Craig Morgan

I couldn't agree more with Mr. Morgan. Thank you to all our troops!

Comm. from RJ

Hi everyone-

I've had minimal contact with RJ as of late. As you know, the 3/25 has had their hands full. Each company doing different things.

RJ has been out on a 2 week "mission" for the lack of a better word. My guess is that everyday is a mission until he comes home. "Tired" seems to be the common denominator with each day. Not surprising. Especially since I just read (and posted) an article where they were talking about blaring music and radioing one another in the Humvees to keep each other awake. RJ said he's been spending the past 10 days in a Humvee with the same 4 guys. He really can't say much of anything else. I bet once they all get back to the states, even if they are at their camps in NC or CA they'll probably sleep for a week straight.

Bottom line, he sounds fine. I sent a package out a few weeks ago that he got just before he left for this 2 week mission. In that package was a series of random things, food and some toys for the kids they come across. In that box were these googly like glasses. Here is what he said about it, "I recieved your box ...the guys all were wearing the goggles ...it was pretty funny to see grown men cleaning their deadly weapons wearing plastic google eyed glasses. We will wear them while we arrest the next insurgent. We want word to get back to the insurgency that we are crrrraAAzzy."

On that note...I'm going to say Semper Fi, God speed and hugs to all. Smile everyone. We're down 4 months, only 6 to go!

Carrie Ann

If they get injured...

The command notification requirements when a Marine or Sailor is injured. The updated requirements are as follows:

Notification will be made to a casualty's next of kin as follows:

Telephonic notification:
  • Very Serious Injury - resulting from a hostile or nonhostile event
  • Serious Injury - resulting from a hostile or nonhostile event
  • Not Serious Injury - resulting from a hostile event

When notification is warranted, the assigned Marine Corps representative will notify the next of kin and disclose all known facts about the incident.

The assigned Marine Corps representative will contact the next of kin even if the casualty has already notified his next of kin, in order to offer assistance unless the casualty states that he does not want his next of kin contacted.

Next of kin notification IS NOT REQUIRED for nonhostile, not serious injury cases.

Hostile:
Casualty type assigned when a Marine becomes a casualty "in action" as the result of enemy action.

Nonhostile:
Casualty type assigned when a Marine becomes a casualty resulting from circumstances not directly attributable to enemy action.

Please take caution with news articles and information that they receive outside of the Key Volunteer Network because it has not been screened by the Marine Corps nor the command and could contain inaccurate or incomplete information. The battalion website is being
updated with the latest articles published by the Marine Corps, so please refer to the website. We are posting the letters received from the Commanding Officer on the website as well.

Contact our Key Volunteer (you know how she is!) if you have any questions.

Latest update from the 3/25 Battalion Commander

Here is the latest update from the 3/25 Battalion Commander. This letter will be posted on the battalion website as well.

Dear Families and Friends,

The Marines, Sailors, and Soldiers of Third Battalion, Twenty-fifth Marines continue to protect the innocent and eliminate the terrorists in the Al-Anbar Province of Iraq. We are more familiar with the roads, communities and landscape in this part of the world than we were when we last saw you, but there is still much to learn. We have accepted the reality that our daily routine will never be routine. We have learned to anticipate the enemy and to expect the unexpected. The weeks since our arrival have gone by quickly. During this time we have been assisting the local Iraqis through civil affair projects and by providing security that they currently cannot provide for themselves. Through constant patrols, vehicle checkpoints, and tactical operations, we have been removing those terrorists who are rash enough to try to overtly harm the local communities or the security forces assigned to protect the innocent.

We understand our mission, are intent on accomplishing it, and believe we are making a difference. Having witnessed firsthand the professionalism and courage of your loved ones, I am continually impressed by the caliber of the men of Task Force 3/25. Their ability to rapidly adjust our way of doing business to more effectively deal with the terrorist threat has been superb. We quickly learned firsthand that all Iraqis are not terrorists. In fact most do not like the terrorists and yearn for security and stability. But as we have painfully learned, there are terrorists. These terrorists claim to be many things, but have shown by their actions that they are liars, murderers, and bullies. Like all bullies they want to intimidate and control those who are weaker through violence and threats of violence. These terrorists prey on unarmed and untrained civilians. Whenever someone arrives who is either as powerful or more powerful, the terrorists run away. Typically the only fight the terrorists want to engage in is a cowardly one consisting of hiding Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and mines on roads where they indiscriminately explode--- many times harming innocent Iraqi civilians. When they are not hiding IEDs and mines, the terrorists are hiding in the local communities and countryside. They have shown by their actions that they are not men of honor. The local Iraqis rarely report them for fear of being beaten or killed. Our job is to: “Protect the Innocent, Eliminate the Terrorist and Know the Difference”. The ability of the individual Marine, Sailor, and Soldier to accomplish our mission has truly been noteworthy.

Our lives aren’t all work. We do get a few moments to catch our breath, clean up and prepare for the next mission. During those moments, we think of home; we think of you. Ultimately, you are the reason we are here. Each of us wants to ensure that the daily battle we are fighting against terrorism here in Iraq does not have to be fought in the United States. The letters and packages you send are valued more than any amount of money. The most popular thing to do when we’re relaxing is to spend time on the phone or Internet with you. Obviously with the amount of Marines, Sailors and Soldiers in Task Force 3/25 there is a lot of waiting for a chance to use a computer or phone, but when we hear your voice or read your words, all else is forgotten. I know I speak for everyone, when I say we can never truly express how much your thoughts, prayers, support, and concern mean to us. Thank you.

In closing, I would like to ask that we each take a moment to remember the families of those Marines and Sailors seriously injured, wounded or killed during Operation Iraqi Freedom. HM3 Dauphin was seriously injured. Captain Hadsall, Lance Corporal Rice, and Lance Corporal Luning were seriously wounded. All were sent to the United States for follow on medical care. Corporal Bryan Richardson and Corporal Michael Lindemuth, United States Marine Corps, died fighting for a better tomorrow. Their deaths have saddened all of us, as we know they have you, but their courage and selflessness has inspired us to continue the fight against terrorism.

With sincere appreciation for your sacrifices, support and love,

Lionel B. Urquhart
Lieutenant Colonel, United States Marine Corps
Battalion Commander

Radio Hosts Visit Iraq, Kuwait for Firsthand Look

WASHINGTON, April 30, 2005 – U.S. servicemembers' dedication was the universal impression carried home this week by a group of radio personalities following a weeklong visit with soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines serving on the front in the global war on terror.

The group -- consisting of talk-show hosts, a reporter and even a classic-rock disc jockey -- traveled to Baghdad and Fallujah, in Iraq, and to three bases in Kuwait on a trip organized by the Defense Department.

Dave Kelso, from Oklahoma City classic rock station KLXO, said the trip's effect on him was "nothing less than a molecular restructuring."

"The thing I was happiest to learn was that duty, honor and country are not lost concepts," he said. "The level and depth of dedication of our people in uniform is something that will live with me forever."

The fast-paced tour included a look at various aspects of the logistical effort required to keep Operation Iraqi Freedom running, and Kelso said the enormity of the task was overwhelming. "Anyone would need three heads to fully comprehend the size and scope of the operation," he said.

Another radio host said seeing U.S. forces in action reinforced his opinion of servicemembers. "I've always been kind of a pro-military guy," said Jerry Agar, whose talk show airs on KMBZ in Kansas City, Mo.

"I've always supported what we've been doing in the Middle East," he said. "But this makes me feel much more committed to that in terms of not only seeing the work, but seeing the dedication of the soldiers and having met some of the Iraqi people who are involved in this and having a closer look at what was done to that country. It just increases my resolve."

Nationally syndicated Talk Radio Network host Rusty Humphries said the trip gave him more well-rounded insight.

"I already had a pretty good feel for the political aspects of the Iraq war and the 'big picture' of it," he said. "What I didn't have was the soldiers' perspective -- what it was that they went through on a day-to-day basis and their difficulties."

Humphries said he embarked on the trip unsure of what he'd find in the area of troop morale.

"I looked for people who have low morale," he said. "I went over there looking for that just to find out what it was that they were unhappy with. Among the hundreds of people I met, I found only two people with what I'd call low morale. I found everybody else very positive, with very good morale. Did they want to be home with their wives and kids? Absolutely. But they knew why they were there, and they're doing it."

The opportunity to meet servicemembers in Iraq and Kuwait also had deep personal meaning, Humphries said. "My father was killed in Vietnam in 1969," he said. "This was my first real experience to see what he had gone through. I want to thank everyone for putting their lives on the line for the country. They're true American heroes."

For Steve Gill, whose morning talk show airs on WWTN in Nashville, Tenn., the trip triggered fond memories.

"As the son of an Air Force fighter pilot, I grew up in the military, and to be around it again and to hear the sound of those fighter jets -- that 'sound of freedom' that I grew up with -- that alone was worth the trip," he said.

Having spoken with hundreds of servicemembers, Gill said he was impressed with the quality of people serving in today's military. "The incredible young men and women who serve us so well and do extraordinary things in extraordinarily difficult conditions just reaffirm everything that I think the American people share in the pride of what these young men and women are doing," he said.

Gill said the chance to experience wearing 40 pounds of body armor in the oppressive conditions under which U.S. forces operate, as well as having the opportunity to go out on patrols, gave him new insight.

"To feel exactly what it is -- not just to look at it on TV from a distance -- I think is something that will bring fabric and understanding to what we do with these stories for a long time to come," he said.

The experience showed him the American people aren't getting the whole story from the mainstream media, Gill added.

"First of all, there is not enough pride and respect (in the media) for what these young men and women are doing," he said. Referring to a beer commercial in which returning servicemembers are applauded as they make their way through an airport, Gill said that too often people see such scenes, appreciate the sentiment, but then move on.

"We ought to show that same applause that we saw in that commercial every day, 24/7," he said. "And after seeing this for a week, hopefully that's one of the things we can convey back to our listeners."

Gill noted that positive developments in Iraq, such as the increasing regularity with which citizens are tipping off authorities on the whereabouts of terrorists, often goes underreported in the media.

"There is huge progress being made in Iraq," he said, citing the aftermath of a helicopter being shot down while the radio hosts were in the country. "In 24 hours, the people of Iraq turned in those responsible," Gill said. "They were apprehended. Six months ago, that wouldn't have happened."

After a first-hand look at Fallujah, purged of terrorists in November, Gill said the rebuilding effort there "will help to set up what freedom really means in a tangible way to these people."

And progress in Iraq, he said, is a direct result of the dedication of U.S. servicemembers. "Hopefully the American people will start to get a sense that this progress is only being made because of the commitment of these young men and women," he said.

Scottie Semler, Gill's producer, said she was most surprised by the degree of stability she saw in Iraq outside Baghdad's heavily fortified International Zone. Acknowledging that danger still exists, she said her overall impression is that "it is safe."

"Our men and women have done their job," she said. "They have been able to secure places where maybe six months to a year ago you couldn't have walked out alone. But today, you can. You still might have that risk of being shot at, but guess what? You'd have that anywhere, whether it be the streets of Washington, D.C., or New York City."

Because of servicemembers' sacrifices, she added, "we now have freedom in a country that has never seen freedom like this ever before."

Mike McConnell hosts a talk show on WLW in Cincinnati, Ohio, and a nationally syndicated program on Saturdays. He said he was favorably impressed with amenities available to the troops. "The quality of life for the troops was far greater than I'd imagined," he said, as was the morale level.

"Morale was as high or higher than any average American worker in any setting," he noted. "The words 'pride' and 'proud,' as used by the president and the secretary of defense, were redefined for me, as even -- or especially -- those working in areas seen to be mundane felt, rightly, that success was not possible without them."

Noting progress in Iraq, McConnell said the way ahead for U.S. forces is clear to him. "The exit strategy would be that when the Iraqis are ready to take over, we leave -- and not until," he said. "And that works for me."

Paul Brandus, a reporter for news station WTOP in the nation's capital, said the trip showed him that the respect he already had for servicemembers is well-deserved.

"The pre-existing view I think that was reinforced was the respect I have for the American soldier - the gratitude and appreciation I have for the very difficult job they're doing under what can only be described, in some cases, as life-threatening conditions," he said.

Though the trip wasn't long enough to make him an expert, Brandus said, it did open his eyes to the progress Iraq is making. "I do sense that things are better than they were six months ago," he said. "I'm not sure if that constitutes a trend or not, but I think they're moving in the right direction. I wish them well.

"They've got a long way to go, too, and if they take more responsibility for their own country, then we can get our guys out, and hopefully they can move down the path of democracy," he added.

Brandus said he doesn't expect that evolution to make Iraq the same as the United States. "But as long as they're stable and reasonably prosperous, I think that's good enough, and I think that will set a good example for the rest of the Middle East," he said.

By John D. Banusiewicz
American Forces Press Service
afisnews_sender@DTIC.MIL

Iraqi Businessman Says His Country Appreciates Americans' Sacrifices

WASHINGTON, May 1, 2005 – Rubar S. Sandi, an Iraqi businessman, wants the American public to know U.S. troops killed in Iraq have not died in vain.

"Your sons, your husband," he said to the wife of Army Capt. Bill Jacobsen, who died in a suicide-bomb attack in Mosul, Iraq, "I don't call them dead; they live in every one of us.

"You all need to be proud of your sons and daughters," he said. "They are doing a terrific job. Their lives have definitely not been wasted. They are there because of you."

Sandi, an outspoken critic of Saddam Hussein, was a guest speaker at an April 27 luncheon sponsored by the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, which aims to help families through the grief process.

Sandi, president and CEO of The Sandi Group, a security and logistics firm with headquarters in Washington and Baghdad, and one of the largest employers in Iraq, said that despite the violence in Iraq, the majority of Iraqis appreciate the sacrifice U.S. servicemembers have made for their country.

"The message (Iraqis) have for America is to please stay," he said.

Sandi explained that Iraqis see violence against Americans as a "horrible thing."

"If you ask the Iraqi people, the majority -- 95 percent -- will say they are happier," he said. "If you go through the streets of Baghdad you see restaurants and tea shops open until (2 or 3 a.m.).

"'If you asked them, 'Are you happy?' They will say, 'Absolutely,'" he said.

However, Sandi said, it is the stories of servicemembers dying in violent car-bomb attacks that grab media headlines. Such violence overshadows how happy Iraqis are about the tremendous progress being made "from health to education to electricity to clean water," he said.

"People have hope, that's the biggest progress that you can imagine," he explained. "During Saddam, people were dying for nothing, their lives were worthless."

Sandi told the group he understands the pain of Americans who have lost loved ones fighting for Iraq's freedom. He said several of his security personnel have been "killed and executed" by terrorists, and others have died defending against insurgent attacks on U.S. servicemembers.

"We are fighting side by side with your sons and daughters," he said. "We are fighting for the same cause.

"I do pray for President Bush, the Americans and specifically for the U.S. armed forces for their dedication and for them sacrificing their lives to defend freedom," he added. "Even if you don't believe in Iraq, you must believe in America."

Sandi also told the group that he believes peace will one day come to Iraq, but it will be a "long journey."

"We have to take it step by step," he said. "Things will get better."

By Sgt. 1st Class Doug Sample, USA
American Forces Press Service

From: Press Service

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

Operation netted suspects, weapons; no Americans killed

chicagotribune.com

IRAQ IN TRANSITION: IN HAQLANIYAH

GIs launch new tactic against enemy fighters

By James Janega
Tribune staff reporter

May 3, 2005

HAQLANIYAH, Iraq -- After an hour of shooting, rocket-propelled grenades were still crisscrossing in front of Sgt. Aaron Hanselman, and he was looking at the horizon for backup as bullets snapped through the air around his men.

"It was whizzing by. Our gunner swears that a couple hit the Humvee," said Hanselman, 28, a mobile assault team leader and Marine reservist from Marysville, Ohio.



...to continue the story go here.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0505030117may03,1,2904226.story?page=2&cset=true&ctrack=1