LTC Bob

Merry Christmas From Iraq

Posted in LTC Bob on December 25th, 2007 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

Courtesy of LTC Bob.

Morgan 31

Uneventful but fairly quiet day here. We worked, but no meetings and got to sleep till 0800, so pretty good. We took a drive over to Sather AFB at Baghdad International Airport this afternoon and snuck a few pictures of air traffic coming in and out.

Thought I would share some of the decorations I have – Steve and Kathy McKinney’s crew made these, they look like they started out as Play-doh, and then turned into more like some kind of foam stuff – anyway they are pretty cool.

4 Snowman House of Horror c

1 Snow Dudes c

5 desk decorations c

Hope everyone is having a great Christmas.

And, some recommended reading.

The weather this Christmas Eve in East Rashid was a touch cool for many, but sunny and bright. It was a good day for walking, and better yet, for strolling and seeing what was going on, and what the stores had out. Only one still had Christmas trees for sale, the other that was selling them had sold out. The walk itself was unremarkable, and that was indeed the remarkable thing this day.

LTC Bob’s Recommended Reading

Posted in LTC Bob on December 19th, 2007 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

For 12/19/2007 – You Just Drive On.

Staff Sgt. William Corp work out with a boogie-board on the wave-rider in the rehab center, I couldn’t help thinking of the best line from a bad film, “Apocalypse Now”:

“Charlie don’t surf.”

Well, maybe the Viet Cong didn’t ride the waves, but our latest generation of severely wounded veterans do. Recovering from the loss of his right leg in a roadside-bomb attack in Iraq, Staff Sgt. Corp ran through his rehab routine – then started doing somersaults in the pressure-generated waves.

LTC Bob’s Recommended Reading

Posted in LTC Bob on December 4th, 2007 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

For Tuesday, December 4th;

The Tipping of West Rasheed, Part One

It is an area where Sunni enclaves are facing “Shia-fication” as powerful interests seek to drive the Sunni out of Baghdad; and, it is an area where the Shia militias have freely operated and attempted to spread out from urban Baghdad to attack and disrupt Sunni areas. As Captain Lee Showman of Task Force 1-18 (Vanguards) of the storied 1st Infantry Division notes, “Since we arrived in West Rasheed we have seen the Sunni population driven from the urban areas of Aamel, Jihad, and Risalah, an ongoing attempt to drive all Sunnis from Saydiyah…”

Nine months ago, this area was “al Qaeda Central” and was not only an area of combat, but also a major route into Baghdad for terrorists. It was an area in which kidnappings, murders, direct attacks, snipers, IEDs, and more threatened not only Coalition troops, but the locals as well. It was truly hostile ground, and as Capt. Showman notes in a bit of understatement, it was and is an “…interesting area with an enormous amount of dynamics which make it an extremely difficult counterinsurgency fight.”

The Latest From LTC Bob

Posted in LTC Bob on November 19th, 2007 by Bigwig – 2 Comments

Last month, me and MAJ Mike Biankowski went down to Camp Echo, in Diwaniyah. Camp Echo is the coalition base: Poles, Mongols, Armenians, and a bunch of others. We had a small US engineer detachment working there at the time, putting up T walls for a new Joint Security Station. Me and Mile lucked into our trip when their crane went down and needed some new hydraulic hoses. We boldly volunteered to be the guys to fly them down. Well, anything to get off Victory Base is more like the truth.

Anyway, we flew from Liberty Helipad on 18 October at about 0930, enroute to Camp Delta, at Al Kut, our first stop. First picture is of a Baghdad street scene as we flew out.

010 Baghdad intersection

Second picture is of a highway interchange, and I left it full size so you can blow it up and check the details.

015 Baghdad highway

Note Iraqi Police car at center beneath bridge and officer standing at roadside. Also at extreme right, note red, white and black building on highway bridge and barricades – this is an Iraqi Army traffic checkpoint. Various concrete walls and barriers at bottom, top right and other places are part of the Baghdad barrier plan, which has been quite successful in controlling flow of bad guys in and out of the capital. All these “minor details” are new since I was here last.

Third photo is of a mud village we flew over on the way to Al Jut – lots of details there as well.
31 mud village

Sorry for the “smudgy” look – these were shot through the windows on the UH-60 so are not too clear.

We landed and the crew shut down the bird, as we had to wait to carry some local big wigs (sheiks) up to Baghdad on the return trip, and they were late. The first photo is what you can see from the flight line at lovely Camp Delta, the FOB of Choice.

33 Welcome to FOB Delta

Delta is an old Iraqi AF base – nice runways – you can see it easily if you check out Google Maps – search for Al Kut, Iraq, select hybrid view and then look to the south west of town across the river – you can’t miss the air base with the twin runways and the old fighter dispersal areas.

We were on the ground for awhile, so we talked to the KBR firemen, had some water, took another picture or two.

37 me

Finally the Iraqi big shots arrived, we all loaded up on the bird, belted in, shut the doors.

42 recharge

43 rest break

The pilot hits the start button and that whiny noise of a turbine spinning up starts for a few seconds and then shuts off. The crew chief opens the door on my side of the bird (left) and motions for me to get out. He and the other crewman (well, crew-woman) start “pumping up” the hydraulic accumulator, that stores air pressure at about 3000 psi that is used to push the hydraulic fluid that starts the auxiliary power unit that starts the main engines.

47 broken UH

It was pretty hard work – and it of course got harder as it went along – since the pressure continued to go up. They had to take some breaks during the program.

So after they had the accumulator pumped up, I got back in, they got back in and we tried again. Then I got out and they pumped it back up and we got back in and we tried to start it again. And again, and again. I think maybe four of five times.

By then, the crew was fagged out from pumping up the system, and it was clear we weren’t going anywhere fast. You can tell when they open up every access panel on the bird and start poking all around. The crew guessed that the igniter was out on the APU – they said “It’s supposed to be making a clicking noise and I can’t hear it clicking”. The raw fuel leaking out of the exhaust was kind of neat, too.

I thought it was great however, because unlike in the USAF, the crew immediately got out their tools and started to try and figure out what was wrong with the bird, and the two crew chiefs from the other bird came over to help out. In the good ole USAF, the plane breaks, and the Pilots Union and Crew Union members sit down for a break and wait till the Mechanic Union members arrive, helped by the Truck Driver Union and Ladder Placement Union members…

So the Iraqi big shots went to sit in their air conditioned SUVs and we watched the crew mess with the bird.

More later….

Postscript:

As you may know, there are quite a few countries with soldiers over here- I think between 25-30 or so… Anyway – here’s a test: What flag in on the first photo?

Flag

Answer is on the second.

read more »

Banned In Iraq

Posted in LTC Bob on November 2nd, 2007 by Bigwig – 2 Comments

An email from LTC Bob. He is unable to read the timeless prose we generate.

Believe it or not – I can’t read Silflay. Our systems admins have some kind of “big brother” program running on the LAN over here called Bluecoat Proxy that blocks all kinds of stuff – including Silflay Hraka, which, according to its tiny encoded decision making process, is a “Political/Activist Groups;Blogs/Newsgroups” and is blocked.

We’re trying to get them to change the settings – hope we can do that – pretty ridiculous in this day and age.

“Political/Activist?” Rather a broad category. There must be thousands of other blogs banned, if that is so.

Hraka is also banned in China. Who have thought that Operation Iraqi freedom would have so much in common with the Chi-coms?

LTC Bob’s Recommended Reading

Posted in LTC Bob on November 2nd, 2007 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

for Friday, November 2nd.

The Longest Morning

The four-man sniper team hustled to the northern gate of the apartment building, cut the lock, and quietly moved into the courtyard. Morley instructed Moser and Corriveau to remain behind to close the gate and remove other signs of the team’s presence, while he and Willis made their way into the building and up the stairs. Moser pulled security while Corriveau quietly closed the gate and replaced the lock, and then the two followed the others inside, clearing the stairwell as they ascended, but not going into the hallways of the apartment building, as they didn’t want to alert the inhabitants of their presence.

The four-man team emerged onto the northern half of the roof and surveyed their surroundings. The building was set up with two staircases, one on the north side and one on the south side, both of which opened up onto the top of the building facing west. Dividing the north and south halves of the roof was a four-foot high, east-west running wall. The entire perimeter of the building’s top was lined with a wall of the same height.

Once the area had been secured and the OP established, there was little to do but watch the street around the building. The team took turns keeping watch and sleeping; they had done hundreds of these before, and, while things could get hairy at times, their job involved far more boredom than excitement — especially if they were careful, as they always were, to keep their heads down and not let anybody below know that they were there.

Unfortunately, unbeknownst to the four men of Reaper Two, one of the building’s occupants had seen them enter and had passed the information along.

Hello From Iraq

Posted in LTC Bob on October 29th, 2007 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

The latest from LTC Bob, in an email he sent to a school class that had sent his unit some posters and drawings.

Dear Class-

Thanks for the great poster and the book of pictures that you sent me. I have shared them with the rest of the Engineers here in Baghdad. We really like them. We have Soldiers from the US Army, Sailors from the US Navy, Airmen from the US Air Force and Marines from the US Marine Corps working here, and we have some civilians and contractors helping us, too.

We do lots of different things here in Iraq, like build roads and bridges, help the Iraqi Army, and try to help the Iraqi People make their country better. I sent you four pictures and also a map of Iraq for you to see. The first picture is of me standing by a US Army helicopter.

LTC Bob

The second and third ones are pictures of Iraqi farmer’s houses in the south-central part of the country. You can see goats, turkeys, sheep and cows in some of them.

Iraqi farmer house 1

Iraqi farmer house 2

The last picture is a Polish helicopter – some of the soldiers here are from Poland and they are helping us.

Polish heliocopter

I hope you have are having a good school year.

Take care-

LTC Bob

LTC Bob’s Recommended Reading

Posted in LTC Bob on October 1st, 2007 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

Why We’re Winning Now in Iraq

Fishes Of Iraq: Dinnertime

Posted in Birds of Iraq, LTC Bob on September 11th, 2007 by Fiver – 2 Comments

The latest from LTC Bob.

Fishing has begun again here at the Boathouse in Camp Victory. As many of you may remember, we did fish a bit last go around, and caught a few. There are several kinds of fish here – some are pretty disgusting – some kind of little catfish that looks more like a snake than a fish, and some others with huge teeth that resembles a bowfin which seem pretty gross to me, but not to everyone evidently – although I do respect a species that’s managed to hang on for 150 M years!!

Anyway, here at Bldg 36 it’s mainly a carp show. Carp are considered a food fish here and in most of Europe, and I have tasted some smoked carp that a local guy had last time and it was quite good.

CDR Jeff Hicks, USN, is here with us as our Facilities Chief. Last go around, he worked at another HQ: Multi-National Security Transition Command – Iraq, MNSTC-I, commanded by then LTG Petraeus.

i15Iraqi Fish Fry 1

i16DSCF1442

i17DSCF1448

In that job, he got to go run around and see cool stuff, including the cookout shown on the above pics. Our Senior Chief Petty Officer who works in Facilities caught a carp yesterday and Jeff dug up the photos. Jeff said they cooked on the sticks for awhile, then they put the fish, skin down, on the coals to finish off.

i3KIF_0932

i5KIF_0933

The other pics are of a kid baking bread. This is very similar to the way I saw them do it in Afghanistan as well. They stick the flat bread on the inside wall of the oven, let it cook, then grab it out with tongs. It is really good, but of course you have to eat it right away. No preservatives!

The Latest…

Posted in LTC Bob, Uncategorized on September 7th, 2007 by Fiver – Be the first to comment

From LTC Bob

A message from General Petraeus; MNF-I Commanding General’s Letter to the Troops 7 SEP 07

Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines, Coast Guardsmen, and Civilians of Multi-National Force-Iraq:

We are now over two-and-a-half months into the surge of offensive operations made possible by the surge offerees, and I want to share with you my view of how I think we’re doing. This letter is a bit longer than previous ones, since I feel you deserve a detailed description of what I believe we have -and have not – accomplished, as Ambassador Crocker and I finalize the assessment we will provide shortly to Congress.

Up front, my sense is that we have achieved tactical momentum and wrested the initiative from our enemies in a number of areas of Iraq. The result has been progress in the security arena, although it has, as you know, been uneven. Additionally, as you all appreciate very well, innumerable tasks remain and much hard work lies ahead. We are, in short, a long way from the goal line, but we do have the ball and we are driving down the field.

We face a situation that is exceedingly complex. Al Qaeda, associated insurgent groups, and militia extremists, some supported by Iran, continue to carry out attacks on us, our Iraqi partners, and the Iraqi civilians we seek to secure. We have to contend with the relentless pace of operations, the crushing heat, and the emotions that we all experience during long deployments and tough combat. And we operate against a backdrop of limited Iraqi governmental capacity, institutions trying to rebuild, and various forms of corruption. All of this takes place in a climate of distrust and fear that stems from the sectarian violence that did so much damage to the fabric of Iraqi society in 2006 and into 2007, not to mention the decades of repression under Saddam’s brutal regime. Tragically, sectarian violence continues to cause death and displacement in Baghdad and elsewhere, albeit at considerably reduced levels from 8 months ago, due, in large part, to your hard work and sacrifice together with our Iraqi counterparts.

In spite of these challenges, our operations – particularly the offensive operations we have conducted since mid-June – have helped produce progress in many areas on the ground. In fact, the number of attacks across the country has declined in 8 of the past 11 weeks, reaching during the last week in August a level not seen since June 2006. This trend is not just a result of greater numbers of Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces; it also reflects your determination, courage, and skill in conducting counter-insurgency operations. By taking the fight to the enemy, you have killed or captured dozens of leaders and thousands of members ofAl Qaeda-Iraq and extremist militia elements, you have taken many ofAl Qaeda’s former sanctuaries away from them, and you have dismantled a number of their car bomb and improvised explosive device networks. By living among the population with our Iraqi partners, you have been holding the areas you have cleared. By helping Iraqis reestablish basic services and local governance, you have helped exploit the security gains. And by partnering closely with Iraqi Security Forces, you have been strengthening Iraqi elements that will one day have sole responsibility for protecting their population. Indeed, while Iraqi forces clearly remain a work in progress, Iraqi soldiers and police are very much in the fight, and they continue to sustain losses that are two to three times our losses.

We are also building momentum in an emerging area of considerable importance – local reconciliation. Local Iraqi leaders are coming forward, opposing extremists, and establishing provisional units of neighborhood security volunteers. With growing Government of Iraq support, these volunteers are being integrated into legitimate security institutions to help improve local security. While this concept is playing out differently in various areas across Iraq, it is grounded in a desire shared by increasing numbers of Iraqis – to oppose extremist elements and their ideologies. This is very significant because, as many of you know first-hand. extremists cannot survive without the support of the population. The popular rejection ofAl Qaeda and its ideology has, for example, helped transform Anbar Province this year from one of the most dangerous areas of Iraq to one of the safest. The popular rejection of extremists has helped Coalition and Iraqi Forces take away other areas from AI Qaeda as well, and we are seeing a spread of this sentiment in an ever-increasing number ofSunni areas. Now, in fact, we are also seeing a desire to reject extremists emerge in many Shi’a areas.

The progress has not, to be sure, been uniform across Baghdad or across Iraq. Accomplishments in some areas – for example, in Ramadi and in Anbar Province – have been greater than any of us might have predicted six months ago. The achievements in some other areas – for example, in some particularly challenging Baghdad neighborhoods and in reducing overall civilian casualties, especially those caused by periodic, barbaric Al Qaeda bombings – have not been as dramatic. However, the overall trajectory has been encouraging, especially when compared to the situation at the height of the sectarian violence in late 2006 and early 2007.

Many of us had hoped this summer would be a time of tangible political progress at the national level as well. One of the justifications for the surge, after all, was that it would help create the space for Iraqi leaders to tackle the tough questions and agree on key pieces of “national reconciliation” legislation. It has not worked out as we had hoped. All participants, Iraqi and coalition alike, are dissatisfied by the halting progress on major legislative initiatives such as the oil framework law, revenue sharing, and de-ba’athification reform. At the same time, however, our appreciation of what this legislation represents for Iraqi leaders has grown. These laws are truly fundamental in nature and will help determine how Iraqis will share power and resources in the new Iraq. While much work remains to be done before these critical issues are resolved, the seriousness with which Iraqi leaders came together at their summit in late August has given hope that they are up to the task before them, even if it is clearly taking more time than we initially expected.

In the coming months, our coalition’s countries and all Iraqis wilt continue to depend on each of you and on our Iraqi counterparts to keep the pressure on the extremists, to help improve security and strengthen the rule of law for all Iraqis, to work with the Government of Iraq to integrate local volunteers into local security and national institutions, to assist with the restoration and improvement of basic services, and to continue the development of conditions that foster reconciliation. For our part. Ambassador Crocker and I will continue to do everything in our power to help the Prime Minister and the Government of Iraq achieve the meaningful results that will ensure that your sacrifices and those of your comrades help produce sustainable security for Iraq over the long term. A stable and secure Iraq that denies extremists a safe haven and has a government that is representative of and responsive to all Iraqis helps protect the vital interests of our coalition countries. A stable and secure Iraq will also benefit Iraq’s citizens and Iraq’s neighbors alike, bringing calm to a region full of challenges and employing Iraq’s human capital and natural resource blessings for the benefit of all.

As I noted at the outset of this letter, over the next few days. Ambassador Crocker and I will share with the U.S. Congress and the American people our assessment of the situation in Iraq. I will also describe the recommendations I have provided to my chain of command. I will go before Congress conscious of the strain on our forces, the sacrifices that you and your families are making, the gains we have made in Iraq, the challenges that remain, and the importance of building on what we and our Iraqi counterparts have fought so hard to achieve.

Thanks once again for what each of you continues to do. Our Nations have asked much of you and your families. It remains the greatest of honors to serve with you.

Sincerely,

David H. Petraeus
General, United States Army
Commanding