Pages

Thursday, August 18, 2011

I am BRAVO team leader.

********************** WARNING NOT FOR SENSITIVE EARS!!!***********************
This video is of a dismount op we did. The first three minutes is us dismounting and going into the village. The next three minutes are of a conversation with an 8 or 9yr old Iraqi kid . The last two minutes are of us mounting back up.
It was very dark out so you wont be able to see much but worth a listen.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Rough start good ending

Woke up this afternoon very tired from having not slept well. I got to work and saw that we had a mounted brushback mission so I took the least involved position of being a passenger in the back of the MRAP with the medic. We get all loaded up and and roll out from the ready room and headed for our exit checkpoint. As we are cruising through VBC the driver of my MRAP jumps on the brakes and brings us to a very abrupt halt, after peeling my face off the air conditioning system I ask the driver wtf that was all about? He informs us that a pack of skinnies to our 9 had kicked a soccer ball into the road and stopped to avoid running it over. After the TC(truck commander) and driver look around to see if they could see the ball but couldnt, they called it clear and we continued on. We make it out to our check point and go on with our mission that ended up being a uneventfull cruise through the red zone and then we returned to our ready room. Once there the gunner of the truck behind us let us know that we had in fact ran over the soccer ball.  Well apparently this did not sit well with the skinnies cause they started yelling, throwing stuff and flipping the bird to them. Then he points to our white board and someone had written MRAP 1 soccer ball 0. We all had a good laugh over that.

After a few hours rest it was time for us to pull our tower duty which was as eventfull as it sounds. I passed my time by messing with the Ugandan, his name is Robert.

Me . . . So how long have you been in Iraq Robert?
Robert . . . 3 years.
Me . . . Have you shot anyone?
Robert . . . No.
Me . . .You have been in Iraq for 3 years and aint shot anyone?
Robert . . . No sir.
Me . . . Look at me Robert. Now pay attention. You are leaving at the end of this year cause VBC is shutting down correct?
Robert . . . Yes sir.
Me . . . Before you leave here, you HAVE to shoot someone!
Me . . . Shoot an Iraqi.
Me . . . Its required that you shoot someone.
Me . . . Its in the Geneva convention, look it up.
I crack myself up.

My relief shows up and I update him as to what activity I had seen and then head down the 7 flights of stairs to the dirt road below, then walk about 300 meters down the road to my pickup spot. Its about 0430hrs at this point and dawn of the new day is progressing nicely. I have some time before my ride shows up, so I take a seat on a jersey barrier, turn on my hajipod, pop in my headphones and enjoy watching the little brown sparrows swoop through the air after the morning bugs as well as watching a slight breeze sway the tall grass and reeds that line a small creek in front of me. While im sitting there enjoying this I think to myself how freaking cool this is! Sitting on a jersey barrier alone, in full body armour, with weapon, listening to music, watching nature while the sun slowly lights up the sky in IRAQ.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

New crap hole to live in and new stuff to do.

Well my mission at FOB prosperity ended and my command didnt want us sitting around for the next month or so, so they got us a new one which required us to move to a new FOB. I am currently living and operating out of the VBC http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victory_Base_Complex . The place itself sucks cause there is no trees or shade producing anything here so it gets amazingly hot. Plus since VBC is a highly targeted place almost every mission conducted buy us troops requires us to wear full body armour which makes the intense heat even more taxing on our bodies.

Me and most of the soldiers on my shift go to bed shortly after our shift. When we wake up in the mid afternoon we go to the gym and then shower before changing and heading off to our ready room for our shift. By the time we get to the showers the water tank outside has been in the sun long enough that turning on only the cold faucet produces almost perfect temperature water for showering and shaving. Turning on the hot water knob aint even a possibility cause it would just burn the crap outta you.
My first sunday here I didnt go to the gym since its my rest day so I set about sweeping and mopping my room. Afetr the sweeping was done I was contemplating the best place to get water for my mop bucket, and I figured that the pallet of bottled drinking water just outside my room would be warm enough to mop with. So I go grab a 12 pack of 1 liter bottles and bring it back to my room and I start pouring them one by one into my bucket. After the third or fourth one my hands couldnt take it anymore. The water was so hot that I had to give my hands a few moments to cool down before I could open and pour anymore.

I am back on the night shift again which makes life a little more pleasant but also includes us in a lot more missions cause it falls on the times that insurgents are prone to attacking. Plus trying to sleep during the day is hard enough to do without apache and blackhawk helicopters flying directly over top of our CHU's along with the KBR hacks coming in and doing inventory of our rooms or testing out the smoke detectors and checking the fire extinguishers. Im not even gonna get started on ranting and raving about the KBR pukes cause it just pisses me off.

Anyways our new mission has three parts to it. 1. QRF 2. Tower guard 3. Brush back.
QRF(quick reaction force) for us is basically sitting in our ready room waiting for something to happen on VBC such as mortars/rockets that have landed inside our walls or providing security/overwatch at an ECP cause of a suspected item/person/vehicle.

Tower guard is just what it sounds like. We sit in a tower with a Uganda, African on top of the wall seperating our base from the rest of Iraq. There is a road just on the other side of our wall that is used frequently buy US forces and Iraqis as well and a wall on the other side of that for an Iraq village. We are keeping an eye out for suspicious activity such as insurgents digging in either walls or the ground trying to plant an IED which they have successfully done as recently as a month ago. We also keep traffic flowing by not allowing people or vehicles to dawdle for more than a few seconds without putting our ROE(rules of engagement) into effect. We are also in place for IRAM( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lob_bomb ) mitigation  by scanning our sectors as far out as 700 meters. A FOB not long ago had 4 soldiers killed by a 240mm IRAM cause the towers then were only manned by Ugandans and they didnt fire a single shot till after the IRAM was launched. Because of the Ugandans hesitancy and lack of training no insurgents were killed or captured and now this is why we are in the towers with them making sure they stay awake and do their job.

Brush back means we patrol the road  adjacent to our wall outside the wire looking for IED's or signs of someone trying to prep an area for an IED. We patrol the same section of road that a month ago 2 uparmoured humvees were blasted with an EFP(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosively_formed_penetrator) and killed 2 northern Idaho soldiers. We will also dismount our MRAP's and me and another NCO will take our squads into the villages as a presence patrol as well as IRAM mitigation by talking to the local people trying to get intel on unknown/known or suspicious people in their village trying to launch ordnance into our base from there as well as searchign their village for signs of insurgent activity.