Monday, November 12, 2007

Fear Breeds Alertness...

I am always looking to read stories filed by reporters embedded with the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment. Why? I think these journalists paint an interesting picture of life on the ground in Baghdad. Unlike us, they get to see firsthand what boots on the ground means to the 2nd SCR and the people of Iraq. Recently I posted a blog called Shadows... that included an article from Michael Gisick writing for The Albuquerque Tribune. I trust you had time to read it...

Now, a slightly different view - one from our friends across the big pond...read that Great Britain.

Ride along with David Smith, a British journalist writing for the Guardian Unlimited, the network of websites from the Guardian newspaper based in London, as he accompanies warriors from the 2nd SCR on patrol.

The first article in David's series called Inside the Green Zone is another great read and sets the stage for his first patrol with the 2nd SCR...

It makes me wish I could ride along...how 'bout you?

Enjoy...

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Apprehensive? Oh Yes.

In the second of his reflections, David Smith conveys the tension and nervousness of his first day out on patrol with US troops in Baghdad.

Tuesday November 13, 2007

Guardian Unlimited



Two children sit in front of a US soldier from 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment on patrol in Baghdad. Photograph: Stefano Rellandini/Reuters



The steel hatch swung up behind me like a drawbridge and snapped shut. My fate was sealed. I was sitting inside an armoured, eight-wheel Stryker vehicle and would spend the next 10 hours patrolling 'al-Qaida's last stronghold in Baghdad'. Apprehensive? Oh yes.

Fortunately the Stryker is probably the best there is and, I was told, able to withstand roadside bombs, the improvised explosive devices that have taken such a terrible toll on US forces. I tried not to think about the even more lethal explosively formed projectiles, which fire a slug of molten metal capable of penetrating the thickest armour.

With body armour, helmet, notebook and camera, I was sitting towards the rear of the Stryker with my back to the driver, in the middle of four soldiers who spent much of the journey standing at turrets with assault rifles. To my left and right were TV screens, clusters of wires and control panels, a fire extinguisher, an industrial strength laptop and, I noted, a box of sweets and an iPod. A thin film of sand clung to everything.

If I turned and looked over my shoulder in the half-light, I could see another bank of screens. One seemed fixed on a patriotic image of an US bald eagle spreading its wings paternally over heroic troops and vehicles. On another was a satellite photograph of Baghdad with blue icons representing important locations. Most fascinating was a laptop showing a live, roving aerial view beamed to us by a remote-controlled drone known as a Raven. Occasionally, after shivering and distorting for a moment, it would fix a suspicious vehicle in its crosshairs.

All in all, amid the beeps and voices crackling over the radio, it was like being inside a windowless submarine or space capsule, with a similar sense of venturing into the unknown as we passed beyond the perimeter fence which makes the vast US military base Camp Striker something of a safe haven.

On yet another screen I could follow our progress via an external camera. It showed a series of streetlights and palm trees flowing against the sky, and sometimes caught the sun as a bright, beautiful circle. Finally, after a bumpy ride, it showed buses, cars, billboards, bridges, mosque domes, telegraph poles, and rubbish-strewn streets. We were in town.

The confidence of the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment platoon was infectious. If you had to trust your life to anyone, these professional men with their hi-tech weapons would be high on the list. Yes, they said, they still feel fear, but with routine they learn to control it: fear breeds alertness, and is better that than getting cocky or casual.

So when we finally halted and the hatch lowered itself to the ground I didn't feel like a rabbit desperate to bolt for its burrow. I stepped into the sunlight and found a city like any other, yet not like any other: a street corner, a hardware shop, a child wearing a Chelsea badge. But also a building blackened by a recent bombing, a pile of rubbish turning rancid in the road and a deserted house with its windows shattered.

I got on with the journalism, interviewing an Iraqi man who said security was improving but asked how I would feel if, like him, had seen a family member bleed to death in the street because of a lack of medical provision. Later, a lieutenant-colonel remarked that this interviewee had been directing everyone on that street through his body language. I hadn't noticed.

We visited a school - a safehouse for Iraqis to provide information - a baker who fed us freshly cooked bread and numerous other stop-offs in al-Hadar, once one of Baghdad's most affluent suburbs. It's become something of cliche but US soldiers really did spread goodwill by pretending to spar with children, play football with them and throw them sweets. One has been nicknamed the "mayor" because residents go to him with their complaints about drains, rubbish collection and so on.

Darkness closed in and we ground to a halt. The hatch opened again but this time the vehicle commander told me: "David, I'm gonna leave you in here because we're dealing with a sniper and I don't want you to get shot." Sniper fire, aimed at nearby Iraqi security volunteers, had hit some water 20 metres from us. The gunman had vanished into the darkness.

On our way back, the troops had got used to me, or maybe forgotten my presence. There was talk of baseball and ice hockey rivalries and the swearwords flew thick and fast. Back at base, the care they had shown me all day extended to handing me a takeaway meal.


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"The confidence of the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment platoon was infectious. If you had to trust your life to anyone, these professional men with their hi-tech weapons would be high on the list."

Wow - how about that statement?

v/r,
- Collabman

2 comments:

Marti said...

That statement jumped out at me, as well. Just think that a few short months ago we sent, for the most part, our young soldiers who had not yet seen war to the world's hotspot. Now to hear someone say they are the ones to protect your life lets us know how competent they are.
Having a bit of fear before going out on each mission definitely does keep you alert. I remember once hearing an interview with stage actor Hume Cronin who said that if he didn't have some butterflies before each performance then his performance would be off for that day.We certainly don't want our soldiers to be off on any given day.

Collabman said...

Marti - zactly! In a combat zone having a "bad day" could have significant consequences for the warrior and those around him/her...well said.

v/r,
- Collabman