Did the title grab your attention? I thought it might - hang on and I'll explain in a moment.
Before we get to the
War Pigs from the 3rd Platoon, 84th Engineer Company, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, I wanted to draw your attention to an article on the emerging
Cholera Crisis in Baghdad from David Smith,
The Observer. Remember David's reporting while embedded with the 2nd SCR? Here is his latest...just one more challenge our warriors from the 2nd SCR are dealing with while on patrol in Baghdad...
Now to the
War Pigs...the 2nd SCR is blessed to have talented
combat engineer's supporting their counter-IED mission in Iraq. These engineers run route-clearing missions to protect our loved ones from deadly road-side bombs. In my opinion, a job that doesn't get enough publicity or respect.
The
War Pigs use a series of tools like the
Buffalo (Mine Protected Vehicle) to help them do their job. However, they also dismount and get up close and personal with potential IEDs. Check out the pictures that accompany the article - crazy stuff, eh? Can I see a virtual show of hands for those who would trade jobs with the
War Pigs? I thought so...
Before you watch another football replay tonight, give Seth Robson's latest article in the Stars and Stripes a read...and join me in applauding the
efforts of the War Pigs for their work to clear the way for our 2nd SCR warriors.
Here is a virtual tip of the hat to the
War Pigs from the 3rd Platoon, 84th Engineer Company, 2nd Cavalry Regiment - well done guys, well done! War Pigs, a fitting name given the work you guys do...By Seth Robson, Stars and StripesEuropean edition, Sunday, December 2, 2007BAGHDAD — Trash, dead animals, concrete blocks and street rubble appear to fascinate soldiers from the 84th Engineer Company, 2nd Cavalry (Stryker) Regiment.
On daily route-clearance missions, the engineers roll out of Camp Liberty, part of a sprawling complex of bases connected to Baghdad International Airport, and drive for hours paying close attention to what they find by the side of the road.
“Was that Coke bottle there yesterday? How about that plastic bag? Is that a piece of wire running out of that hole in the ground? That’s really strange … weird. Let’s grid-reference that lump of concrete. Let’s take a closer look at that piece of half-buried metal,” the soldiers say as they make their way through traffic-clogged urban streets or along dirt back roads in search of roadside bombs.
Their missions are one of several measures the Army takes to defeat roadside bombs, which have killed hundreds of U.S. troops in Iraq over the past four years.
On Thursday morning, the 84th’s 3rd Platoon, the War Pigs, cleared about 40 kilometers of roads connecting Camp Liberty to Combat Outpost Aztec, a smaller 2nd Cav base surrounded by semi-rural land on Baghdad’s southern fringe.
One of the platoon soldiers, Staff Sgt. Chester Wall, 34, of Rapid City, S.D., did this work when the unit was last in Iraq, in Mosul in 2005.
Back then, the engineers would mount combat patrols and drive 35 to 40 mph searching for roadside bombs. Now, Wall said, route-clearance missions travel at 5 to 10 mph and rely on a mix of Strykers with plows, a Husky observation platform and the Buffalo — a heavily armored vehicle with a robotic arm used to “interrogate” suspected bombs.
Insurgents have gotten better at disguising their bombs, but engineers have gotten better at finding them, Wall said. And when the soldiers spot something suspicious, they can use the Buffalo to roll up to it and use the robotic arm to roll it over or dig it up to see what it is.
“A lot of people think we are crazy, but that’s what combat engineers do,” he said. “It is no different than back in World War II when they cleared with mine detectors, except now we have all this equipment and vehicles.” Sometimes the bombs explode in front of the Buffalo.
“It isn’t cool. It’s like if you are hit by an NFL linebacker with no pads on,” said Wall, who despite being the victim of one such blast still presses his face close to the Buffalo’s shrapnel-proof windows to get a close look at objects as they are inspected.
The 84th has found eight roadside bombs during two months in Baghdad. Only one has struck the engineers so far — an explosively formed penetrator that shot in front of a Stryker during an Oct. 8 ambush that involved mortars, small arms and a rocket-propelled grenade. The unit killed a three-man enemy RPG team during the encounter, Wall said.
Occasionally, the engineers dismount to inspect things such as ditches and culverts. On this day, Spc. Michael Stevens, 24, of Warren, Mich., climbed out to check inside a drain, crawling into the darkness with a flashlight to see what was down there.
They also dismounted to look for weapons hidden behind berms or in prickly bushes.
During one search, Wall spotted a plastic container filled with what an explosive ordnance disposal team confirmed was homemade explosives. Former Sunni insurgents who have turned against al-Qaida often dump weapons in the area, soldiers said.
But as Wall probed around the explosives for other buried ordnance, an RPG fired from nearby forced the platoon to set up a defensive position while EOD soldiers came to detonate the homemade explosives.
For 30 minutes, Apache attack helicopters circled overhead until the explosives were disposed of.
Second Lt. Erich Schnee, 27, of Dayton, Ohio, the 3rd Platoon leader, said his unit takes its time on route-clearance missions. Thursday’s took seven hours.
“This is what engineers do out here. We go out and clear routes nice and slow and make sure they are safe for coalition forces,” he said.
The explosives find was a small but satisfying one, he said.
“It wasn’t a huge find, but we feel like we could possibly have saved someone’s life today,” he said.
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Chris, you are in our prayers son and we love you more than you will ever know. Be safe!
v/r,
- Collabman
2 comments:
When I hear the word engineer, I am reminded of my friends who work for oil companies, NASA and environmental agencies. In terms of the army I think of the Corps of Army Engineers, not young men who seek and difuse bombs. I wonder if any of them as young children ever said, " I want to be on a bomb squad when I grow up." I, too, tip my hat to them for their bravery. Thank you for making us aware of one more things our warriors do on a daily basis.
Ms. Marti - thanks for sharing and well said!
v/r,
- Collabman
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