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    Task Force Liberty Soldiers Work to Better Train Iraqi Forces

    SSG Young shows PHCU members the proper stance and how to hold their weapon

    Courtesy Photo | Staff Sgt. Robert Young, 1-112 Inf., shows members of the Provincial High Crimes unit...... read more read more

    TIKRIT, IRAQ

    08.30.2005

    Courtesy Story

    22nd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment   

    22nd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

    FORWARD OPERATING BASE DANGER, Tikrit, Iraq -- Task Force Liberty Soldiers work to better train Iraqi forces to take over when Coalition Forces with-draw from Iraq.

    Infantrymen with 1st Battalion, 112th Infantry, train some of Iraq's Provincial High Crimes unit in Tikrit, Iraq to properly search buildings in looking for some of Iraq's high target people wanted by Coalition and Iraqi forces.

    "We will control everything here if we continue to get more training, more information on how to do the missions and do our job the right way," said Capt. Ishmael Muhammed, PHC unit commander in Tikrit.

    The members of the PHC unit are eager to learn what they can in order to perform their missions better, a Coalition Soldier said.

    "I think they're getting there," said Staff Sgt. Robert Young, a police liaison with Company A, 1-112, and native of Monaca, Penn. "The motivation is there with a lot of the Iraqis. For now they still need our help, but in time I believe they will function quite well."

    The training that the 1-112th is giving the PHC unit is set up to simulate a real mission.

    "Their missions are to conduct raids for high-value targets -- people wanted by Coalition Forces and Iraqi forces," Young said. "This prepares them to go out and conduct these missions a little more safely and be more effective to obtain their mission."

    Iraqi forces find the training useful in obtaining their objectives, Muhammed said.

    "The training is very useful for us because we get more information on how to treat the people and on how to deal with the terrorists and also how to deal with problems around our sector and our community," he said.

    Young said one of the reasons the 1-112th is successful with their training is their work in the civilian world.

    "One thing that really helps is I'm a civilian police officer at home and I introduce myself that way to these guys so I think they find that common bond in policemen all over the world," he said. "They understand I'm here to help a brother in blue. They are very receptive to that rather than a normal Coalition Soldier."

    This training will also help Iraqi forces train themselves and spread what they have learned, Muhammed said.

    "The training helps me out a lot because by this I'll be able to give the training to my guys anytime I want," he said. "I will be able to train other people from other departments, and that will help us out a lot to control our situation."

    Young said that training the Iraqi police force better tactics is one of the most important missions in Iraq.

    "I believe it's the most important in Iraq at this time," he said. "Nobody wants to see the Iraqi army patrolling the streets of Tikrit or anywhere else in Iraq, that's a policeman's job."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 08.30.2005
    Date Posted: 08.30.2005 17:50
    Story ID: 2868
    Location: TIKRIT, IQ

    Web Views: 215
    Downloads: 58

    PUBLIC DOMAIN