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    ‘Ghostrider’ soldiers clear the way for operations

    ‘Ghostrider’ soldiers clear the way for operations

    Courtesy Photo | Combat engineers with 1st Platoon, Company C, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion,...... read more read more

    CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE ADDER, IRAQ

    07.07.2011

    Courtesy Story

    3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division

    CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE ADDER, Iraq – As the sun sets on the desert horizon, the highways of southern Iraq empty of civilian traffic.

    Although the local population begins to go home for the night, a new type of traffic emerges on Iraq’s highways. Long rows of headlights are exiting forward operating bases all across Iraq. Trucks either full of goods going to the soldiers further north or loaded with equipment heading for Kuwait.

    As combat logistic patrols begin their hauls into the dark of night, a small group of vehicles separates from them: vehicles brightly lit but moving slowly and deliberately.

    These are the improvised explosive device hunters of the United States Forces-Iraq looking for their next find.

    The combat engineers of Company C, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division, are out in full force to provide critical assured mobility across the Greywolf operational environment.

    As the only organic combat engineer company in the brigade, the "Ghostriders" have conducted more than 1,000 route clearance missions to date.

    They have covered more than 50,000 kilometers of highways and secondary roads in southern Iraq, searching for IEDs and explosively formed penetrators. As IED hunters, their task is to put their safety in jeopardy to ensure it for others. Their missions are anything but short.

    They are sometimes on the road for10 continuous hours, scanning every disturbance for deadly IEDs, enduring the 120 degree heat and yet courteous to Iraqi traffic patterns. Because of this, they have enabled the brigade to safely conduct hundreds of combat sustainment and resupply missions, which have supported over 15,000 soldiers, sailors, airmen and civilians in southern Iraq.

    “Our company conducts 24-hour operations, seven days a week, so we are constantly gathering intelligence from the battlefield to provide our platoons with the best operating picture for their missions,” said Spc. Christopher Fuentes a native of West Chester, N.Y.

    As one of Charlie Company’s Intelligence Support Teams (COIST) lead analysts, Fuentes is responsible for battle tracking and coordinating assets for seven route clearance teams across 150,000 square kilometers.

    Company C recently finished its fifth month of a twelve-month deployment to Iraq. As units and equipment begin to move south to Kuwait, the combat engineers of Company C will spearhead their movement.

    “It’s a large responsibility to undertake, to actively search for IEDs and clear the roads for the soldiers behind us, but it’s one that I’m proud to fulfill,” said Pvt. Sean Lee a native of White Plains, N.Y. “I want to be here with my unit, making a difference in the lives of others. I wouldn’t want it any other way.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.07.2011
    Date Posted: 07.19.2011 02:11
    Story ID: 73927
    Location: CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE ADDER, IQ

    Web Views: 21
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN