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    PSD: Not your everyday job

    PSD: Not Your Everyday Job

    Photo By Spc. Jason Dangel | BAGHDAD – Sgt. Fernando Rodriquez, command personal security detachment team leader,...... read more read more

    by Spc. Jason Dangel
    4th BCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.

    FOB PROSPERITY, Iraq – In the early morning hours, a Soldier awakens to the sound of his internal communications radio as a stern voice blaring over the radio instructs the leader to rally his men and be ready to move into southern Baghdad in less than 30 minutes.

    Fifteen minutes later, approximately 14 combat-ready Soldiers line-up their armored vehicles with their weapons ready and mounted atop their steel turrets. The Soldiers stand ready to greet the brigade commander before leaving the safe haven of a small forward operating base on the edge of the International Zone.

    This is the life of the Soldiers who make up the command Personal Security Detachment teams of the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division in Baghdad.

    The two 14-man teams are tasked to provide a means of safe and timely transportation for the brigade command team: Col. Michael Beech and Command Sgt. Maj. John Moody. The task requires a state of readiness 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week.

    "I couldn't do what I do without them," said Moody, who has more than 27 years of service.

    "They do a good job and take their job seriously," he said. "They take personal responsibility for taking me where we need to be, and when I get out of the vehicle, they are like those guys who take care of the president – secret service."

    There isn't a day when the two teams made up of infantrymen, cavalry scouts, tankers and military police don't see the highways of the bustling Iraqi city, either out on patrol with units from the 4th BCT or taking the command group to various meetings and ceremonies throughout central and southern Baghdad.

    "The PSD team is tasked with the responsibility of ensuring the safety of the (commander) and the command sergeant major for any and all missions and meetings within the Multi-National Division – Baghdad and 4th BCT area of operations," said Sgt. 1st Class Daniel Cardona, PSD noncommissioned officer-in-charge, 4th BCT.

    Approximately four months before deploying in December 2005, the Soldiers who make up the current command PSD teams were each selected for the security job they would be tasked to complete, Cardona said.

    Most of the Soldiers, he added, were very young and inexperienced when they showed up for their first day of duty.

    Unsure of how well the assortment of young Soldiers would work together, Cardona sent both teams through two weeks of initial training.

    "From the day the PSD was created, it was kind of thrown together," said Cardona, a 15-year Army veteran from Alice, Texas. "All the Soldiers came from different units and backgrounds, so the training gave me early assessments on what they needed to improve on as a cohesive security unit."

    The majority of the standardized training included a two-week course that encompassed convoy escort procedures, protection tactics for principle dignitaries and security procedures when moving the command staff through a combat zone, added Cardona.

    After the training, Cardona identified two leaders, who are now both designated team leaders for the two PSD teams: Staff Sgt. Bradley Hoy, an infantryman, from Llano, Texas, and Sgt. Jeffrey Rogers, a military policeman, from Buffalo, N.Y.

    Both veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Hoy and Rogers took comfortably to the leadership positions they were asked to fill and worked hard to ensure their Soldiers were trained and ready for their mission in the Iraqi capital, explained Cardona.

    "Truthfully, I don't think we could have done it without (the leaders)," Cardona said, speaking about the success of the PSD teams. "They both stepped up into an unfamiliar position and have done a great job leading their Soldiers."

    After four months of training, to include a three-week mission rehearsal exercise at Fort Hood, the two teams deployed with the rest of the brigade to Camp Buerhing, Kuwait, in late November 2005. To date, the teams have completed approximately 550 successful missions.

    Aside from the constant string of daily missions tasked to the two autonomous teams, when not traveling the streets of Baghdad, they can be found in the motor pool working on their humvees.

    Down time is hard to come by for the PSD Soldiers, who are constantly working to improve and upgrade the vehicles that carry the 4th BCT's command personnel.

    If a new armor upgrade is available, there is no question that it will be installed, said Spc. Alex Faiivae, a gunner for the commander's team.

    "There is definitely a lot of time spent in the motor pool," said Faiivae, a native of Woodridge, Va. "We have installed just about everything in terms of armor upgrades that is available. We have to have the highest amount of protection because we carry around the colonel and sergeant major – and they have to be safe."

    Most of the Soldiers are in the motor pool so often they even have their own coveralls, Faiivae said.

    There is no doubt that the PSD Soldiers have a busy schedule where sleep sometimes is a low priority, but that doesn't discourage the personal security troopers.

    Morale always remains high among the two teams, said Sgt. Gregory Thomson, a team leader on Moody's PSD.

    "The way our young Soldiers have grown in to what they are today is amazing," said Thomson, a native of Oglesby, Ill. "When they are asked to do something, they get it done, and they are always focused on their mission. They have all grown into some great Soldiers."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.16.2006
    Date Posted: 10.16.2006 13:36
    Story ID: 8027
    Location: BAGHDAD, IQ

    Web Views: 434
    Downloads: 284

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