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Home » News » World

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Soldiers on the ground offer mixed assessment

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  • Richard Tomkins/The Washington Times
ONE STEP FORWARD: Soldiers from the 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment have been deployed as many as three times to hot spots across Iraq. Although they have seen progress, they are skeptical of the post-surge environment.

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By

FORWARD OPERATING BASE NORMANDY, Iraq — Behind the recitation of facts and figures by Gen. David H. Petraeus in Capitol Hill testimony beginning today, the fluctuating moods and emotions of U.S. troops here are much harder to gauge.

Do the Americans — many of whom have survived multiple deployments of more than a year at a time — see the surge as a success? Do they see Iraqis making progress, taking responsibility for public safety, their own lives and their nation's future?

Responses vary from day to day and often depend on when the questions are asked.

When soldiers return from a mission outside the base, the frustrations come fast and furious. Later, when the tension eases and soldiers are a bit more relaxed, responses are far more reflective.

"[The Iraqis] were shocked when we came. When we got here, we walked around and the people didn"t even want to make eye contact with us," said Sgt. Rudy Parreno of the 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment. "They were scared. All they heard from al Qaeda were these stereotypical things about American forces. It took them a little while to gain a sense of trust.

"An older man with his family came up to me the other day and said that for the first time, he and his family have been able to have a good night's rest. That means a lot. That lets you know that everything you're doing in sector is paying off. You're making a difference."

The Stryker regiment has been involved with both urban kinetic combat and rural operations that goes back long before President Bush announced the troop surge more than a year ago.

In 2004 to 2005, the unit was deployed in the northern city of Mosul from their home base in Vilseck, Germany.

In September and October 2007, they fought pitched battles in southeastern Baghdad. In January this year, they chased al Qaeda out of Diyala province's "breadbasket" region, where al Qaeda had ridden roughshod for the previous two years.

Their mission today is not only to keep terrorists out of the Diyala province, just northeast of Baghdad, but also to help Iraqis take control of their own security, bridge sectarian divides and learn the ropes of local democratic self-governance.

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