Theodore's World: In Country With ‘Ace High’ Soldiers

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November 26, 2008

In Country With ‘Ace High’ Soldiers



Heavy machine guns with barrels unearthed during a cache sweep in Dhabtiya, a village northwest of Baghdad lie in line during an inventory of the items Nov. 23. Soldiers from Troop A "Ace High," 2nd Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment "Strykehorse," 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team "Warrior," 25th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division-Baghdad, conducted a cache sweep along the Grand Canal and seized 11 cache's over the two-day period.


‘Ace High’ Soldiers Strike Gold During Cache Sweep


By Sgt. 1st Class Brian Addis

2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team,
25th Infantry Division

JOINT SECURITY STATION SHEIK AMIR, Iraq

Soldiers from Troop A “Ace High,” 2nd Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment “Strykehorse,” 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team “Warrior,” 25th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division-Baghdad, conducted a cache sweep in Dhabtiya, a village northwest of Baghdad, Nov. 24-25.

The two-day operation resulted in eleven cache finds.

Platoons from Ace High Troop, with the help of approximately 50 Sons of Iraq (Abna al Iraq) and Iraqi army soldiers conducted a deliberate east-to-west search along the north side of the Grand Canal Nov. 24. The search initially turned up an unknown type rocket and a 60mm mortar. An ensuing search resulted in four additional separate caches. The cache find was expected, but the size and contents of some of these caches were surprising.

“The size of the heavy weapons caches was not what we had expected,” said Capt. Matt Clark, commander, Ace High Troop, who is a native of Tucson, Ariz. “The discovery of the SA-13 missile [Strella] pod was definitely not something we had envisioned in the beginning.”

The first cache consisted of two AK-47s with magazines, an FAL rifle with magazines, three DSHKA barrels, a hand grenade, 100 meters of time fuse, a SA7 anti-aircraft missile, 120 links of 7.62mm rounds, a .30-caliber machine gun, four Italian anti-tank mines and a 120mm mortar tube.

The second cache consisted of four 155mm artillery rounds, five 130mm rockets with serviceable warheads and two 130mm rocket warheads. The third cache contained a 155mm artillery round and three 105mm projectiles.

The items found in the fourth cache were unserviceable due to corrosion and was much older than the other three. Items found were a flare pistol, four mortar bipods, five .50-caliber machine gun receivers, 10 12.7mm HMG receivers, 30 HMG barrels of various types and calibers with one being unknown, and a light machine gun receiver.

“I believe these caches were the property of al Qaida in Iraq cell that had a large influence in the area historically.” Clark said
.

Once all items were inventoried, EOD was called to the site and all unexploded ordnance/explosive cache items were reduced on site. All other serviceable and unserviceable weapons were turned over to the Iraqi army.

The second day of “Operation Gold Digger” began at approximately 10 a.m. Nov. 25 with Soldiers from Ace High Troop once again patrolling the flat lands of Dhabtiya along the Grand Canal. The sweep would complete the north side of the canal and push the search 200-300 meters south of the canal as well. The Soldiers discovered almost twice the number of caches than the previous day as seven caches were unearthed, inventoried and destroyed. Amongst the items found were 27 82mm mortars, five heavy machine guns, four 120mm mortars and six anti-aircraft guns.

The combined efforts of Iraqi security and coalition forces during the two-day event culminated in a successful reduction and erosion of enemy capabilities.

“The Iraqi army and Sons of Iraq were able to work together and contribute a great deal, which is beneficial in the progress towards a safer and more secure area,” Clark said. “General intelligence allowed us to focus the time and man power effectively and the success of the operation was a direct result of that.”



Posted by Wild Thing at November 26, 2008 04:47 AM


Comments

Did the media not get the memo? Oh, that's right. Iraq is no longer news now that it's pretty much a complete success. Excuse me for forgetting for a moment...

Posted by: yankeemom at November 26, 2008 07:40 AM


The cooperation between American troops and Iraqi troops and civilians is amazing. Three years ago I would not have thought it possible. This cooperation is producing great results. The main result being peace and freedom for the Iraqi people.

Posted by: TomR at November 26, 2008 12:03 PM


With Obama Almighty in the news this will never see the light of day outside the blogosphere. It looks like the Iraqi Army has some rust removal to do.:)

Posted by: Jack at November 26, 2008 12:40 PM


Yankeemom, LOL good one.

Posted by: Wild Thing at November 26, 2008 08:01 PM


Tom, I feel like that too. I read these stories and am nothing less then amazed. The Iraqi's so many of them can see how much better life is to fight back and keep the freedom our troops have given them.

Posted by: Wild Thing at November 26, 2008 08:03 PM


Jack, true, only blogs share stories about our troops, the media wants nothing to do with supporting them. grrrrrrrr

Posted by: Wild Thing at November 26, 2008 08:05 PM


Congratulations CAPT Matt Clark and the entire Ace High Troop of the 2-14 CAV! Your hard work is paying off! Be safe and hurry home!

Posted by: Joshua Clark at November 29, 2008 10:09 AM