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Soldiers have broad reactions, feelings about extension

In the streets

BAGHDAD–The questions on the minds of families and soldiers in July were direct and centered on one word: “Why?”

“Why was the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team being kept in Iraq for up to 120 days beyond the year it was about to wrap up in northern and western Iraq?”

“Why were the soldiers of the 172nd being sent to Baghdad?”

Stryker patrol

Happiness did not accompany the announcement of the extension, both when it was received by families and when it was delivered to the 172nd in Iraq.

Now, about halfway through the overtime period, soldiers say they appreciate that commanders haven’t tried to portray the soldiers as pleased about the extension. They say that while morale has suffered, it hasn’t affected their work. Read more »

Iraqis say they’re living in fear

Neighborhood patrol

BAGHDAD — The young artist, sitting in a comfortable upscale home earlier this week, told Lt. Andrew Pfeiffer he didn’t feel safe in his own western Baghdad neighborhood. The home offers a nice coolness on a clear, hot day as they speak.

Western Baghdad

The man, who specializes in ceramics, bronze and glass, said the increased violence keeps him and his family living in fear.

As if on cue, a single gunshot rang out a few blocks away.

“You see?” the man said, pointing his thumb over his shoulder and speaking through an interpreter. Read more »

Making do in Baghdad

In order

Talk about a change of plans.

While preparing to return to Alaska from Iraq in August, most of the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team’s personnel had packed up equipment and supplies to be shipped home or had turned them over to an incoming unit. Most of the items were en route to Kuwait or already waiting there for the brigade.

Keeping the brigade running

Then came word that the brigade’s tour had not only been extended for up to 120 days but also that it was being moved to Baghdad.

It was the Brigade Support Battalion that bore much of the responsibility for carrying out that move.

All equipment heading from western and northern Iraq to Kuwait had to be rerouted to Baghdad. Think of it as a family of 4,000 moving from Fairbanks to Seattle but having all the household goods and vehicles in transit somewhere in between. Read more »

Time working against Strykers

Iraqi shops

BAGHDAD — The four Stryker vehicles with 3rd Platoon of the 4-14 Cavalry’s Assassin Troop rolled out of Camp Stryker around 5 p.m. Thursday, just as the sun was beginning to set and the air was beginning to cool after a scorching day.

That night’s mission for Lt. Mateo Gross and his platoon was to patrol an eerily quiet southwest Baghdad street. The few streetlights and the scant illumination from shop windows would plunge people and corners into darkness.

It’s the kind of street where a visitor might think that danger dwells. And it does. The bodies of several Iraqis have been found on this street in the last few weeks. Read more »

Strykers say their presence a deterrent to violence in Baghdad

In the community

BAGHDAD–Pfc. Michael Hoyt of Texas had a simple answer when asked what was so important about the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team that it be sent to the Iraqi capital, the site of heavy sectarian violence. Read more »