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    Rakkasan transition team teaches Iraqi Army Soldier skills

    Rakkasan transition team teaches Iraqi army soldier skills

    Photo By Pfc. Christopher McKenna | Sgt. Chad Highland, from San Clemente, Cali, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 1st...... read more read more

    By Pvt. Christopher McKenna
    3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division

    FORWARD OPERATING BASE FALCON, Iraq – A Military Transition Team stationed at Forward Operating Base Falcon, about eight kilometers south of Baghdad, plays a rigorous and important role in rebuilding the capacity of Iraq.

    The MiTT helps the Iraqi army to operate in an optimal manner, said Sgt. Chad Highland, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 1st Squadron, 33rd Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division.

    Soldiers from the MiTT, assigned to 1-33rd Cav. Regt., teach a five-day Iraqi basic training course using U.S. Army knowledge converted into something Iraqi army soldiers can execute.

    "It's basically a course to teach basic Soldiering skills and something to refresh what they ... already learned in their basic training," said San Antonio native Sgt. Adam Troxel, MiTT gunner and trainer.

    The five-day course, taught monthly, has a capacity for 25 Soldiers; five from each of the companies with 3rd Battalion, 25th Brigade, 6th IA Division.

    Before assuming their duties, the team went through a MiTT course in Taji providing them with guidance on teaching Iraqis, said Highland, from San Clemente, Calif.

    The instruction focuses on first aid, guard duty, unit movement techniques, vehicle search, reaction to improvised explosive devices, rules of engagement and other soldiering skills.

    "The course itself attempts to focus more toward hands-on training so that the Soldiers can take what we teach them and utilize it out at their battle positions and checkpoints, which is where the majority of the Soldiers coming to us work," Highland said.

    When the MiTT is not conducting classes, the team travels to IA checkpoints and battle positions to ensure the proper procedures learned are being implemented.

    "When you actually go out and see them using what you taught them it is rewarding," Troxel said. "Besides, we are all non-commissioned officers and it is our job to train Soldiers. It's a reward in itself to be able to stand here and say 'I help train Soldiers from a completely different country's army than our own.'"

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.07.2008
    Date Posted: 05.09.2008 10:35
    Story ID: 19263
    Location: BAGHDAD, IQ

    Web Views: 189
    Downloads: 146

    PUBLIC DOMAIN