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    278th ACR Provides Humanitarian Aid to Taji

    278th ACR Provides Humanitarian Aid to Taji

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Michael Carden | Sgt. Chelsie Kirkland, a intelligence analyst for the Regimental Troop Squadron, 278th...... read more read more

    CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE TAJI, IRAQ

    05.25.2010

    Story by Sgt. Michael Carden 

    13th Armored Corps Sustainment Command (13th ESC)

    CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE TAJI, Iraq — Soldiers with Regimental Troop Squadron, 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment, 13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) conducted a mission, May 25, to Taji, Iraq, to hand out food and clothing to the local community while also collecting human intelligence.

    The two-dimensional operation, was organized and overseen by Master Sgt. Melvin Brown, liason with the Iraqi Army for the 278th ACR and a Whites Creek, Tenn., native.

    "The humanitarian aid part of (the mission) speaks for itself …but it is also an information and counter-insurgency operation," Brown said. "It is an attempt to gather human intelligence for any potential emerging threats that we are unaware of and also to help plan and coordinate future humanitarian aid projects."

    Sgt. Chelsie Kirkland, an intelligence analyst with RTS, 278th ACR and a Murfreesboro, Tenn., native, assisted with the mission by passing out supplies and speaking with citizens to determine their attitudes towards U.S. forces.

    "We got to talk to some of the villagers about how they felt about how security goes in and around the area," Kirkland said. "To see if there are any direct threats, to try to learn things that support our intelligence mission."

    Kirkland also stressed the importance of humanitarian missions like this, as they increase the likelihood that the populace would be more forthcoming with information in the future.

    Hundreds of donations of shoes and clothing were sent to Soldiers from organizations in the United States, while some Soldiers spent their own money to provide school supplies. Pallets of nonperishable canned and dry goods were donated as well.

    The village of Taji, which is located adjacent to COB Taji, is home to about 3,000 people.

    "Back in the early years, [troops] interacted with them during insurgent raids, doing sweeps," Brown said. "Those are pretty negative encounters. Humanitarian missions on the other hand, are pretty positive."

    It helps the Iraqis, but it is also good for the Soldiers. The Soldiers with RTS, 278th ACR volunteered to be a part of the mission because they believed in the necessity of the mission and what it would accomplish; easing the hardship of poverty and improving the relationship between Iraqis and U.S. force, Kirkland said.

    "These types of mission are important because they aid people that are greatly in need," Brown said. "Beyond that, it gives them a better feeling about their interactions with [Soldiers] and the presence of American forces here."

    Army doctrine now directs Soldiers to provide humanitarian aid whenever possible, it is all part of asymmetric warfare – impress upon the Iraqi people that the U.S. forces are in place to help and provide a stabilizing force during the rebuilding, he said.

    Brown coordinated with COB Taji's quick reaction force to provide security for the operation, also giving the QRF an opportunity to check the perimeter of the base for any potential breeches in the wire. The presence of the QRF was necessary for the success of the mission as well as conveying a sense of protection for the villagers receiving the aid, Brown said.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.25.2010
    Date Posted: 06.02.2010 04:20
    Story ID: 50690
    Location: CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE TAJI, IQ

    Web Views: 309
    Downloads: 192

    PUBLIC DOMAIN