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    Master Sergeant comes full circle with latest deployment to Iraq

    Master Sergeant comes full circle with latest deployment to Iraq

    Photo By 1st Sgt. Brent Williams | Master Sgt. Craig Wagner, a forward observer assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters...... read more read more

    By Sgt. 1st Class Brent Williams
    1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division

    FORWARD OPERATING BASE FALCON, Iraq — The senior non-commissioned officer of the Fire Effects and Coordination Cell for the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad, began his mission almost immediately upon arriving at Forward Operating Base Falcon in the Rashid District of southern Baghdad in March.

    Currently serving as a special projects manager for the "Raider" Brigade, specializing in force protection, Master Sgt. Craig Wagner, a forward observer assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, has come full circle with a career that has spanned Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm to three deployments in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

    When Wagner enlisted as a private and a cannon crewmember for the U.S. Army in 1988, Saddam Hussein had the third largest army in the world.

    Stationed with the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, part of the VII Corps Cavalry Regiment, Wagner's duties as a driver and loader, the No. 1 cannoneer of an M109 Howitzer, earned him a deployment to Saudi Arabia for the initial push to liberate Kuwait from the armies of Iraq.

    Wagner said he remembered arriving to his unit in Bamberg, Germany, where every sock and drawer, rolled tight, was arranged dress-right-dress in the locker. The floor was like glass and the room was neat. Soldiers wore their uniforms fresh and starched, boots spit-shined to perfection and haircuts tight. Everything squared away.

    At the turn of the Cold War, the Soldiers of the VII Corps' Cav. Regt. served as the eyes and ears of the corps commander, providing border surveillance and border security on the border with Czechoslovakia, he said.

    The mission kept the Soldiers in a constant state of combat readiness, explained Wagner, and when alerted, the units reported, loaded its gear and went out the gate to take up defensive positions.

    "We were always ready to go to fight the Russians on the East German border, but we never even thought about packing up and going somewhere else," said Wagner, who grew up in Santa Rosa, Calif., and still calls it home.

    Within days, the Soldiers deployed to Saudi Arabia, where for the next several months, the unit prepared its equipment and conducted training, awaiting orders in the middle of the desert to drive the Iraqi army from Kuwait.

    "We flew into Saudi Arabia, waited for ships to arrive with gear and vehicles, loaded up and moved out," Wagner said.

    The unit was only in the port for approximately a week when it assumed positions in the desert along the Saudi-Kuwaiti border.

    Accustomed to facing off the East German and Russian forces across the East German and Czech border, the U.S. Soldiers were curious as to the capabilities of the Iraqi's Soviet equipment that they had learned to respect as the enemy.

    "We were staring across the border at them staring at us," Wagner said. "All the stuff that they had, we were worried that if we got into a fight, the Soviets would scuff us up really bad. We knew that we were going up against forces a lot bigger than ours. I knew our equipment was good, but I didn't know that it was going to be that overwhelming of a difference because the Iraqi forces were using all Soviet equipment."

    The size of the regiment, with its attached elements, was roughly the size of a modern brigade combat team, said Wagner.

    The unit deployed with three maneuver squadrons; each squadron comprised of three cavalry troops, consisting of scouts, tankers and mortar platoons. There was also a tank company and an artillery battery in each of the maneuver squadrons and a forward support squadron and air command squadron to complete the regimental force of approximately 5,000 Soldiers.

    "Our training was really good; it was top-notch," he explained. "When we finally got the word to go, the superiority of our weapons systems and training, compared to theirs, they didn't have a chance."

    Removing the guard towers and breaching the 25-foot berm that lined Iraq's border, the reconnaissance element assumed a wedge formation and tore north to cut off retreating Iraqi forces before they could return to their bases.

    The regiment earned the opportunity to test its mettle in the Battle of the 73rd Easting, the biggest battle of the Gulf War and the biggest tank battle since World War II, said Wagner.

    "Our jobs were to ... make contact with the enemy; so we did," remembered Wagner. "Meanwhile 1st Infantry and 1st Armored Divisions were supposed to come up and relieve us; and 12 hours later they did a relief-in-place with us. They did a forward passage of lines while we were still engaging with the enemy. They did it without any fratricide, and that was impressive."

    By the time reinforcements linked up with the 2nd Armored Cav. Regt., Wagner said that he had shot 100 missions; each mission consisting of loading one to six 155 mm artillery rounds onto load trays, sliding the round into the cannon, applying powder and prime and waiting for the section sergeant's signal to fire.

    "So the enemy was retreating, trying to get through us to get back to Iraq," he recalled. "We were blocking their return route."

    The reconnaissance unit was never supposed to go toe-to-toe with the brigade-sized Iraqi element, but the troops were ready to fight, remembered Wagner.

    "We had to disengage after running out of ammunition," he said.

    Operation Desert Storm came to a head for U.S. Forces with four days of fighting after six months of living on tracked vehicles in the middle of the Saudi Desert, he explained.

    "The fight will always be with me," Wagner said. "We were pretty well-prepared and well-trained. We were experts at our weapons systems."

    In the years that followed, Wagner reclassified from a cannon crewmember to a forward observer and eventually reported for duty with the 4th Battalion, 42nd Field Artillery, 1st Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, at Fort Carson, Colo.

    Throughout his career, he worked in a variety of positions, from leader to trainer, eventually returning to the Raider Brigade, which was part of Task Force XXI, the mission to modernize the Army's Command and Control systems used on today's battlefield.

    Despite the many changes seen in the U.S. Army during the past two decades, "soldiering" remains the one consistent force, said Wagner.

    "By definition, a veteran is somebody who has been to a combat zone and served their country in a time of war," said Sgt. Gary Bixler, a forward observer assigned to the 1st BCT FEC at FOB Falcon. "By definition, Master Sgt. Wagner is a veteran — on his third deployment, plus all the deployments he is not getting credit for — that is a notable thing – to be in for 20 years and still going.

    Bixler, a 22-year old native of Hannibal, N.Y., said that he has a goal of leading Soldiers and saw the best and worst of the Army during two combat tours to Iraq. He credits Wagner with showing him what it means to be an NCO from the first day that he arrived to the unit and went under the senior NCO's wing in 2005.

    "When I came in the Army, I had never seen the real world, and without his influence, I wouldn't be who I am today," explained Bixler.

    Bixler added that Wagner's pride and professionalism, proficiency in getting the job done yet still old-fashioned in some ways, helped prepare him for the area-denial and counter-fire missions, peppering known points of origin sites to eliminate the enemy's indirect fire.

    "How could we expect to come over here and not learn anything from people who have been there and done that," Bixler said. "It gives me something to look up to; he's seen a lot in his time, and I have learned a lot from him."

    As far as securing the bases from indirect fire and force protection as a whole, Wagner said he believes the Raider Brigade saw significant success in securing its area of operations due to the brigade taking an early offensive from the COPs and joint security stations in the Rashid District.

    "We went on the offensive when we first got here, and we shot a lot of the anti-Iraqi forces down," he explained. "We took away their leadership and cut off their supply channels."

    The security in southern Baghdad continues to improve as the Raider Brigade maintains its presence in the communities and neighborhoods, working tirelessly with the Iraqi security forces and the general populace to build trust and keep the Special Groups and militias out of Rashid, he said.

    "I think that a lot of our success has had to do with our relationship with the general public here in Iraq," Wagner explained. "They know us and they trust us; and they know that we're really going to give them a fair deal. They like to have some safety and security in their neighborhoods, and they know if they let the [criminals and terrorists] set up shop that will go away."

    He said he expects challenges as the combat "surge" forces begin to withdraw and the units leaving without being replaced.

    It is part of the overall plan, explained Wagner, as the brigade will disengage from its direct combat role and move into tactical over-watch with the ISF in the forward position.

    Without changing his current role in the Raider Brigade, Wagner said that he wants to see his FEC Soldiers to continue to maintain their readiness and ability to provide counter fire in a timely manner if the need should arise again.

    "Without getting into the politics of what I think, I knew we would prevail in battle against Saddam's army – that wasn't really much of a worry for me," Wagner explained. "I knew we had a far superior force and would go in and win; and I also knew the hard part was going to be after."

    Wagner, who will reach his 20-year mark in February 2009 is currently serving his third tour with the 1st BCT, 4th Inf. Div., in support of OIF. He deployed to Tikrit in 2003, Taji in 2006, and currently with the "Raider" Brigade in the Rashid District in southern Baghdad.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.12.2008
    Date Posted: 11.12.2008 06:01
    Story ID: 26226
    Location: BAGHDAD, IQ

    Web Views: 1,114
    Downloads: 259

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