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The Men of MiTT
A U.S. military transition team stands up Iraqi troops.
by Matt Sanchez
08/15/2007 12:00:00 AM

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Men of MiTT.jpg
The Rogues of the 3-5/6.

Iraq
BRIEFING BEGINS at 0800 at FOB Prosperity, and I was ready for the typical "SIGACTS." Small push pins on a magnified satellite image map on the wall showed where each significant act occurred: SAF, IED, EFP, a morse-code of letters that usually meant danger, explosions, and possibly a dead body. But these were the Rogues, the 3rd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division Military Transitional Team (MiTT), and they had a different mission than most stationed here in Baghdad. First Sergeant Joseph McFarlane, a career Army man whose father served in Vietnam and whose grandfathers both served in WWII, read the latest news from the place the soldiers cared about most--back home.

He read stories about broken bridges, baseball scores, and which movie earned the most at the box office that weekend. Sergeant Arturo Guerra, of El Paso Texas, described a video game where border agents arrested illegal immigrants. Whittingham, a young soldier, had to get up and tell a joke. Many laughed, mostly because the joke wasn't funny, so they made him promise to stand up the next morning and try it again.

But the mission that day was serious, and each member of the 3-5/6 had the dangers of Baghdad in the back of his mind. Jamia was once a majority Sunni neighborhood where professors, bureaucrats, and other favorites of the former regime had lived, until Saddam was

overthrown and vengeful Shia drove the residents out. The neighborhood's attractive and centrally located multi-level homes, with high ceilings and spacious roof patios, would be worth a fortune in Manhattan, but here, in Baghdad, there â s a 70 percent vacancy rate. The majority of the inhabitants have fled to areas where they are less threatened, and the new occupants are often not so neighborly. Al Qaeda has been known to use abandoned homes as â safe houses â in order to carry out the order of the day--terrorizing the populace. These operations used to target American forces, but AQI now seems to prefer attacking Iraqi soldiers.

The Rogues were sent to this troubled zone as a result of the troop surge. Before, they had been on Haifa Street, where, in January of 2007, they were ambushed and had to hold their ground for nearly six hours. "Everyone survived," said Major Chris Norrie, an armor officer cross-trained to supervise the mentorship of the 5th Brigade Iraqi Army. During the firefight, the Rogues tried to rally their fellow Iraqi soldiers, some fought, and some disappeared.

The surge sent more troops into Haifa--by the time I got there in July, the 4-9 Cavalry remarked how much calmer one of Baghdad premiere boulevards had become. So, the 3-5/6 was sent to another tough neighborhood where they were to make another go at mentoring the Iraqi military.

The Killing Fields

The "Killing Fields" are at the center of the Jamia neighborhood violence. "We think they dump bodies here because it's a lot easier to get on and off the main road," remarked Major Norrie. The field was nothing more than an open dirt plot of Baghdadi weeds with trash mixed in that often covered IEDs. In the center, there was a television antenna, but no one was sure if it worked.



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