1st Battalion 22nd Infantry
Former BN Commander revisits Iraq
October 2008
State Senator Steve Russell left
Oklahoma City Friday to travel back to the war zone with Time
Magazine.
The retired Lieutenant Colonel is heading to the Middle East to
compare and contrast what Iraq is like now
with what Iraq was like 5 years ago.
He wrote an article about a day he spent in an Iraqi market place
where six months ago, soldiers could expect to be shot at.
Today, that market place is teaming with shops, good and friendly
people trying to earn a living.
Steve Russell
Photo by News9
A market day in Baghdad
by Steve Russell, for NEWS 9
October 29, 2008
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- The Bayaa
market in the West Rashid District of Baghdad is one of the
oldest market streets in Iraq.
Anything and everything can be found, well almost. The style or
the quality may not be the best,
but the most decent attempt at anything can be found. A year ago,
or even six months ago,
you could expect to be shot at, but not today.
Lt. Col. Matt Elledge has taken the West Rashid District by the
horns. Capitalizing on the success of the 1st Battalion,
28th Infantry under Lt. Col. Pat Frank last year, Elledge's
battalion quickly established dominance in the heavily contested
area.
Now, that dominance has transitioned into diplomacy as Iraqis
have also taken their own fate by the horns.
The Rashid District, representing roughly one million Iraqis in
southeastern Baghdad, has one of the most successful
cooperative efforts of Sons of Iraq, National Police, and
community leader groups. The result has been impressive.
When Lt. Col. Elledge arrived for his third tour in Iraq as the
commander of Task Force 1-22 Infantry,
Firas Qasim was on the list of most wanted in the area. Now he is
on the list of the most helpful.
He is the twenty-nine year old leader of the local Sons of
Iraq,' an organized reconciliation group
that now fights for the new Iraqi nation. The work that the Sons
of Iraq have done in West Rashid
has been pivotal in securing the district.
In the last few weeks, Firas and his men have helped discover
large caches of weapons, locate criminal elements
and insurgents, and have kept a vigilant eye on the community to
spot any kind of trouble.
Elledge and local Iraqi leadership have been quick to recognize
the difference their work has made.
From left Senator Steve Russell, BG Bahaa Noori Yaseen, LTC Matt Elledge
"We're going to put the
Sons of Iraq into the government system" informed Brigadier
General Bahaa Noori Yaseen,
the West Rashid District's National Police Commander. "Once
he feels he is a part of the government,
he will perform in the right way. Now, we are showing him how to
work, how to be in the right uniform,
how to make a good relationship with the people."
General Bahaa is also another reason Rashid has made a turn
around. Dynamic, smiling and with an easy style
that exudes confidence, Bahaa appears to have restored hope among
the locals, who clearly see their own police
protecting them throughout the district. As we walked the market
with the general, Iraqis would call out to him
with hands over their hearts or ask about when the concrete
barriers could be removed that have been instrumental
in containing traffic so the police could secure the area. He
tells them to continue to be patient
or thanks them for their kind words.
"We could not have done this six months ago," said Lt.
Col. Elledge.
"We would draw fire after standing here only a few
minutes."
In the two hours we lingered at the market, the only sound we
heard was the banter of locals shopping
and working and a few generators augmenting the electricity in
the market. Gone were the insurgents
sniping from the hundreds of balconies jutting from crowded
floors in scores of squat apartment buildings.
Present were crowded shops loaded with goods teaming well into
the sidewalks, a sign that business has been good.
Walking the streets, my
instincts as a former combat infantryman in Iraq were tuned to
view the alleys,
the balconies and the lounging men in recessed corners. Before
long, with men relaxed moving arm and arm
in conversation, or women bustling to look at shoes or handbags,
and kids scurrying from place to place,
my eyes became tuned to different things altogether. Mannequins
stood adorned in trendy fashions,
a wide selection of cell phones filled a display case, a fruit
smoothie shop offered refreshment to passersby
and music pounded from local CD shops. Rather than stare in fear
or hate, the locals offered their wares
or tasty morsels with smiles and waves.
Whatever can be debated about the security situation in Iraq, it
can be answered with what I saw on the markets streets
of Bayaa in the West Rashid District of Baghdad.
Steve Russell was recently
elected to the Oklahoma State Senate. He is a U.S. Army retired
Lieutenant Colonel
who commanded an infantry battalion in Iraq that was a central
player in the hunt and capture of Saddam Hussein.
from the News9 website: http://www.news9.com:80/Global/story.asp?S=9237261
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