Michael Yon

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This site gets much traffic from all around the world, from people searching for news from Iraq, making it an ideal place to host stories from deployed forces in harm’s way.  In my travels I’ve met many budding writers who are now wearing boots and carrying rifles, and I found their stories so compelling that I want the world to see.

Friday with Ambassador

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From Dr. Moayad, an Iraqi cardiologist in South Baghdad:

Many people in South Baghdad and other Sunni areas were upset when the Iraqi Prime Minster Nuri al-Maliki returned directly from London to Karbala, Iraq to participate in the Shiite memorial of Arbaeen (the end of the annual mourning period of Imam Hussein, a Shiite saint). The Sunnis believe that Mailiki is the Shiite prime minister, not the Iraqi prime minister.

But on the early morning of Friday February 29, the South Baghdad neighborhood of Dora received the American Ambassador Ryan Crocker. Everyone in Dora welcomed his visit. It was the first time I met Ambassador Crocker. On TV he looks younger, but he is very active and smart.

We walked along 60th Street where reconstruction work has started. We also walked Mulhallah [neighborhood] 840, where he met with the kids and old women, and visited the shops. Crocker speaks very good Arabic. He asked the same questions of everyone he met. ( How is the security situation? What’s the most important problem after security is established?) The answers were always the same: The security situation is very good and we are looking for jobs and more hours of national electricity.

Then we walked the streets of Mulhallah 838. I felt tired while the ambassador kept walking. General Jeffery Hammond and Colonel Rick Gibbs were with him. My mother cooked all the night before for lunch (which was enough for a minimum three hundred soldiers) but after six hours of touring Dora, Ambassador Crocker received a call and left without having lunch.

It’s wonderful that the American officials take care of us, while the Iraqi government only takes care of their Shiite sect. We can say the Sunni sect has become the American sect because only the American forces and embassy visit us. It was true when one of the local citizens of Dora told the ambassador that Colonel Gibbs is our president, because he supplied more than nine thousand jobs and paid for all the services and the Sons of Iraq in our area. The ambassador smiled at that. Another citizen told the ambassador that the next battle is against the elected Iraqi government to take on their responsibility as the government for all Iraq.
Both American and British ambassadors have visited our area, as well as General Petraeus and more than ten other generals. Meanwhile, we are still waiting an official from the Iraqi government to visit us in Dora without invitations from the U.S.Army.
Thank you very much Ambassador Crocker for your visit, which helped us forget the government deficiency syndrome in Sunni areas.
I had a great time with the ambassador. You can learn a lot from this great man within few hours.

Dr. Moayad
Baghdad

 

Please give the gift of independent reporting. Your gift goes far and is used for transport, lodging, living expenses, satellite communications and for repairing and replacing gear that fails due to the rigors of the battlefields.  Millions of people, in more than a hundred countries, see these photos and words.  Your generosity goes very far, and is greatly appreciated.

 

Bright Idea–Iraqi Electricity

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Bright Idea–Iraqi Electricity

By Matt Sanchez

Most of us expect something to happen when we plug in an appliance or flip a switch, but in Iraq flipping a switch to get power is a key part of fighting terrorism.

The strategy to combat a counter-insurgency consists mainly of improving the living conditions; that means bringing a national infrastructure neglected by dictatorial socialism and asphyxiated by a decade of sanctions to a functional level for a growing population with an increasing appetite for energy.

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Commanders Update #9

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Commander’s Update #9 JAN 08

By LTC. James Crider

Friends and Family of 1-4 CAV:

It has been some time since my last update so this one is well over due! I briefed our families at Fort Riley in November while home on leave and then returned to experience the holidays here in Baghdad. This has also been a holiday period for the citizens of our area in Doura so there has been an especially festive mood to go along with the continued good security.

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General Lee Comes Home, Part 2

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Stryker Dubbed ‘General Lee’ Rejuvenated

By Ann Roosevelt, for Defense Daily

General Lee, the Stryker Anti-Tank vehicle ATGM 0086, is rejuvenated stem to stern by personnel from Anniston Army Depot (ANAD), Ala., and producer General Dynamics [GD], returning it to ready-to-fight condition.

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News Flash: The Mighty Eighth

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Assembling : THE MIGHTY EIGHTH

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A Thank You Letter

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[Web Administrator’s Note: The following letter and photograph was sent to Michael Yon from LTC Jim Crider, the commander of the 1-4 CAV soldiers based at FOB Falcon whose progress reports have recently been published on this site.]

Thank You, America.

Some time ago, I ran into an old high school friend who asked me if I was still in the Army.  After I said yes, he slowly shook his head and asked me how much longer I had to go before I could get out.

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Doura Progress Report

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1-4 CAV Update #8 by LTC Jim Crider

DEC 07
Despite the hardships associated with our current deployment there are many things that are personally rewarding. Undoubtedly, when we return to Fort Riley we will do so with an enormous sense of accomplishment as a team and personal satisfaction as individual soldiers. In our area it is indisputable that we have set the conditions for political progress and are working hard to move forward on the local level. The current situation is not irreversible as there are certainly those with designs for power looking for opportunities to return to chaos.

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Joe Galloway December 5

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Folks give me a plenty hard time for publishing Joe.  Whereas I regularly disagree with him and several times have had to discipline myself not to phone him for his writings, I do respect the man.  Some of the military leaders I respect most, agree with my decision to publish Joe.  Others do not agree.  I’m in the United Kingdom with British soldiers for a break from the war.  These soldiers seem to love Joe.  They’ve all fought for freedoms, and so has Joe.  American, British, Australian or Polish commanders who would like to say their piece, are welcome on these pages.  I will publish writings from battalion or brigade commanders in Iraq or Afghanistan.  Please just contact John Mason through your Public Affairs Folks (Media Ops), and this space is yours.

Now for Joe:

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Joe Galloway November 29

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[Michael Yon:] “This morning, in Mosul, LTC Eric M. Welsh, Commander of 2d Squadron, 7th Cavalry, issued a plaque to me for “combat spurs.” LTC Welsh told me that the only other writer to receive this award was Joe Galloway, and I said to LTC Welsh not more than an hour ago, that I just read Joe’s latest column. I am humbled to receive this honor from 2-7 CAV.”"Joe’s latest column is out. As always, I disagree with much of what he writes, but do respect and read his words. He’s certainly earned his opinions far more than most.”

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Ameriyah Update

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Web Administrator Notes:
Michael Yon has a policy to publish anything written by an American BN commander in Iraq or Afghanistan on this website.

The following is submitted from Lt. Col. Dale Kuehl, the U.S. Battalion Commander who works directly with Abu Abed of Ameriyah in response to the 10 NOV07 Guardian article written by Ghaith Abdul-Ahad.

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Joe Galloway: Is Waterboarding Torture?

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Note from Michael: Joe Galloway sends another column. Though I sharply disagree with much of what Joe writes, I always read his opinions. Further, I agree with Joe that waterboarding is wrong. We should not torture people. Any US service member or employee who engages in waterboarding, even with approval of higher authority, may face serious punishment some day. If our people are ordered to conduct torture, they should refuse and report it. If that does not work, call the press. One reason we are crushing al Qaeda in Iraq is because they use torture. I just returned from a walk through dark Baghdad streets that were practically owned by al Qaeda only months ago. The people hate al Qaeda precisely because al Qaeda operatives act as savages. Savages torture people. Waterboarding is torture. We are not savages.
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The Old New Way

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Anyone familiar with the Combined Action Platoons of the Vietnam War will understand what’s going on here. These Marines live, work, sleep, eat and bathe in the same neighborhoods they are helping to stabilize. In doing so, they’re no longer driving in from a forward operating base, or FOB, outside the city and conducting patrols. Instead, they wake up in the morning, plan a patrol, then walk out into the neighborhood and greet the men and women sweeping their sidewalks or tending their shops. They’re literally swarmed with children wanting a high five or a piece of chocolate.

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Joe Galloway: Asking Too Much of Too Few

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Michael Yon notes:
Though I sharply disagree with much of what Joe writes, I always read his column:

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Wall Street Journal Op-Ed of Interest

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Victory Is Within Reach In Iraq

By Michael A. Ledeen

Should we declare victory over al Qaeda in the battle of Iraq?

The very question would have seemed proof of dementia only a few months ago, yet now some highly respected military officers, including the commander of Special Forces in Iraq, Gen. Stanley McCrystal, reportedly feel it is justified by the facts on the ground.

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Joe Galloway on the McCaffrey Report

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19 October 07

Michael Yon notes:

I have just wrapped up a very interesting trip with British soldiers in southern Iraq. We spent much time in mine fields near the Iranian border. The area looked like a stairwell to hell. Numerous dispatches about the Brits and southern Iraq are on the way. Am currently back with American combat forces in Baghdad.

Joe Galloway sends another column. Though I sharply disagree with much of what Joe writes, I always read his opinions:

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The General Lee Comes Home

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[Michael landed in Baghdad on morning of 25 September 2007.]

War Weary Stryker Dubbed General Lee Comes Home For Reset

By Ann Roosevelt, for Defense Daily

By sea and by land, one of the Army’s war-battered Stryker vehicles known to its unit as the General Lee is coming home to Anniston Army Depot, Ala., where it was built, to be repaired and sent on to a unit in ready-to-fight condition.

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