Operation Beastmaster Successful
Friday, 29 December 2006
By SSG Kason Fark, 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment
From the Official Website of the Multi-National Force-Iraq (MNF-I)
A
Soldier from Company D,
2nd Battalion, 12th
Cavalry Regiment,
attached to 2nd Brigade
Combat Team, 1st
Infantry Division,
communicates with his
squad leader while
pulling security during
Operation Beastmaster.
BAGHDAD
— Staring down at an empty lot,
Spc. Craig McBaine wondered how
such a tranquil neighborhood
could be the scene of so much
carnage.
Nicknamed “IED Alley East,” this
700-meter stretch of barren
earth has been the scene of many
attacks against coalition and
Iraqi security forces.
On this day, the patch of land,
bordered on three sides by
once-beautiful three-story
houses, is occupied by
up-armored Humvees, Bradley
Fighting Vehicles and Abrams
Battle Tanks, all in support of
Operation Beastmaster.
During Beastmaster, troops from
the 4th Battalion, 1st Brigade,
6th Iraqi Army Division cleared
three large neighborhoods in the
western Baghdad suburb of
Ghazaliya. The sight of much
sectarian violence, Ghazaliya is
the battle ground for Sunni
insurgents trying to push back
the overwhelming Shia population
in the northern and eastern
areas of Baghdad.
“Alternate Supply Route Sword,”
the U.S. military’s name for the
largest road running through
southern Ghazaliya, is also the
in-road from Fallujah to Baghdad
proper.
Having just arrived weeks ago,
Soldiers of Company D, 2nd
Battalion, 12th Cavalry
Regiment, attached to 2nd
Brigade Combat Team, 1st
Infantry Division, have set upon
the goal of taking over the
security of Ghazaliya from the
Soldiers of 1st Battalion, 23rd
Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry
Division.
“It’s been pretty crazy
already,” McBaine said. The
Florida native’s patrol would
later be hit multiple times by
small arms fire, a
rocket-propelled grenade and a
roadside bomb.
Based out of Fort Bliss, Texas,
2-12 Cavalry is part of the 1st
Cavalry Division’s newest
brigade – the 4th “Long Knife”
Brigade Combat Team. While the
unit may be new to El Paso,
Texas, it is no stranger to
combat.
2-12 Cavalry was de-activated
shortly after its return from
Operation Iraqi Freedom II in
March 2005. The unit has also
earned streamers in other
conflicts such as World War II,
Vietnam, and Desert Storm. The
unit was the first U.S. unit in
Leyte and Japan. The unit
re-activated at Fort Bliss 18
months after returning from
Iraq.
Participation in operations such
as Beastmaster with the Iraqi
Army is the key to handing Iraq
back over to its people. The
Iraqi soldiers involved were
being observed by coalition
forces to gauge their ability to
perform urban warfare tasks.
Overall, Operation Beastmaster
was a huge success. In the
course of three days of house to
house searches, the Iraqi Army
troops uncovered seven weapons
caches, numerous roadside
bomb-making materials and
captured a high-value target.