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Iraq
U.S. Soldiers, Iraqi Army Discover Huge Weapons Cache
2008-03-03
CAMP STRIKER — Soldiers of Company A, 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) discovered a significant weapons cache, Feb. 25, just one day after Iraqi Army (IA) Soldiers turned in three caches in Yusufiyah.

While establishing a checkpoint, Soldiers from 1st Platoon, Company A, conducted a security sweep. Staff Sgt. Jon Hood, from Kansas City, Mo., noticed a plastic bag on the ground.

When he kicked the bag and heard a clink, he looked down and discovered several rounds uncovered by the rainy weather. Seeing the exposed rounds, Hood and his fellow Soldiers started digging and unearthed the largest cache the brigade has found since arriving in October.

“There was a lot more to that little cache than we thought,” Hood said. In all, more than 300 live mortar rounds, between 56 mm and 155 mm, were intermixed with more than 8,000 mortar shells. With the help of local Sons of Iraq, the unit spent more than 26 hours digging up the cache.

This is the largest cache I’ve seen since I was a platoon leader with 3rd Infantry Division during Operation Iraqi Freedom I,” said Capt. Terry Hilderbrand, of Atlanta, Ga., commander of Company A. “This is definitely the largest cache we’ve pulled up since we’ve been here.”

The discovery of the massive munitions stash came one day after Soldiers from Company C, 3-187th Inf. Regt. received three caches from their IA counterparts.

Iraqi troops from 4th Battalion, 4th Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division recovered three large caches from Qarghuli Village and Shubayshen, and turned the munitions over to Soldiers at Patrol Base Yusufiyah.

In total, the three caches yielded one complete improvised explosive device, 190 pounds of unknown bulk explosive, 40 pounds of dynamite, (74) 82 mm mortar rounds, (18) 122 mm artillery rounds, (38) 60 mm mortar rounds, 400 additional projectiles between 23 mm and 155 mm, hundreds of assorted munitions pieces, several radios and documents.
Posted by:Unolunter Snerert5312

#3  Guess it's permanently ingrained, though it's a little hard to explain to people who weren't there.

Yeah, it does stay with you, doesn't it Barbara. 83 - 84, two years under the mountain, CINCENT Primary Static War HQ. I figured, being a Static War HQ, our life span was a couple of hours after the first tanks started rolling into the Fulda Gap. Of course, that was better than the 30 minutes in the Titan missile patch in Kansas.
Posted by: Steve   2008-03-03 22:28  

#2  Jeezus - he kicked it?

I learned over 30 years ago in Germany, at the height of the Baader-Meinhof terrorist attacks, that you NEVER pick up (or kick) a bag of any kind if you didn't put it there or know who did. And if a bag seems particularly out of place (for instance, a fire extinguisher inside a shopping bag sitting in the waiting room at the Frankfurt Airport), you tell the cops pronto.

Even to this day, I won't (can't, really), nor will I drive over a bag in the road if there's any safe way to avoid it. Won't park over one, either. Guess it's permanently ingrained, though it's a little hard to explain to people who weren't there.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2008-03-03 20:02  

#1  i would watch what i was kicking for now on
Posted by: sinse   2008-03-03 17:07  

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