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Military notebook: Iraqi security forces aren't exactly bean-counter

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  • Military notebook: Iraqi security forces aren't exactly bean-counter

    Stars and Stripes, D.C.
    May 27 2005

    Military notebook: Iraqi security forces aren't exactly bean-counters



    By Sandra Jontz and Kevin Dougherty, Stars and Stripes
    Mideast edition, Friday, May 27, 2005



    Kevin Dougherty / S&S
    Whenever they are on the road, Spc. Ben Davis and Staff Sgt. Jerry
    Bench try to get some physical training in any way they can. On this
    trip to the Iraq-Iran border, they managed to squeeze in a friendly
    game of volleyball with Iraqi border police.


    Accountability is one of the areas the U.S. military is focusing on
    as it goes about training Iraqi security forces.

    The Iraqi army battalion in Hawijah, Iraq, does remarkably well
    keeping track of personnel and equipment, but it doesn't do as well
    with uniforms and ammunition, observed Maj. Matt Smith, who heads the
    training effort at Forward Operating Base McHenry.

    An Iraqi recruit who is issued a pair of boots will appear the next
    day wearing his old tattered sneakers, for example.

    Sgt. Dustin Kessler of the Montana National Guard raised the issue of
    ammunition at a recent meeting of U.S. Army trainers at the base. The
    issue struck a chord among his fellow instructors.

    Iraqi soldiers have a tendency to get excited and shoot, a sort of
    shoot-first-and-ask-questions-later mentality, a couple of U.S.
    trainers said. Like elsewhere in the country, the trainers work with
    Iraqi soldiers in the field to hone their skills. `Instead of yelling
    at somebody [to clear the road], they just pop off a magazine,' added
    Staff Sgt. Tommy Morgan.

    The occasional celebratory fire is another habit of the Iraqis that
    U.S. soldiers hope to break as well. In many parts of the Middle East
    and Africa, it's part of the culture. `Somehow we need to make those
    guys more accountable,' Smith said.

    Multicultural gift

    It might be quicker to ask Spc. Krist Zeynalyan what languages he
    doesn't speak.

    The 24-year-old soldier with Delta/52 Infantry Company, 1st Brigade,
    25th Infantry Division has a knack - and familial ties - that has him
    speaking in different tongues. In addition to his native Armenia, he
    can converse in Korean, Russian, Persian, English, and, oh, a little
    Arabic.

    The infantryman was raised in the Armenian capital of Yerevan, so
    that's a given, as is the Russian, he said. His father is Iranian,
    `so I have to know his language.'

    And when his family moved to the Los Angeles suburbs, he quickly
    picked up English. Korean was just for fun.

    As is the Army way of life - for now, he joked. He joined, he said,
    `out of sheer patriotism.'

    `I grew up on the welfare reform system, needing government help.
    This is my way of paying the country back,' said the former
    Pepperdine University student whose water polo scholarship ended
    after an ankle injury.

    And he's an aspiring writer who hopes to publish a book someday on
    his combat experiences in Iraq and keeps a detailed daily journal,
    spending anywhere from 30 minutes to hours daily logging his
    thoughts. For the time being, he's titled it `Perspectives.'

    `I guess I'll get out when the Army says I can,' he said. Because of
    the stop-loss policy, he was unable to leave the Army when his
    contract was up in December.

    `That's OK. I'm fine with it. My door is always open to the
    military.'

    America's cute critters

    A Special Forces soldier and a grizzled TV outdoorsman have come
    together to bring a small piece of Americana to troops in
    Afghanistan.

    Master Sgt. Carl Morton, of the 7th Special Forces Group, grew up in
    Michigan camping, fishing and watching the long-running Public
    Broadcasting Service outdoors series `Wild America.' The show is
    hosted by Marty Stouffer, pretty much a legend to anyone who's spent
    time on the couch, and features footage of North American wildlife
    and landscapes.

    When the series debuted for purchase on DVD, Morton placed an order
    via the Internet. Stouffer, according to his staff, saw the e-mail
    order and stepped in.

    `I read his e-mail and said there's no way this guy is going to pay
    for the series. We're sending him the shows for free,' Stouffer said
    in a statement sent by his staff. No word yet on whether other free
    sets are being sent.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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