Posted on Jul 27, 2016
U.S. combat adviser mission in Iraq expands to battalion level
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Thanks for making us aware SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL that the advise-and-assist mission for U.S. forces in Iraq is expanding after a small team of American forces deployed for the first time to work alongside an Iraqi battalion and help install a bridge over the Tigris River south of Mosul.
Hopefully the number of soldiers and the Joint Engineer mission with Navy, Marine and Army Engineers will be incrementally expanded and that the forces the are assisting will be monitored to prevent blue on green attacks.
Hopefully the number of soldiers and the Joint Engineer mission with Navy, Marine and Army Engineers will be incrementally expanded and that the forces the are assisting will be monitored to prevent blue on green attacks.
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CPO (Join to see)
Sir, its not just soldiers, that was a Joint Engineer mission with Navy, Marine and Army Engineers. We have a Detachment there and the Bridge they are repairing was one we built during the invasion. It is also not a Military Ribbon bridge like the photo, it is a Maybe Johnson on pontoons and will be anchored down solid, so they do not have to have the bridge boats like you need for the Ribbon in the photo. Having the bridge boats and all the maintenance for the Ribbon would be a night mere for the Iraqis to maintain. I know this bridge and bridge site as we built it in 2003.
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CPO (Join to see)
This the Bridge that was there and the type they need to replace. The span is to diffucult for a ribbion, and to much maintiance.
http://www.107thengineers.org/1437/BridgingTheTigris/BridgingTheTigris.asp
http://www.107thengineers.org/1437/BridgingTheTigris/BridgingTheTigris.asp
The 1437th MRBC Bridging The Tigris
ZUBAYDIYAH Iraq - The 1437th MRBC (Multi-Role Bridge Company) of Sault Ste. Marie, MI, working jointly with the First Marine Expeditionary Force Engineer Group and the Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 7 (Seabees) have successfully completed one of the biggest projects of its' kind since World War II. The 1437th lent their experience and equipment in floating bridge building to construct a 762 foot Mabey-Johnson bridge across the Tigris...
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LTC Stephen F.
CPO (Join to see) - thanks for sharing. Over 40 years ago I was a 12B combat engineer and we built various military bridges back in those days from the M4T6 metal bridge to timber trestle bridges.
I am fairly sure bridging has come along way but the basic skills required are still the same.
I am fairly sure bridging has come along way but the basic skills required are still the same.
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CPO (Join to see)
LTC Stephen F. - Your correct sir, The Maybe is a larger version of the Bailey Bridge system. We do the more none slandered type bridges and Combat Engineers still do the combat bridges and we train with them to help augment or retrieve and replace with a longer lasting no maintenance type bridging, so no over watch or security needed.
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL - Dear Mr. & Mrs. (insert name ) we regret to inform you that your son/daughter, PFC Snuffy was killed today in Iraq while on a critical mission : providing advice on protective measures to better secure a pontoon bridge being built over a local river”. On behalf of a grateful nation, I thank you for your son's/daughter's sacrifice to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States from all enemies, foreign and domestic. Sincerely yours, Barak Obama, President of the United States and Commander in Chief of all US armed forces.
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