Rick Kaiser is in charge of the transition of equipment and personnel out of Iraq through Camp Adder, the last stop in the south before crossing into Kuwait. The camp has gone from 12, American soldiers to 2,, and will soon be turned over to the Iraqi military and become an Iraqi Air Force base.
At Camp Adder, hundreds of vehicles will be left behind for the Iraqis. They are either in need of repair or not worth the high cost of transporting them.
Two soldiers, helping to transition convoys of equipment through Camp Adder that are headed south to Kuwait, take a break at the equipment staging area. They are building trailers really fast so by the time the next rotation gets here they will be the first to move into them. They just built a new hot spot complete with free wireless internet service, ping pong and pool tables, nice movie room, and a gaming room. And yes the trip to the Ziggurat was fun.
They temporarily shut it down when I first got here because some soldiers were caught peeing on it and taking pictures of themselves…another example of the few misfits ruining a good thing for everyone.
The Romanian Army during the ceremony marking the end of their mission at Camp Dracula. Following a number of years of being left abandoned after the withdrawal of the coalition forces, Ali Air Base reopened as Nasiriyah Airport with domestic flights to other cities in Iraq as well as international flights to Iran with Iraqi Airways.
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The military will not say exactly when, for security reasons, but troops here say they expect to hit the road in the next couple of weeks.
Until then, soldiers like Captain David Moses will be busy directing traffic. Trucks arrive from bases further north, stop off to rest and refuel, then continue on the four-hour drive to the Kuwaiti border. Last month, Moses said, the massive staging area for these convoys handled 1, vehicles per day. Moses may have underestimated the scale of the operation: Military officials say this is their largest logistical operation since World War II.
Not everything will be shipped away, though. There is also a parking lot full of civilian vehicles used on the base, many in a state of disrepair after eight years of dusty roads and searing summer heat. The US is leaving those behind, as many as vehicles, and handing the keys to the Iraqi government. The military says this equipment will help the Iraqi security forces, though its real motives are a bit simpler: The US is leaving behind anything which is not worth the cost of shipping.
We can pay the millions of dollars it would cost to ship back to the United States. In line with their Campaign Plan for , the U. Army Corps of Engineers USACE prepared for contingencies and provided support to combat and disaster operations through forward deployed and reach back capabilities.
One of the important capabilities that they provided was power support services. The vehicle the USACE chose for providing power support services was the Worldwide Power Contingency Response contract, under which Fluor could be called on to provide equipment and support services for conflict environments and disaster relief situations anywhere in the world.
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