202nd RED HORSE SQUADRON:
"Lead, Follow, or Get The Hell Out of The Way!"


Dec 17, 2007
FATHER SURPRISES DAUGHTERS AT SCHOOL...

The best Christmas gift these girls could imagine.

Watch this homecoming here.

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Nov 21, 2007
GOOD NEWS FROM IRAQ!!

Here it is folks!  Stuff the mainstream media will never report.  Good news out of Iraq:

** Violence in Iraq is down by 50%.
** Civilian casualties in Iraq are down by 60%.
** Baghdad casualties are down by 75%.
** Basra violence is down by 90%.
** Terrorist attacks in Iraq are down by 80%.
** IED attacks down by 55%.
** Average daily attacks down by 42%.

You can see the whole article here.  But major thanks goes to our men and women serving over there.

To Gabe, and all of our soldiers, thank you for all that you do.  This Thanksgiving, you will all be in our prayers.  We are so blessed to be as free as we are, and it's all because of what you are doing over there.  Keep up the great work, take care of yourselves, and remember to call home every now and again to let us know you're okay.

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A RAPID RESHAPING...

News about the Red Horse Squadrons is slow to come by, if not non-existant.  However, I found some news at the Air Guard News site.  This is back from April:

Red Horse airmen turned Iraqi plain into base in 6 weeks
By Erik Holmes - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Apr 20, 2007 12:49:40 EDT

BESMAYA, Iraq — When the first elements of the 557th Expeditionary Red Horse Squadron arrived Feb. 17 at this dusty outpost 25 miles east of Baghdad, they faced a daunting mission: Transform a harsh and featureless plain, littered with bombed-out buildings and unexploded ordnance, into a forward operating base for 3,700 soldiers.

The timeline: less than six weeks.

Red Horse airmen, the Air Force's combat construction crews, are used to tight schedules and austere conditions, but this was beyond what any of them had experienced during previous missions and deployments.

"When they told us what the original schedule was, I said, 'No way,'" said Senior Master Sgt. Andrew Baker, a District of Columbia Guardsman and the squadron's senior enlisted airman on site.

Yet the airmen finished the bulk of Forward Operating Base Hammer ahead of schedule. They erected 223 tents for barracks, headquarters, latrines and other support functions in just 20 days.

When the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division rolled in on March 26 — part of the surge of more than 20,000 troops President Bush is sending into Iraq — the soldiers had a place out of the sand to rest their heads, eat and — luxury of all luxuries — even do their laundry.

From out of the rubble

The 200 or so members of the 557th working at Besmaya are two-thirds Air National Guard and one-third active duty. They come from nearly 40 units, with the Florida Air Guard's 202nd Red Horse Squadron and the Virginia Air Guard's 203rd Red Horse Squadron serving as lead units.

They are among a growing number of airmen filling "in lieu of" taskings, jobs that would be performed by soldiers or Marines if their numbers weren't stretched so thin. Most of the more than 5,000 ILO airmen serving in Iraq and Afghanistan do jobs that are similar to or the same as their usual duties, though the environments and organizations in which they work are often far from what most airmen would consider normal.

When Baker and his small advance team arrived, the former Iraqi Republican Guard base was deserted save for a few Marines advising an Iraqi Army unit one to two miles away. Nearly all the previous buildings had been reduced to piles of rubble by American bombs, and the airmen provided their own security with nothing more than their M16s.

"You talk about outside the wire," Baker said. "When we first got here, there was no wire. ... This is one example of where you couldn't have contractors do it all. You need military."

Living conditions were austere. The 18 airmen lived in barracks at the nearby Iraqi army camp. The mattresses were soiled, and the bathrooms were fouled by human waste backed up in the pipes. Unable to stomach the latter, the airmen found a septic tank in a field and built a platform over it to serve as an open-air toilet.

With no dining facility to feed them, they ate MREs morning, noon and night.

And then there was, and is, the dust. The consistency of talcum powder, it lies in drifts waiting to be kicked up by a vehicle's tires or the slightest breeze. The airmen come in from work caked in the stuff, their nostrils coated and clothes saturated. It creeps into their tents and settles on their green, Army-issue cots.

There is no escape from the dust, except to finish the job and get out.

Setting up shop

The advance team's first task was to survey everything within five miles, so they knew their working conditions. With only two surveyors, Tech. Sgt. Jonathan Mickett and Staff Sgt. Brian Gray, it took nine days to walk the base and survey every natural and man-made feature of the more than 11,000 acres.

The hundreds of data points Mickett and Gray collected included existing road and canal structures, allowing the team to adapt the master plan for FOB Hammer to conditions on the ground.

The surveyors also discovered about 60 unexploded munitions scattered at a dozen sites. They ranged from old Iraqi artillery shells to unexploded bomblets left by American BLU-97 cluster bombs. Mickett and Gray marked the sites so explosive ordnance disposal teams could deal with them later.

The advance team also had to locate a suitable source of water before the rest of the Red Horse unit could move in, Baker said.

The closest source was a canal about four miles away, but the airmen were able to use existing canals to move it to within about two miles of the base. From there they pump the water to a 6 million gallon reservoir, through a reverse-osmosis water-purification unit and into storage bladders. The system can supply the base's projected consumption of about 350,000 gallons per day.

The airmen were keenly aware they were vulnerable to enemy incursions, so they laid out a 9-mile-long, 8-foot-high earthen berm to protect the base.

"Other than feeding folks, force-protection is No. 1, so we started pushing that from day one," Baker said.

The airmen also constructed hundreds of Hesco barriers, large steel wire and felt force-protection structures that must be filled with dirt. Baker called them "the bane of our existence" because filling them is dusty and labor-intensive.

Construction began in earnest when the main body of the Red Horse team arrived March 6.

Regular convoys from Baghdad hauled in all manner of supplies and equipment, from the massive D-9 armored bulldozers needed to build the protective berm to pallets of lumber, from which they constructed tent platforms and hard structures.

In all, the team built three housing and support areas, known as land support areas. The materials for those facilities would fill 36 C-17 cargo jets. (Workers from Kellogg, Brown and Root, a civilian contractor, arrived later and built two more LSAs.)

Construction is also underway on several hard structures, including five battalion headquarters, a brigade operations center and a 5,000-square-foot combat hospital.

Most of the Red Horse team is slated to go home in early May, and the airmen plan to leave a nearly complete base for their replacements to finish.

Living with the Army

But this success has not come without some hiccups. Foremost among them is a constant shortage of building supplies and tools, said 1st Lt. Russell Powell, the squadron's director of operations, deployed from the 366th Civil Engineering Squadron at Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho.

"Logistics has been a huge deal for us," Powell said. "We've been working through all the materials we can get."

Bases all over Iraq have been diverting lumber to FOB Hammer, but there isn't enough in theater to keep up with demand. Delays have begun to creep in as lumber has grown more and more scarce.

"The materials are slowing us down," said Staff Sgt. Johnny Gonzalez, a supervisor working on one of the battalion headquarters. "We can work around the tools issue."

There is also some friction between the soldiers who own the camp — the formal handover took place April 1 — and the airmen who are building it.

The Red Horse commander, Lt. Col. Peter Garner, served 10 years in the Army and has tried — for the most part successfully — to maintain cordial relations. For example, the Army and Air Force leadership hold regular meetings to discuss progress, hear complaints and work out problems.

But infantry soldiers and Air Force engineers hail from vastly different organizational cultures, and those differences can be difficult to reconcile.

"I'm used to dealing with the Army as an engineer," Garner said, "but not as a trigger-puller. It's a different mindset."

Other problems have emerged as more soldiers arrive on base daily. The airmen complain that soldiers are using already scarce construction materials, such as lumber and the metal gratings for Hesco barriers, to build shade canopies over their vehicle gun turrets.

But the airmen are pushing ahead, clearly proud of what they have accomplished and determined to finish the job, or come as close as possible to finishing by early May.

The crew building the combat hospital has worked at a breakneck pace and is on schedule to finish the facility in less than three weeks. The job usually takes about four weeks.

"The motivation is getting us home," said Staff Sgt. Tommy Flynn, the job's structural supervisor. "We can see the light now."

FOUND HERE

Posted at 10:38 am by CYOUNG2110 for JOE
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Apr 10, 2007
MISSON COMPLETE!!



MISSION COMPLETE (April 4) -- Air National Guard engineers from the 557th Expeditionary RED HORSE Squadron  - which includes Airmen from the Florida National Guard - prepare to cut the ribbon to officially open a newly paved road in Iraq. The Florida Airmen are scheduled to begin returning to Florida later this week, following the six-month deployment to the Middle East. Courtesy photo.

FOUND HERE

WELCOME HOME JOE!!!!!


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Apr 2, 2007
H2O!

Water from sand

By Staff Sgt. Bill Nicholls
202nd RED HORSE Squadron


 

SOUTHWEST ASIA (April 2) -- When U.S. forces deploy, they need water.  That's especially true in the deserts of Southwest Asia, where the 557 Expeditionary RED HORSE Squadron has been tasked to support the recent troop surge.

 

Staff Sgt. Bill Powell of the Florida Air National Guard is in charge of the ROWPU (Reverse Osmosis Water Purification Unit) at one location.

 

"We draw water from a marsh, process 1,900 gallons per hour, producing 600 gallons of potable (drinkable) water, and 1,300 gallons pumped to a lagoon for dust mitigation," he explained.

 

Powell tests the water to ensure it's safe, in addition to checking pH, acid and alkaline levels.  Soldiers and Airmen then use the water to take showers, brush their teeth, and wash clothes.  Pallets of bottled water produced by other ROWPU team in-theater are positioned throughout the compound.

 

"We make the exact same water here, but they ship the bottled water in because it's easier to transport," Powell said.  "Guys can carry it with them instead of coming back here to fill canteens and water buffalos all the time."

 

Although he began his military career as a Utilities Airman, Powell soon learned he derived more satisfaction from providing water: "After I got to school and started seeing all this stuff, I said, 'Man, this is pretty cool.'  Running the water side of it is what I really wanted to do…I get a lot of satisfaction out of making water for troops."

 

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FOUND HERE

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Mar 12, 2007
NEWS...

Desert Road


DESERT ROAD (March 5) -- Airmen from the 557th Expeditionary RED HORSE Squadron, which includes members of the Florida Air National Guard's 202nd RED HORSE Squadron, help build a road in Southwest Asia recently. The Air Force engineering unit is expected to return from their deployment by early summer. Courtesy photo.

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Jan 22, 2007
LET IT SNOW...





DESERT SNOW –
Snow covers equipment, Airmen, and even the camera lens as three members of the 202nd RED HORSE Squadron pose for a photo during operations at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, recently. Pictured are: Master Sgts. Winston Edwards (left) Allen Brinkley, and Jim Black. More than 120 members of the 202nd RED HORSE are currently deployed to Southwest Asia in support of the ongoing Global War on Terrorism. Courtesy photo.

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Jan 18, 2007
ARTICLE ON RED HORSE IN ASIA

RED HORSE assists War on Terrorism in SW Asia

SOUTHWEST ASIA -- The 557th Expeditionary RED HORSE Squadron (ERHS), which includes members of the Florida Air National Guard, recently played a major role in assisting the ongoing Global War on Terrorism.

 

By renovating buildings in Southwest Asia the members of the 557th helped provide room for A-10 Warthog ground attack jets and their maintenance crews. According to Col. Patrick Malackowski, commander of the 438th Air Expeditionary Group and the A-10 Warthog aircraft, his jets are more maneuverable and can observe more on the ground than a helicopter, making them relevant to any combat.

 

The renovation project included moving a group of Marines from one building and converting it into an A-10 hangar, and constructing a 32-foot by 120-foot hut for maintenance.

 

"We had to convert another hardened aircraft shelter into billeting for the Marines; so the crew built forty bedrooms in a hardened aircraft shelter from scratch, then went back to the ones the Marines had been living in, gutted it, and converted it to aircraft use,” said Master Sgt. Michael Judd of the 557th.  “The crew did more in less time than I had any right to expect.  We finished all projects ahead of deadline, including the first one.  We thought we were going to have to extend the deadline when we first arrived.  We did not extend the deadline, and instead, the crew finished it a day early!"

 

The A-10 is designed for close air support of ground forces by attacking tanks, armored vehicles and other ground targets.  The primary weapon system of the A-10 is the 30-mm Gatling gun, capable of firing 3,900 rounds per minute.  The Warthog can fly under 1000 feet with 1.5-mile visibility, typically flying at relatively slower speeds of 180 knots.

 

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(Staff Sgt. Bill Nicholls contributed to this article)


FOUND HERE


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Jan 12, 2007
ARTICLE ON RED HORSE COMMANDER

RED HORSE commander visits locations in Iraq

Col. Jack Paschal

Five Airmen from the 557 Expeditionary Red Horse Squadron receive "Commander's Coins" from Col. Jack Paschal on Jan. 6, for "individual and overall performance above and beyond the call of duty." Those Airmen were (left to right): Tech. Sgt. Thomas Tubb (Electrician), Tech. Sgt. Daniel Turba (Heavy Equipment), Airman 1st Class Allen Miller (Electrician), Staff Sgt. Adam Barnes (Structures/Truss crew), and Staff Sgt. Bill Nicholls (Services/Public Affairs). Courtesy photo.

 

By Staff Sgt. Bill Nicholls
557th ERHS
 


AL ASAD AIR BASE, Iraq -- The Commander of the 557 Expeditionary RED HORSE Squadron (ERHS) Col. Jack Paschal, was at Al Asad Jan. 5-6, to check progress of local engineering projects, and keep in touch with Airmen.

 

Paschal said the trip to Al Asad was: "Like always, to visit our Airmen that are spread out at all our different forward operating bases, construction locations; and visit with the aviation community — ensure they're getting what they're expecting.  Once you see the construction sites, you can put together what you see on paper, and it communicates a lot better."

 

 Paschal is a former Army engineer now in command of a wartime organization more than twice the size of his Florida Air National Guard home station unit, the 202nd RED HORSE.

 

"I've been pleasantly surprised at how well the team has come together," he said. "We're representing almost sixty different units in one group…some folks still didn't know each other when they got to their final destination.  They've really taken the emphasis, and made a team out of it.  Keeping it as a team tends to focus people to work together -- that's the important thing."

 

With Airmen from Active, Guard and Reserve, the 557 ERHS is engaged in multiple engineering projects at various undisclosed locations throughout Southwest Asia, as part of the 411th Engineering Brigade, U.S. Army.

 

Paschal said it doesn't matter who the customer is: "I see it as no different.  We're here to do the missions that require us to construct things.  If we're constructing it for the Marines, the Army, the Navy or the Air Force — it doesn't make any difference.  We're here to do quality work."

 

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FOUND HERE


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Jan 9, 2007
GO GATORS!!

Florida National Guard Headlines

CELEBRATION IN IRAQ! -- Soldiers from Forward Support Medevac Team Gator, in Ad Diwaniyah, Iraq, celebrate during the BCS Championship game between Ohio State and the University of Florida, in the early morning hours of Jan. 9. Pictured are: Sgt. Jason Hughes (back, left), Sgt. Paul Weeks, 1st Lt. Geoffrey Fahringer (foreground, left), Staff Sgt. Rey Regulacion, Capt. Brett Rhodenizer, and Chief Warrant Officer Brent Gordon. Fahringer noted in an email from Iraq: "It is only half time right now, but we could not be more fired up. Soldiers from the Troop Medical Clinic and the Dental Clinic have already been lured into our 'Gator Zone' break room, where we are watching the game, to see what all of the yelling and screaming is." The University of Florida Gators beat the Ohio State Buckeyes 41-14. Courtesy photo.


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