Summer 2006 World of Welding
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FROM THE FRONT LINES
MARINES AND SEABEES REBUILD HIT BRIDGE
By1st Lt. Rob Dolan
Regimental Combat Team – 2 PAO
Reprinted from The Desert Marine, a
publication of the 2d Marine Division,
U.S. Marine Corps, with
permission.
HIT, Iraq (October 11, 2005) – Navy Seabees and Marines from
Regimental Combat Team-2 and Soldiers from Task Force 2-114,
Mississippi National Guard, repaired a section of bridge here
yesterday that was heavily damaged by an insurgent car bomb
September 4. The bridge spans the
Euphrates River connecting Hit
to the suburb of At Turbah on the eastside of the river. Navy
Seabees conducted site surveys and assessments on the bridge and
decided the best way to get the two cities connected again was
by prefabricating a patch for the bridge to repair the damaged
section.
“They rehearsed the move in and repair several times prior to
movement to the site,” according to Navy Lt. Cmdr. Darcy Wolfe,
Assistant Operations Officer, 30
Naval Construction Regiment.
The citizens of Hit received a huge morale boost when the
Seabees and Marines of Regimental Combat Team – 2 appeared on
the scene, geared up and ready to repair the vital
infrastructure. The 1st Battalion, 2d Brigade, 7th Iraqi Army
Division (or 1-2-7 IA) provided security by cordoning the bridge
on both sides of the river and erecting barriers and defensive
schemes that will protect the bridge against future incidents.
“Actual construction took three days – two days to perform the
second site survey, confirm all measurements, pre-fab the
solution and rehearse. The final day was transporting the
solution to the site and performing the repairs to the bridge,
which took approximately four hours,” said Wolfe.
The mood in Hit was described by the Sailors as ‘good and the
citizens appeared extremely pleased’ now that the inconvenience
they had suffered for the past month has been rectified.
“We had one sniper round come in after we were off the bridge,
but it hit the bridge and no one was injured. I guess the bad
guys slept in too late and missed the opportunity,” said Navy
Lt. Richard Windham, Alpha company commander, Naval Mobile
Construction Battalion-22.
The bridge will be open to pedestrian traffic only, until after
the October 15 referendum at which point it will be opened to
controlled vehicular traffic.
Late morning on Sept. 4, Marines witnessed a white Suburban stop
in the middle of the bridge, moments later an explosion echoed
through the city. When the fire and smoke cleared a large
section of the aging bridge was missing and the citizens of At
Turbah were effectively cut off from the city, eliminating their
shortest route to the local hospital.
Marines and Iraqi Soldiers began providing permanent presence in
Hit in late July when the joint force rolled through the city
during Operation Saif (Sword). Since then the Soldiers and
Marines have been conducting routine patrols and targeted raids
against suspected terrorists. Al Qaeda in Iraq terrorists have
been using an intense murder and intimidation campaign focused
at discouraging Iraqi citizens from voting in the referendum and
cooperating with Coalition Forces.
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