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Face of Defense: Soldier’s Arabic Skills Pay Off
By Army 2nd Lt. Jack Pinney Special to American Forces Press Service
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FORWARD OPERATING BASE LOYALTY, Iraq, July 8, 2008 – Take a platoon of
deployed U.S. soldiers and add 100 Iraqi National Police officers. Then
mix in a mission to search 400 houses and temper it with just one
interpreter. The dynamic challenges speak for themselves.
 Army
Pfc. Joshua Ingraham (center), a 19-year-old rifleman from Bradenton,
Fla., prepares to enter a house with Iraqi National Police officers
during a clearance mission in eastern Baghdad’s Hay Nassir district,
June 20, 2008. Ingraham’s ability to speak Arabic is a great asset when
working with Iraqi security forces. He is assigned to Multinational
Division Baghdad with Company C, 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment,
4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division. U.S. Army photo (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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But blend in one motivated American soldier familiar with the Arabic language, and everything comes out great.
Such
was the case June 20, when Multinational Division Baghdad soldiers from
the 10th Mountain Division’s Company C, 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry
Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, aided Iraqi security forces during a
clearance mission in Hay Nassir, a volatile district of eastern
Baghdad.
During the mission, soldiers from the company’s 1st
Platoon worked hand in hand with their Iraqi partners to search for
illegal weapons and explosives. With only one interpreter available,
Army Pfc. Joshua Ingraham’s experience serving side by side with Iraqi
security forces proved invaluable.
Ingraham is a 19-year-old
rifleman from Bradenton, Fla. For a short time, he was assigned to
“Team ISF” a platoon of Company C soldiers dedicated to operating with
Iraqi security forces partners, at Joint Security Station Beladiat.
“I went over to JSS Beladiat for about two months, where we could live next door to the national police,” Ingraham said.
He credits his understanding of the Arabic language to the extensive amount of time he spent with his Iraqi counterparts.
“We
would go on missions with them at least twice a day,” he said. “We
would eat chow with them, [and] we would watch movies with them. For
some reason, they like romantic movies.”
During clearance
missions, the platoon could not always have an interpreter available to
explain every situation between the soldiers and policemen. Ingraham
was able to use his understanding of Arabic to position the national
policemen so the American soldiers could better assist them.
“It
motivated them a little better,” Ingraham said. “They want to work with
you more, because it’s not just some guy yelling at them and pointing
in some foreign language.”
The company’s squad leaders have
used Ingraham’s abilities to communicate on many different occasions
during this deployment, said Army Sgt. Kevin Pack, a Knoxville, Tenn.,
native.
During the Hay Nassir mission, Pack said, he was
searching a house with five national policemen when he sensed the
occupants were concealing something.
“[In] one house, we were
having trouble with getting a weapon, [and] Ingraham came over and
helped me with the ISF partners to find the weapon and confiscate it,”
Pack said.
Ingraham’s ability to communicate with Iraqi
citizens and security forces is a key reason why his unit has had
successful clearance operations, Pack said.
The Hay Nassir
mission was not the first time Ingraham’s Arabic speaking ability has
helped his unit. Army Staff Sgt. John Roeder, a noncommissioned officer
from his unit who hails from Cottage Grove, Ore., cited another
situation that allowed the squad to locate and maneuver on the enemy.
“We
were taking contact and using Ingraham as [an interpreter],” Roeder
said. “I was able to determine from the [national police] where the
contact was coming from.”
(Army 2nd Lt. Jack Pinney serves in
Multinational Division Baghdad with the 10th Mountain Division’s 2nd
Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team.) |
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| Military Connection's Comments: Soldiers with Company C, 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division were on a dangerous and challenging mission in Baghdad’s Hay Nassir district, Iraq. They had to ferret out terrorists that might be hiding in residential homes and avoid harming local citizens. Add a language barrier to the mix and things get more complicated. Nineteen-year-old Army Private First Class Joshua Ingraham spent two months with Iraqi national police at Joint Security Station Beladiat. Ingraham obviously has a natural aptitude for learning languages. He picked up enough Arabic to build a good relationship with the Iraqi police. Private Ingraham is an asset to his combat team. His ability to speak and understand Arabic soothes situations between Iraqi citizens and our soldiers when they are searching houses for weapons. |
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