Saturday, June 9, 2007

SIGACTs

SIGACT is military jargon for significant activity. Like most Army acronyms, it can be juggled to mean different things and morph into various parts of speech. A SIGACT is a concise report of pertinent facts concerning any enemy-focused event that occurs throughout the day. They range from an isolated, harmless sniper shot to a car bomb that kills 20. They can be good news, such as the safe discovery and neutralization of an IED or enemy weapons cache; but are mostly bad, like a successful IED attack that kills a Soldier or Iraqi policeman. Writing them is a critical duty of the tactical operations center--the task force command and control center.


Yesterday, June 8th, there were only two SIGACTs in all of Ramadi and the greater surrounding area. This is astounding. A year ago, Ramadi was a lost cause. It was probably the most dangerous, most lawless city in the world. It routinely grabbed the highest percentage of SIGACTs throughout all Iraq. Yesterday, however, some Marines downtown found a rusty artillery shell and a belt of ammo under a trash pile with a metal detector. Then on the outskirts there was a truck bomb that struck a checkpoint on the highway and badly wounded some Iraqi policemen. But after that, not a single IED exploded, and nobody was shot at, and nothing else was reported. Anywhere. The small cache type finds are still somewhat common--forgotten remnants of the lawless days when insurgents ruled the city. They had weapon and ammunition stocks hidden everywhere to facilitate attacks. They would burst into the homes of citizens and stick their AKs in the faces of the kids to make the father bury artillery shells in the backyard--and keep them from telling us about them. When the Iraqi police finally rolled in and kicked the insurgents out, they brought in these caches by the Ford F-350 truckload. Now the insurgents are out of the city, they've stepped up their VBIED campaign.


Vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices--"vee-bids". Now that the IP and the people who love them deny insurgents access to the city, the terrorists changed their tack. Now they infiltrate massive truck bombs targeting innocents and infrastructure. They like to add big tanks of chlorine, but that's just a headline-grab; the chlorine that doesn't evaporate just gives some folks a sore throat for while and gives the media something to yak about. Last week they went for an Iraqna cell phone tower, but ended up destroying five homes and wrecking a few families. The one three days ago that hit a highway patrol station a few klicks outside the base was so large that the concussion knocked down ceiling tiles and filled the on-base gym with dust--it destroyed my workout and wounded some patrolmen (one lost a leg), but luckily no one was killed except the driver.

These attacks are senseless. They're like the Nazi buzz-bombs over London at the end of WWII. A big middle finger to the people of Ramadi who are starting to enjoy water and electricity again for the first time in years. They're an Al Qaeda ploy to prove to the people that they can still control their lives. The city is getting wise, though, and a new rule by the mayor and other tactics will hopefully push these attacks further outside the densely populated areas. It is easy to see how willing the people are to suffer major inconveniences for security--waiting in long lines at checkpoints, Iraqi Army and police clearing their homes again: they don't want another VBIED to detonate in their local market. Impinges on certain civil liberties are easy to bear when the alternative is rampant violence and arbitrary destruction.

But now, the people are starting to come to terms with the uneasy peace over Ramadi right now. A few days ago our neighborhood of Ramadi had their first soccer tournament on a new field. City municipal workers are coming out of the woodwork and fixing water pipes and electrical lines on their own now that they won't get sniped at, kidnapped, or beheaded for doing so. It's kind of unfortunate we don't have positive SIGACTs: official reports that tabulate every time some kids had a soccer game without getting offered 10 bucks and some candy to put a bomb in a hole where humvees drive, or when we finally removed all the concrete barriers and concertina wire barring all the storefronts (now open) along a former IED alley, or when the municipal workers tested the local water tower and found out--amazingly--that it had no bullet holes and didn't leak like a giant colander on stilts. But that might make things too hectic in the TOC again--no one wants to go back to the time when there were 40-50 SIGACTs per day.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dave-

Great news, I am happy to see that y'all have made a real difference in Ramadi. I just hope that the progress made there isn't lost to the greater mess of Iraqi national politics. I am afraid that is the trajectory for Al Anbar, amazing progress that will one day go up in the disintegration of the Iraqi state. Hope I am wrong.

Best,
Pat

David Bradley said...

Hey Pat,

You could very well be right. The pity is that they're doing so well at the local level right now. As Sean and I see it, the best shot at not getting swallowed up in the mess of national politics is having elections to get the SAI (Sahawa al Iraq) in charge of the province, but there really doesn't seem to be any discussion about that whatsoever.

I wish you could see Ta'meem for yourself right now. We filled the Ta'meem water tower last week and guess what--the thing totally works! Just needs some leaky valves replaced. Turns out the water tower is what provides fresh water to pretty much all of Ta'meem south of Shubat. Two days ago the Ta'meem council met and the president established committees for various things like public relations, security, and so forth. There's a separate 5 Kilo council as well. There's a nominal council in Tash but it's brand new so we'll see. We're also traveling regularly to Al Angur now--that fishing village penninsula on lake Habbinyah. The Ta'meem IPs also planned a full fire rescue training day with the fire department and Red Crescent society. They lit old car tires on fire in one of the abandoned white apartments and had neighborhood kids feign various injuries with red paint. Then they all conducted a joint fire rescue operation: firemen put out the fires, used their ladders and conducted this big emergency response drill all morning--it was pretty impressive, and they were having a blast.

You may have read a Washington Post article about the Anbar Salvation Council disintigrating. I'm sure you know well enough that the LTC they cited for a lot of their points was kind of an idiot--he was also from Baghdad. I could be totally wrong, but we imagined he was a fat, bitter reservist loitering over desert in the DFAC (you know the type) when the WP found him--willing and eager to provide that 2nd opinion they were looking for.

If you want to know about anything specific just let me know...

David

Anonymous said...

Dave-

I think provincial elections could be key to making this thing stick. The progress yall have made is simply stunning. I have been talking to Katz about everything yall have been doing as well. I just wonder if the SAI will just become the leaders of Sunnistan if this whole thing falls apart??? (if so, better them than anybody else I know of out there)

I am bothered by the powers that be in Baghdad claiming the progress in Al Anbar is a result of the surge. I don't see the correlation since the Al Anbar turn around began when Col. MacFarland realized that the campaign plan the MEF was pushing wasn't tied to the realities on the ground. It irks me to see people taking credit for the drastic change in Al Anbar in order to support their political agenda. Thinking about writing an op-ed to the Post about these shenanigans. Thoughts?

You guys keep up the good work and keep the blog rolling. I love getting the updates.

Pat

David Bradley said...

Pat,
You need to write in about that! Sean told me about the same articles about claiming the surge is responsible for the success out here and I can't believe that crap. There seems to be an unwillingness to give the Iraqis credit where they really deserve it!

However, on the other hand I can understand the necessity of trying to foster political support for the surge--commanders on the ground need the troops to quell the insurgency in other areas, and we finally have (inshallah) a strategy to use those troops effectively. Unfortunately, you can't claim success where credit is simply not due--that will ultimately fell the meagre credibility they're just starting to cobble together--thanks to the Awakening, of course.
David.

ElanorLayne said...

David,
Thanks for the things you have written and the scenes you've described. I like to read things from your perspective.

It was good to see Robin recently. We all sat around missing you.

Please take care,
Kelly (for all of us Fugates)

David Broadus said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
David Broadus said...

This editorial was interesting. I would be interested in your take.

I'm reposting to get the entire link

http://www.ibdeditorials.com/
IBDArticles.aspx?id=267664846901795

Denise said...

This was thoroughly interesting and enlightening. I have apprecaited reading your blog to know more of what is happening in Ramadi in particular, Iraq in general. I appreciate the worldview you approach it, as a Christian officer.
Your mom sent me this blog link and I hope you don't mind my reading/commenting.
You (and others we know in the service) are being prayed for. My husband is in the Air Force, a Navigator on JSTARS.
-Denise Wilson (formerly Graydon)-

Anonymous said...

Homeopathic medication is a pure form of therapeutic!
[url=http://www.homeopathicdoctors.org/]homeopathy jobs[/url]

Jeff Jones said...

Hi David,
Thanks for this lesson. It's important for non military people -- including journalists like me -- to understand not just the meaning of terms we hear, but the context.

I've linked to this post in an online Reporter's Notebook I'm keeping to help fellow journalists find useful on-the-ground insight into the Iraq war experience as the U.S. prepares to pull out the last troops this year. It's at: http://after-iraq.posterous.com/

Best,
Jeff Jones
Engagement Editor, Public Insight Network
jjones@americanpublicmedia.org