Guard gets ready to go
Local soldiers heading to Iraq by way of Miss.
By Drew Houff
The Winchester Star
WINCHESTER — A local unit of the National Guard will take an official step toward Iraq on Tuesday with a mobilization ceremony at Shentel Stadium.
The Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division of the Virginia Army National Guard begins its efforts on Saturday when the unit is federally mobilized, beginning activities to prepare for the full deployment.
ABOVE: Members of the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division of the Virginia Army National Guard check their supplies and equipment on Wednesday in a field next to the National Guard Armory on Millwood Avenue in Winchester. BELOW: Sgt. 1st Class Thomas Clarke calls out the Army-issued items that his fellow soldiers will need when they are mobilized to support Operation Iraqi Freedom. (Photos by Rick Foster) |
“We’re being mobilized to support Operation Iraqi Freedom,” Staff Sgt. Jason Bowen said on Wednesday. “The training will be theater-specific, helping them to handle the different environments and the different ways to use difficult technology.”
He likened that specialized training to efforts during World War II, when troops who fought in the Pacific campaign had a very different war from those in Europe.
Tuesday’s departure ceremony from Shentel Stadium on the Shenandoah University campus will begin at 6:30 p.m., and the public is invited to attend, Bowen said.
Once those events conclude, the National Guard will be sent to Camp Shelby, Miss., for additional training, said 1st Lt. Brian Ostrowski.
“We go on active duty next Tuesday and begin training for three months,” he said. “We then will support Operation Iraqi Freedom for the next nine to 12 months overseas.”
Bowen said he was hopeful that a large public turnout will greet the troops. “We really appreciated the support we got last time. The entire Winchester area seemed to be involved.”
The local National Guard unit has been deployed before, serving as part of Operation Enduring Freedom from July 2004 until July 2005, Bowen said, adding that the soldiers were mobilized in March 2004.
The mission sent the unit to Afghanistan, where two members of the company — Staff Sgt. Craig Cherry, 39, of Winchester, and Sgt. Bobby Beasley, 36, of Inwood, W.Va. — were killed in August 2004 when an improvised explosive device struck their armored Humvee.
“The combat veterans know what to expect,” he said. “The key is that they all return safely home.”
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