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thedrifter
01-25-04, 07:42 AM
Marines to take popular Dragon Eye to Iraq


By Sandra Jontz, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Friday, January 23, 2004


MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va. — As Marines head back to Iraq in the coming months, they’re taking their new Dragon Eye unmanned aerial surveillance plane, an asset in short supply but in heavy demand when they battled this spring to topple Saddam Hussein.

The Corps is pushing to equip its infantry units with the five- to 10-pound aerial vehicle that provides immediate intelligence to the ground troops.

“The true value of it is that it’s right there in the hand of the guy who needs the info and needs the intel,” said Col. Jim Howcroft, who served as the intelligence officer for the 1st Marine Division in Iraq. “It was literally in his hip pocket … and gives him info on what he wants to find and gets it back, no kidding, as it’s flying.”

The Corps had planned to field 35 systems in fiscal 2005, but with roughly 25,000 Marines Iraq-bound, they’ve moved up the time line to buy 41 to 60 this year, said Program Manager Marine Lt. Col. Don Bruce.

Dragon Eye is a long-term plan for the Corps.

“If the budget gods continue to smile on us, we plan for a five-year buy of 323 … so we could provide pretty much every maneuver company commander in the Marine Corps with a system of their own,” Bruce said.

The attractiveness of the bird with a 45-inch wingspan also is in its simplicity, said Howcroft, now the intelligence officer for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force.

“The average rifleman can be trained with a couple of hours of training. It doesn’t take a pilot to fly this,” Howcroft said.

“The beauty of the Dragon Eye is we put the tool into in the hands of Marines and said, ‘We think this is a good piece of gear,’ and they figured out how to make it work and what tactical situations to use it in. It was not a bunch of colonels … who wrote this huge book on how to employ it tactically.”

It does have its drawbacks.

“It’s somewhat fragile … and its range isn’t huge,” he said.

It optimally flies about 300 feet above ground and is difficult to maneuver in an urban setting. It flies for about an hour on batteries.

“It wouldn’t be good to fly a whole border area, but if a company commander wanted to look at a valley or wadi [a dry water channel] … they could put the Dragon Eye up and survey that,” Howcroft said.

While Dragon Eye is unique to the Corps, some aspects are shared with other services. For example, the autopilot mechanism is the same the Air Force’s Desert Hawk UAV.

“The receivers and transmitters in our UAV are virtually identical to those in the Army’s small UAV they’re looking at,” Bruce said.

In December, the Corps awarded the production contract to the Simi Valley, Calif.-based AeroVironment to buy up to 1,026 air vehicles, 342 ground control stations and field support kits, and the associated technical and logistics support.

Each system, which consists of three planes, a ground station and a field support kit, costs roughly $100,000.

The tally for research and development totaled $3 million in fiscal 2001 and $2.2 million in 2002.

“Unlike the Global Hawk that costs millions of dollars, or a Pioneer that costs a couple hundred thousand, a Dragon Eye is relatively inexpensive and therefore, it’s expendable,” Bruce said.

http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=20012


Sempers,

Roger
:marine:

thedrifter
01-25-04, 07:43 AM
January 21, 2004

Marines pack ‘friendship’ Frisbees as they head to Iraq

By Gidget Fuentes
Times staff writer


OCEANSIDE, Calif. — As they load tons of military gear onto cargo ships bound for Iraq, leathernecks with the 1st Marine Division are making room for items meant to bridge the gap with the locals.
Think Frisbees — 15,000 of them.

The flying discs are part of a massive supply of donated goods that Marines and volunteers at Camp Pendleton, Calif., helped pack Jan. 21 for shipment overseas.

In all, the Marine Corps is sending 9 tons of material — including four tons of school supplies and three tons of medical supplies — with the 25,000 Marines and sailors who are deploying this spring for a seven-month rotation to Iraq.

Spirit of America, a nonprofit organization that sent baseball bats and gloves to Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom, collected the goods.

Division officials say the items are meant to inspire good goodwill and help build trust with local Iraqis. The Frisbees, for example, feature the word “Friendship” in English and Arabic.

Ramune Carothers, a Spirit of America spokeswoman, said the donations mostly will go to schools, hospitals and children in the al-Anbar Province — a part of the “Sunni Triangle” that has seen many attacks against U.S. and coalition forces. The 1st Marine Division is slated to take control of the area from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division this spring.

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/story.php?f=0-292925-2573846.php

Sempers,

Roger
:marine:

thedrifter
01-25-04, 07:50 AM
Marines hope to win Iraqi hearts - Depot Marines help on homefront, aid deployed comrades
Submitted by: MCRD San Diego
Story Identification Number: 2004123134146
Story by Lance Cpl. Jess Levens



MARINE CORPS RECRUIT DEPOT SAN DIEGO, Calif.(January 23, 2004) -- Three Depot Marines took part in delivering donated toys, school supplies, medical supplies and sports equipment Jan. 16 for deployed Marines to give to Iraqis as part of the No Better Friend Program.

The Marines were Capt. Dave Walker, assistant Depot inspector, Cpl. James Jones and Lance Cpl. Nathaniel Green, both from the installation and logistics staff section. They departed the Depot in two moving trucks to Camp Elliot, Calif., where they filled the trucks with toys for 1st Marine Division at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Calif., to take before its next deployment to Iraq.

The toys were taken from a Toys for Tots surplus at Camp Elliot. The Depot Marines, along with Marines from Naval Marine Corps Reserve Center, Calif., separated and categorized toys before filling the trucks.

The No Better Friend Program is a Marine Corps effort to improve the relationship between Iraqis and the Marines in Iraq, according to Walker. The Marine Corps wants to take a more humanitarian approach when it returns. The name of the program is self-explanatory. Officials hope the Iraqis feel there is no better friend than a Marine. Officials from Spirit of America, which is a nonprofit organization geared toward the military, and 1st Marine Division officers decided the contents.

"This is a great program," said Walker. "We want the Iraqis to trust us and look at the Marines as friends and protectors, not enemies."

Once the toys and supplies were loaded into the trucks, the Depot and Reserve Center Marines proceeded to Las Pulgas, Camp Pendleton, to make their delivery to 1st Marine Division, which redeploys in February and March.

They will be in an area called the Sunni Triangle, which is one of the most volatile areas in Iraq, so improving relations with the people is very important, according to Walker.

"Only toys with positive images are being delivered," said Walker. "Sporting goods, books, action figures and things like that are good, but we don't want to send toy guns or anything like that."

After a full day of loading and unloading, the Marines arrived back to the Depot at around 3 p.m.

"It feels good to help out," said Jones, an inactive reservist serving on active status. "I may not be over (in Iraq) with my fellow Marines, but if I can do my part in contributing to the effort, I'm happy."

For more information on the No Better Friend Program and similar programs, visit the Spirit of America Web site at www.spiritofamerica.net.

http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/main5/AFC47481988AD94C85256E240066B396?opendocument


Sempers,

Roger
:marine: