With a little more than two months left in a
year-long deployment, the 76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team is
beginning to turn attention to missions beyond the convoy security,
force protection and garrison command missions of Operation Iraqi
Freedom.
Capt. Gary Deckard, commander of C Co., 1-151st
Infantry, sees the challenge in terms of sustaining his unit rather
than rebuilding as C Co. prepares to transition to the traditional
role of homeland security in Indianapolis where C Co. is armored.
After nearly eighteen months of pre-mobilization
training and deployment Deckard doesn’t mince words about C Co.’s
ability to handle potential homeland security assignments: “No
problem… any mission,” said Deckard. “After all that we’ve gone
through, I feel confident we could do anything.”
Deckard is not alone in his assessment. 76th
Brigade executive officer Lt. Col. Sarver is responsible for
tracking the daily missions of brigade convoy security teams
throughout theater.
“I’m very
pleased with the way the units are performing their combat
missions,” said Lt. Col. Scott Sarver, executive officer, 76th
Infantry Brigade Combat Team.
“The
company level leadership has built very professional teams which
have been able to adapt and overcome everything the enemy can throw
at them.”
“This ability to build teamwork and adapt to
changing environments will serve us well upon redeployment as we
look toward to new challenges. Every soldier has become a leader,”
Sarver added.
Deckard agrees, saying that he has watched his
company transform in the last year into a highly disciplined team
that meet or exceed Army standards, and just as importantly,
understand why they need to achieve and maintain that level of
readiness.
“I had soldiers who were, honestly, marginal
performers,” said Deckard, adding that he believes that had more to
do with not understanding the goal as compared to the unwillingness
to put in the effort.
“Now, some of those Soldiers have become some of
the best performers I have. They’ve become leaders, and they’re the
future of this company,” said Deckard.
Deckard credits his NCOs
with that transformation, most who have previous deployments in
Iraq,
Afghanistan
or both. He
also says much of C Company’s future depends on their commitment to
sustaining readiness post deployment.
“When they’re out there on the road, I have to
trust in their judgment,” said Deckard. “They police themselves,
(to) make sure they’re doing the right thing. It’s easy to be a
buddy, but it takes more to do the right thing.”
1st Sgt. Steven Dejong
says the key to unit readiness is the individual Soldier.
“You have to focus on the whole Soldier,” said
Dejong, “taking care of Soldiers and families.”
Dejong said the challenges of deployment reveal
shortcomings, but that any weakness is an issue that Co. C can
address together.
“It’s a 24/7 process, day in and day out, Soldier
development and counseling, opening the door for Soldiers to grow,”
said Dejong.
One
area the leadership of C Co. has given special emphasis is
education, a challenging prospect even when a unit is not deployed
to a combat zone. Dejong says more than twenty Soldiers of C Co.
have taken advantage of online courses, pursing higher education
goals.
He said that many in the
unit have expressed an interest in developing through military
education opportunities, specifically the Army’s medic occupational
specialty training program. Dejong, a
South Chicago
firefighter and paramedic says the training program is roughly equal
to civilian intermediate volunteer to full-time training programs.
“There’s a ton of interest in (the medical
military occupation specialty) and we can make it happen,” said
Dejong.
Recognizing the benefit to his unit, the Soldiers
and even the communities to where his Soldiers will return, Dejong
is supporting the effort. And he points to it as yet another example
of the teamwork that has become a hallmark of the unit’s deployment.
Dejong also believes the focus on development
through educational opportunities during deployment, both military
and civilian, will carry over and increase the probability of
Soldiers leveraging expanded educational benefits of the GI Bill.
“It’s part of retention, gaining a career path
that brings that knowledge back to the fight,” said Dejong.
Deckard and Dejong both admit they have a company
full of Soldiers that are outstanding examples of the progress the
unit has made in the last two years, but both also say that there is
a particular Soldier who embodies the spirit of C Co. A quick check
with fellow Soldiers confirms that the leadership is not alone in
their assessment.
Spc. Matthew Bumphus is a
soft-spoken, earnest and sincere young man with a direct and plain
spoken belief: “I don’t think I
really knew what it meant to be
a Soldier until I joined C Company.”
The
Indianapolis
native joined the Indiana National Guard for the experience, but
admits that assignment to an infantry line company headed for a
combat zone caused him concern.
“(My leaders) told me
‘This will be good for you.’ I couldn’t see how going to
Iraq
would be good for me, but here I am,” said Bumphus.
Now, Bumphus says he understands what they were
telling him.
“This deployment has changed my life, I wouldn’t
take the experience back for anything,” he says.
Reluctant to talk about himself, Bumphus takes
every opportunity to steer conversation back to a favorite subject,
his fellow Soldiers.
“These are people that actually care and are
sincere in the things that they do,” he said. “Somebody can tell
right off the bat when something is wrong. They’ll come and talk to
you about it… say ‘I’ve been there too’”.
Dejong says that the whole unit has come to rely
on Bumphus as a “go to guy” who works in the unit’s operation center
and serves as a filler for convoy security missions.
Bumphus credits any success he may have to C Co.
“I’m comfortable. I trust them; we have a shared mentality. If
you’re mentally ready then you can say ‘I’m able to do the job, to
get the job done.”
In a final analysis Bumphus says the experience
of deployment has taught him about perceptions, reality and shared
values.
“For me it’s been a time for soul-searching. I’ve
learned a lot about other people as well as myself,” said Bumphus.
“Soldier development,” says Dejong.