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The Kurdish Detour
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Page 24

The 432nd's mission was to create rescue operations as part of a task force named Operation Provide Comfort which would provide medical and food distribution services in mountain-based couection areas and, at the same time, set up two displaced civilian camps outside of Zakho, Iraq. Eventually, the operations were to be handed over to non-government organizations under the authority of the United Nations.

Unloading supplies with Kurds, Chameju, Iraq, May'91 A large variety of US military units and non-government organizations (NGOs) would support the 432nd's mission. Subordinate to the 354nd Civil Affairs Brigade, the 432nd coordinated with the 18th Engineer Brigade; the 18th Military Police Brigade; the 431st, 418th and the 96th Civil Affairs units. Additional support was offered by US Seabee's, aviation, psyops and Marines, as well as Italian, Dutch, British and French military engineers, medical and airborne personnel.

Once the mission of creating a relief infrastructure in northern Iraq was achieved, the control and operations of the effort would be handed over to a vast array of NGOs under the UN. These included: the UN's World Health Organization, the High Commission on Refugees, Northwest Medical Doctors, CARE, Red Cross/Red Crescent, Operation Mercy, Overseas Development Agency, AMURT, Doctors Without Borders, Sisters of Mercy, Global Partners Inc., Middle East Enterprises, Action Nord-Sud, Medicins du Monde, Christian Outreach, Intemational Rescue Committee and UNICEF. Several nations also made contributions of food and tents. All these assets converged on the shoulders of CPT Carl Fisher and CPT John Elliott who served as the mayors of Camps 1 and 2 respectively. They had the burden of coordinating those assets for the basic purpose of sustaining the lives and well being of the Kurds. Before that could happen however, the 432nd had to get out of Incirlik.


McMurry's Notes


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© Copyright 1995-2008 by Preston V. McMurry III