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| AT
THE START Martin gives last instructions March
19, 2003, before setting out to oversee the breach of
the Iraq/kuwait border defenses and launch of the war. |
Col. Gregg F. Martin
walked onto an airfield at a sprawling U.S. Army base north
of Baghdad on Feb. 3 with the headquarters company of his command,
the 130th Engineer Brigade. The soldiers climbed into a C-17
cargo plane that spiraled upward to gain altitude above the
base, minimizing its exposure to enemy fire, before heading
for Germany. That ended Martins year of service in the
combat zone of Iraq and the wildest episode yet of an extraordinary
career.
Martin led the U.S. Armys
construction mission in the Iraq campaign with intelligence,
energy and courage. As the fighting ebbed, he quickly helped
set the stage for reconstruction. He brought an innovative
style of flexible organization and management as well as personal
inspiration to his command. His responsibilities expanded
drastically to include coordination of more than 15,000 engineer-soldiers
and their shiploads of equipment from dozens of units called
up and thrown into the fight.
"Gregg Martin did a superb
job," says his wartime commander, Lt. Gen. William S.
Wallace, in a March 15 summation of Martins performance.
Wallace led the Armys V Corps, which planned and ran
last springs ground campaign. Martin not only led the
Corps engineer component but also served as Wallaces
chief engineerthe ranking engineer for V Corps
war planning. "He is a great officer, a great engineer,
a great soldier and a great individual," Wallace says.
Martins skills and leadership
helped engineers achieve their mission with swift efficiency
in the best traditions of the U.S. military. His service represents
an immense personal accomplishment and capitalization on decades
of training and education that seem almost prescient to the
needs of the campaign.
For his extraordinary service,
and to honor the accomplishment of all the military engineers
serving the nation, Engineering News-Record has chosen
Col. Gregg F. Martin to receive its Award of Excellence for
2003.
During the war, Martins engineers
built and repaired roads, bridges, airfields and bases, sometimes
under fire and always at the most critical junctures. Then,
as Baghdad was taken, Martins engineers immediately
began civil reconstruction to ease unrest among the Iraqi
people by addressing myriad infrastructure needs. Simultaneously,
they turned their resources to base construction, road building,
enemy ordnance demolition and force protection for both the
coalition troops and the fledgling Iraqi police and the countrys
civil defense forces.
Martins role in the campaign
began when he reported in Germany as the new commander of
the 130th in June 2002. The 47-year-old soldier was immediately
swept up in what became 10 months of top-secret preparation
for invasion.
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| RAPID
THRUST A Third Infantry Division column, with Martin's
54th Engineers, attached, races toward An Najaf, deep
in Iraq on Day 4. Martin's engineers were everywhere in
motion. (Photo above right courtesy of the 130th Engineer
Brigade) |
Poring over terrain maps, satellite
imagery and intelligence data, planners scripted various alternatives
for the assault. "The engineers are a key player in developing
the operational scheme of maneuver," Martin says. "The
main commander will lay out that this is the mission. Then,
the planners...including engineers, come up with different
courses of action and critique them. The engineers have a
heavy vote."
There were three basic routes to
Baghdad: go straight up the middle between the Tigris and
Euphrates rivers; or go westward across the desert and then
turn north for Baghdad; or go even further around and come
back at the city from the north and west. The second alternative
was chosen.
"The way we ended up going
had less population, fewer canals and fewer river crossings.
The bad news was that the road network was very, very weak.
The biggest advantage was that we went around most of their
defenses," Martin says. As the force advanced, it made
several thrusts to appear to be turning for the middle, but
those moves were intended to fool the enemy. "We just
went around most of them," says Martin.
As engineering tasks were identified
during planning, they were resourced by tapping regular engineer
units from all over the army and by calling up troops from
the National Guard and Reserves. An invasion force was mobilized,
deployed to the gulf region and staged for action. A huge
multicamp build-up began to rise in the desert of Kuwait as
advance elements of Martins engineers helped to create
an infrastructure to support and organize the invasion.
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| EVERYWHERE,
DOING EVERYTHING The engineers were an awesome
force, from repairing bomb-created runways at critical
airports to throwing out assault bridges such as the Birthday
Bridge at Tikrit and launching the first mission
into Baghdad to begin restoring electricity. (Photos below
courtesy of 130th Engineer Brigade) |
On March 21, 2003, the assault
was launched. Martin led the ever-expanding mass of engineers
into the fight in a campaign that today is being used to rewrite
U.S. military doctrine. By the time the tasks began to shift
to stabilization and recovery, Martin had six colonels and
their units working under him. All were commanders of engineer
groups performing tasks across Iraq that ranged from restoring
civil services in Baghdad to building bases and repairing
bridges for regional governments.
During the fight Martins
engineers, or "Sappers," as they are known, "were
probably the most versatile force that we had available during
the fight," Wallace says. After the attack, Martin redirected
the engineering force with characteristic zeal and effectiveness
to help stabilize the country. "The combat tasks were
what we prepared for, but the stability and support tasks,
the nation-building tasks, became the center of gravity of
our engineer effort. The control of all of that was maintained
very expertly by Gregg Martin," Wallace adds.
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| (Photo
by U.S. Navy / Arlo K. Abrahmson) |
Martins positive attitude
and endurance are the qualities people talk about most. "One
thing anybody who has ever met Gregg Martin remembers about
him is the enormous energy he has," says Wallace. "And
it is not just personal energy, it is energy that becomes
contagious; contagious within the organization he is in command
of, but also contagious across the entire formation."
From his first posting after graduation
from West Point in 1979 and subsequent training in the Armys
Engineer and Ranger schools, Martin has demonstrated the qualities
that made him an outstanding leader in the Iraq campaign.
In raising him, his parents had emphasized education and public
service. His late father, Donald Martin, a Navy veteran from
World War II who went to college on the G.I. bill and earned
a masters degree in education, worked with public agencies
and served local government in his community. His mother Patricia
earned her own degree after her five children were no longer
small and became a guidance counselor. Public service "wasnt
something they talked about, it was something they lived,"
Martin says.
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| STABILIZATION
Engineers relieve strains on society and boost the economy
with repairs to infrastructure and work for local contractors.
|
An early Army evaluation of Martin
lays out his key qualities: "Extremely knowledgeable
in all areas of engineering and able to transfer that knowledge
to those under his supervision...very articulate and open
in expressing his opinion and enthusiastically carries out
whatever decision is made...most physically fit individual
in the company...a leader that continuously challenges and
motivates the younger soldiers...Martin is going to be an
outstanding officer whose career should be carefully managed
to insure maximum exposure to soldiers. Recommend civilian
schooling."
Martin eventually got plenty of
civilian schooling, although his military career had a false
start. He originally planned to join a pair of highly regarded
uncles in the U.S. Coast Guard. He was all but accepted to
its academy after high school but failed a vision exam. Deeply
disappointed, he enrolled in the University of Maine, thinking
of going into forestry. Instead, he discovered the Reserve
Officers Training Corps, fell into its program and applied
to all the service academies the following year. He was accepted
at West Point and his military career was off and running.
After his first command in Germany,
the Army sponsored Martin to a masters program at MIT
in 1986. He was an extremely motivated student and piled on
extra courses that interested him. "I tried to keep related
to military engineering," he says. He emerged 21 months
later with two masters degrees, one in civil engineering
and one in technology and policy, and all the course work
completed for his next campaigna Ph.D. He received a
doctorate in engineering management and public policy in 1992.
Martins career took him back
to school several times, adding two more masters degrees.
"The commanders who come out of the field to go to school
tend to do extremely well," he says.
Col. Gregg F. Martin, Award of Excellence Winner, talks about military engineering
efforts in Iraq.
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The field experience was his foundation.
Martin served in Germany as a lieutenant in the 94th Engineer
Battalion, a unit that backs up combat operations with heavy
equipment, and later as a company commander with the 79th
Engineer Battalion. Martin credits that period with helping
prepare him for Iraq. It included three heavy doses of intense
construction under extreme conditions rebuilding a vital NATO
training range at Grafenwoehr, Germany.
For each of three years, one of
the impact areas was shut down for construction while the
surrounding range continued in a training uproar. "You
actually had tanks and Bradleys on the move all around, artillery
shooting at all hours, attack aircraft screaming in at treetop
level. It was a lot of fireworks," Martin recalls.
"It was a monumental effort,"
says Lt. Col. Paul Grosskruger, who also worked on the project
as a junior project engineer and platoon leader, and went
on to command the 94th Engineer Battalion under Martin in
Iraq. During last springs fight, Martin used the 94th
as one of the most aggressively deployed combat heavy battalions
in history. "I dont think any combat heavy was
ever deployed as far forward as the 94th engineers,"
says Lt.Col. Mark Holt, Martins deputy commander during
the assault. One of the 94ths companies took its road
management and road construction equipment "right on
the heels of the calvary, even in front of the infantry,"
Holt says.
"There was concern for the
trafficability of the road in the south and the only way to
handle it was to get scrapers, dozers, compaction equipment,
road graders and water distributors out there in the front,"
says Holt.
Holt says Martins use of
the 94th and other engineer battalions, whose resources were
frequently broken down, task-organized and dispatched on rapid
missions all over the battlefield, was typical of his aggressive
and innovative approach to the campaign.
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| SHARPENING
THE AX West point training, follow on degrees,
Third World experience in Honduras and fitness prepared
Martin for Iraq. (Photos top courtesy of the Martin Family) |
At Tellil Air Base, near An Nasiriyah,
one of the earliest objectives of the war, engineers, including
Martin and a lightly armed band that was his rolling tactical
command post, charged in to start runway clearing work while
the infantry was still in the fight. "Those guys went
right behind the gunslingers," Holt says. "They
caught the Iraqis off guard, secured the base and then pushed
a platoon up to the bridge crossing of the Euphrates."
The engineers swiftly repaired the bridge to allow a major
passage of troops and the execution of the northern prong
of the attack toward Baghdad. "Having combat heavies
that far forward and integrated that deeply...is unheard of,"
Holt says.
Holts job, as deputy commander,
included managing the reception and resupply of engineer units
pouring into the theater, and then shoving them to
the front. The attack actually had been launched early when
it was perceived the Iraqis were off guard, so many elements
were still coming up as the army raced in. "Martin was
moving forward. Every time an engineering unit became available
we were feeding it north." Holt says.
"The Sappers were going to
be part of the fight and frequently they were going to be
the lead element," says Wallace. "It made no difference
whether it was really fighting or if it had something to do
with building a road, providing basic infrastructure to the
Iraqi people, building a school, painting something, or picking
up garbage, the engineers attacked it with all their energy."
Wallace tapped Martin as soon as
Baghdad was taken to deploy engineer missions to relieve Iraqi
suffering. Within a day, he had Task Force Neighborhood up
and running, raiding the most run-down corners of the city
with gangs of engineers and equipment, teamed up with medics
and dentists and other services. They organized and hired
local citizens to collect garbage and repair community facilities
such as soccer fields and schools. Again, field experience
was Martins foundation. Deployments in Honduras, where
he had organized similar expeditions a dozen years before,
served as the model.
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| ROCKETEER
Defueling dangerously unstable missiles in Baghdad neighborhoods
was a new task for the engineers who were trained on the
job. (Photo courtesy of the 130th Engineer Brigade) |
Capt. Nicholas Nazarko, who was
Martins construction manager throughout the campaign,
says engineering officers at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri
are re-examining the rules on how to use combat engineers
based on the war, mainly because engineers jumped on so many
unusual and unprecedented missions. If V Corps had a mission
that was "obviously not a field artillery mission, obviously
not an infantry mission, obviously not an armored mission,
they would throw it at the engineers for us to figure out,"
Nazarko says. "We were the catch-all guys. We had to
get over the fact that we were doing non-doctrinal missions."
One good example was the use of
the engineers to launch the monumental effort to collect and
dispose of Iraqi munitions stockpiled all over the country.
The most unusual job of that assignment was called Task Force
Rocketeer. The engineers were asked to defuel and destroy
67 unstable SA-2 medium range missiles abandoned by Iraqi
defenders. At least three already had exploded where they
sat from high temperatures and looting of components. Thirty-three
were discovered in Baghdad neighborhoods, loaded, armed and
ready to fire.
The detonation risk was so great
they could not be moved until civilian experts arrived to
train and equip Martins crane operators and bridge and
construction units to remove the toxic, unstable fuel. Only
one accident was reported. A drum of chemicals burst and rocketed
into the air, releasing a red cloud of toxic, explosive fuel.
Fortunately no injuries resulted.
Another good example of Martins
creativity was Nazarkos assignment to follow the fighters
and forage for construction materials, and, even more importantly,
local contractors who were willing to work. "We were
really pushing getting local contractors, even on the attack,"
says Martin.
"It was Col. Martins
idea," Nazarko says. "I had a team of 12 guys, enough
people to move around on my own." They took a construction
management organization that typically would work in the rear
(planning base camps and facilities from maps and imagery)
and ran it forward to support troop construction.
The approach was an innovative
response to evolving conditions, as reality diverged from
the war plan and troops took on construction work that they
had expected civilian contractors to handle. "We always
assumed civilian contractors would be right behind us,"
Nazarko says. "It just didnt work out that way."
And as fast as Martin tasked engineers
to aid the maneuver and logistics forces, he also pulled them
off and pushed them on again to the point of greater need.
Nothing sat idle. That was the case for Martin himself, too.
"He was on the ground with the troops who were doing
the work. He wasnt the guy in the back with the map
and the communications. In many cases, he was with the lead
element of the brigade," Nazarko says.
"I think that has changed
the way we will look at training," Nazarko says. "The
next time we train in Eastern Europe, well send units
to different countries and then try to operate and command
and control the brigade. We need long-range communications
and systems to see what the sub-units are doing, even if they
are really far away."
Another of Martins wartime
battalion commanders, Lt. Col. (Ret.) Scott Fehnel of the
864th, says part of the engineers "remarkable success"
comes from Martins leadership style. He made sure his
commanders always understood the main commanders intent
and built a personal rapport that proved invaluable once the
army stretched out hundreds of miles across Iraq. For example,
Fehnel frequently found himself "with 400 pieces of construction
equipment and 40 low-boys, and my boss is telling me to move
with all speed," he recalls with a laugh. He accomplished
the task by rationing the low-boy trailers, hauling around
the clock and leapfrogging equipment from mission to missionfully
confident he understood Martins priorities.
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| WILD
WEST Security gets strict attention in pre-convoy
briefing for trip from Balad to Baghdad on Jan. 25. |
Fehnels confidence started
with his first meeting with Martin at Camp Virginia, Kuwait.
"When we arrived in the beginning of March, there was
this bald guy running around in civilian clothes," Fehnel
says. In the days before the invasion, Martin scouted the
Kuwait/Iraq border defenses wearing a flack vest, red checkered
shirt and jeans, trying to pass as a civilian.
Fehnel finally cornered his nonstop
commander in the 130ths Tactical Operations Centeran
elaborate, modular tent humming with activity as officers
prepared battle plans and assessed intelligence data. Field
reports crackled over the radios. Maps were plotted and situation
reports were updated on banks of secure computers wired to
communications equipment by snakes of scarlet ethernet cable.
"We sat down and talked, right
in the middle of the TOC," Fehnel says. "There was
this whirlwind of activity and I thought it would be, Heres
the tactical situation of maneuver...but he asked me
about my family and told me about his wife and kids,"
Fehnel says. They talked for an hour and Fehnel says it was
the best briefing he could have had to prepare for the war
because by the end of it, he understood his commander, his
drive and intent and he knew what Martin would want him to
do without orders.
Martin told Fehnel about his wife
Maggie and their sons Patrick, Phillip and Conor. They talked
about the Army life, the importance of family and the moves
and career choices they had made.
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| ACCOLADES
Martin visited and thanked his troops at tour's end. |
"I choose to do this. Im
living the dream," Martin says of his career and service
in the Iraq campaign as he awaits word on his next posting,
which should arrive in mid-year. He is proud of his engineers
performance and calls the experience "the ultimate"
for an Army career. He also believes deeply in the importance
of the mission.
"Iraq is the main effort for
the nation," Martin says. "Weve just got to
surge and make it happen. The Iraqis want it to happen. They
want to integrate with the world community and its business,
commerce and education. There are obviously some who are not
so enamoured with this, and that is why we have to continue
to press the fight."
His advice to the soldiers and
the nation is vintage Martin: "Dont wimp out. Dont
get tired. Stay focused to the end. Despite the dangers, youve
got to step out, move out and get the job done."
(All other photos by Tom Sawyer for ENR)
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