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| Army
engineers installed two temporary bridges over the Khazir
River on the highway between Mosul and Irbil last April.
They were removed following repairs to the permanent bridge,
which had been bombed during the fighting. |
The U.S. Armys
130th Engineer Brigade reached two significant bridging milestones
in mid-January during the unit's final days of deployment
in Iraq. In one case a landmark assault float bridge its troops
emplaced during fighting in April was removed, and in the
other, an inadvertent bridge equipment destruction test came
to an end.
On Jan. 15th, Engineers under the
4th Infantry divisions 74th Multi-Role Bridge Co., out
of Fort Hood, Texas, removed The Birthday Bridge
at Tikrit, the longest assault-float bridge placed under combat
conditions since World War II.
The Birthday Bridge was built by
the 130ths 565th Engineer Battalion, headquartered in
Hanau, Germany, on April 28, Saddam Husseins birthday.
The bridge spanned the Tigris in his hometown, just downstream
of a bridge that had lost one of its two lanes in a bomb strike.
We figure he might have even been watching us through
binoculars from his spider hole, joked the 130ths
commander, Col. Gregg Martin. Saddam Hussein was captured
on Dec. 13 in a hideout nearby. Together with almost 265 meters
of temporary causeway, the armys 300 meters of floating
bridge allowed two-way traffic to resume over the river at
Tikrit.
Repairs have yet to begin on the
damaged fixed bridge, but the engineers took up the assault
float bridge because they have replaced it with a 350-meter,
7-span Mabey Johnson Bridge on floats further downstream,
maintaining a one-way traffic loop into and out of the city.
The new pontoon-supported bridge requires less maintenance
and security.
Bechtel is expected to begin repairing
the permanent Tikrit bridge soon.
In the other project, engineers
from two units, one under the 130th and the other the 74th
MRBC under the 4th ID, removed of a pair of temporary spans
over the Khazir River on a highway connecting Mosul and Irbil
on Jan. 16. The project had turned into a side-by-side destruction
test of the two kinds of bridging equipment. Removal
was enabled by the completion of repairs to two-lane twin
of the bridge that stands beside the temporarily patched structure.
The temporary bridges were
placed at the end of April after aerial bombs cut both the
crossings twin concrete bridges during last springs
fighting.
Engineers patched one bridges
section of missing deck with a Medium Girder Bridge (MGB)
unit, a structure designed for manual assembly that is cantilevered
across gaps with considerable might and brawn. The lane beside
it on the same structure was bridged with a Heavy Dry Support
Bridge (HDSB), a new product designed for placement by its
own truck-mounted crane. It requires a far smaller crew to
install. The project marked the armys first use of the
HDSB in combat.
The arrangement established two
lanes of traffic, one in each direction, on one of the parallel,
two-lane bridges. The other cut bridge was left untouched
for repairs that army engineers expected Bechtel to begin
in June. Bechtel was delayed, however, and meanwhile the temporary
bridge units endured very heavy traffic of at least 1,000
vehicles a day, says Staff Sgt. Brett Bybee, the bridge liaison
on the 130ths headquarters staff.
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| The
130th Engineer Brigade commissioned the so-called Birthday
Bridge in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit on April
28, 2003, on the deposed dictator's 65th birthday. |
Neither bridging unit is designed
for long-term use. Specifications call for inspection every
1,000 vehicles because pinned connections, drop-in deck panels
and other features that make them portable can be loosened
or distorted through heavy use. By October 12, with both bridges
suffering considerable wear, the HDSB was replaced by another
of the same design, while the MGB was patched up with replacement
parts that stretched its life for another month before it
too had to be changed out by another MGB.
In their last mission before heading
home, with permanent repairs on the bridge next door complete,
engineers from the 459th Multi-Role Bridge Company, a reserve
unit headquartered in Bridgeport, W. Va., removed the MGB.
The other temporary bridge was taken up by the 74th MRBC.
The army is studying the
failure modes of the two bridge units, but declines to release
specifics, citing strategic considerations.
(Photos courtesy of US Army
130th Engineer Brigade)
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