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Camp Parsons (expansion at Camp Victory) Camp: Performance (Mosul) Nineveh: Camp: Camp Patriot(Green Zone) Camp: Qayyarah: Nineveh: Qayarrah Air Base Camp: Raider FOB Dagger (Tikrit) Salah ad Din: Camp: Ramadi Camp Blue Diamond Camp Champion Main Camp Hurricane Point: Ramadi: Al Anbar: 2007: 2011: 2nd Advise and Assist Brigade, 82nd Aiborne ...
Al-Tash was a UNHCR-administered refugee camp in Iraq, described as being outside the city of Ramadi in western Iraq. In 2003, it was described as having 13,000 men, women, and children. [ 1 ] In 2003, Human Rights Watch visited the camp, finding that some residents had lived there since as early as 1982, when they had been removed from border ...
The Second Battle of Ramadi was fought during the Iraq War from March 2006 to November 2006, for control of the capital of the Al Anbar Governorate in western Iraq. A joint US military force under the command 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division and Iraqi Security Forces fought insurgents for control of key locations in Ramadi.
Company B was posted 7 kilometers to the east of FOB Corregidor at OP Trotter, with a separate mission of protecting the most vulnerable part of the main supply route leading into Ramadi, and the occupation of OP Graveyard, an isolated and abandoned cemetery to the south of the MSR.
The Sunni Triangle is a densely populated region of Iraq to the north and west of Baghdad inhabited mostly by Sunni Muslim Arabs. [1] The roughly triangular area's points are usually said to lie near Baghdad (the southeast point), Ramadi (the southwest point) and Tikrit (the north point). Each side is approximately 125 kilometers (80 miles) long.
Michael Anthony Monsoor (April 5, 1981 – September 29, 2006) was a United States Navy SEAL who was killed in Operation Iraqi Freedom during the Battle of Ramadi when he dove onto a grenade to shield his fellow SEALs, sacrificing his own life.
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After the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq in 2011, the region was in 2014 run over by ISIL forces making Anbar their stronghold in Iraq. [17] By late June 2014, at least 70% of the Anbar Province was under ISIS control, [ 18 ] including the cities of Fallujah , [ 19 ] [ 20 ] Al-Qa'im , [ 21 ] Abu Ghraib , [ 22 ] and half of Ramadi .