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Staff Sergeant Sheik Dale Horn - Someone You Should Know

Posted By Blackfive

[ATTENTION Brigadier General Gary Jones - Sir, if you don't pick this guy up for the Q Course, then you've lost your @#%ing mind...]

Thanks to Beth S. and Bob D. for sending the link to this great story about a Red Leg using his skills and brains to improve relations with the local populace in Iraq.  Staff Sergeant Dale Horn is not a Special Forces Soldier...at least, not yet.

Iraq Citizens Deem U.S. Soldier As Sheik
By ANTONIO CASTANEDA, Associated Press WriterSun Jul 31, 3:36 PM ET

Sheik Horn floats around the room in white robe and headdress, exchanging pleasantries with dozens of village leaders. But he's the only sheik with blonde streaks in his mustache — and the only one who attended country music star Toby Keith's recent concert in Baghdad with fellow U.S. soldiers.

Officially, he's Army Staff Sgt. Dale L. Horn, but to residents of the 37 villages and towns that he patrols he's known as the American sheik.

Sheiks, or village elders, are known as the real power in rural Iraq. And the 5-foot-6-inch Floridian's ascension to the esteemed position came through dry humor and the military's need to clamp down on rocket attacks.

Late last year a full-blown battle between insurgents and U.S. and Iraqi forces had erupted, and U.S. commanders assigned a unit to stop rocket and mortar attacks that regularly hit their base. Horn, who had been trained to operate radars for a field artillery unit, was now thrust into a job that largely hinged on coaxing locals into divulging information about insurgents.

Horn, 25, a native of Fort Walton Beach, Fla., acknowledges he had little interest in the region before coming here. But a local sheik friendly to U.S. forces, Dr. Mohammed Ismail Ahmed, explained the inner workings of rural Iraqi society on one of Horn's first Humvee patrols.

Horn says he was intrigued, and started making a point of stopping by all the villages, all but one dominated by Sunni Arabs, to talk to people about their life and security problems.

Moreover, he pressed for development projects in the area: he now boasts that he helped funnel $136,000 worth of aid into the area. Part of that paid for delivery of clean water to 30 villages during the broiling summer months.

"They saw that we were interested in them, instead of just taking care of the bases," Horn said.

Mohammed, Horn's mentor and known for his dry sense of humor, eventually suggested during a meeting of village leaders that Horn be named a sheik. The sheiks approved by voice vote, Horn said.

Some sheiks later gave him five sheep and a postage stamp of land, fulfilling some of the requirements for sheikdom. Others encouraged him to start looking for a second wife, which Horn's spouse back in Florida immediately vetoed...

Be sure to read the rest.  Especially, you, Sir...

[If anyone has the General's email address, send that AP article to him.]



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August 02, 2005 • Permalink
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» Staff Sergeant Dale L. Horn, United States Army from Sons Of The Republic
Or perhaps I should refer to him as "The American Sheik". [Read More]

Tracked on Aug 2, 2005 2:58:28 PM

» Marines learning Arabic.... from Media Lies
....and Army Sergeants becoming Iraqi sheiks. What is this world coming to?

Sheik Horn floats around the room in white robe and headdress, exchanging p... [Read More]

Tracked on Aug 2, 2005 5:27:31 PM

» A Question of Victory from The Fourth Rail
The Washington Post carries this article on Iraq by National Geographic author Lewis Simons, a former Marine -- or, as he phrases it, "ex-Marine." The terms are frequently used interchangably by the news media, but the choice of one over... [Read More]

Tracked on Aug 29, 2005 12:19:22 PM

» A Question of Victory from The Fourth Rail
The Washington Post carries this article on Iraq by National Geographic author Lewis Simons, a former Marine -- or, as he phrases it, "ex-Marine." The terms are frequently used interchangably by the news media, but the choice of one over... [Read More]

Tracked on Aug 29, 2005 12:32:43 PM

» A Question of Victory from The Fourth Rail
The Washington Post carries this article on Iraq by National Geographic author Lewis Simons, a former Marine -- or, as he phrases it, "ex-Marine." The terms are frequently used interchangably by the news media, but the choice of one over... [Read More]

Tracked on Aug 29, 2005 1:29:36 PM

» A Question of Victory from The Fourth Rail
The Washington Post carries this article on Iraq by National Geographic author Lewis Simons, a former Marine -- or, as he phrases it, "ex-Marine." The terms are frequently used interchangably by the news media, but the choice of one over... [Read More]

Tracked on Aug 29, 2005 2:20:31 PM