Global War on Terrorism: 2d Battalion, 130th Field Artillery

The 2d Battalion, 130th Field Artillery was called to active duty as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom on November 21, 2003. Commanded by LTC Michael Dittamo and headquartered in Hiawatha, the units were located in Abilene, Atchison, Concordia, Marysville, Horton, Sabetha, Salina, and Troy. By year’s end they were in pre-mobilization training for their departure to Iraq. On Jan. 22, 2004, a farewell ceremony was held at Manhattan, and on Feb. 25 the unit left for Iraq, via a short stop in Kuwait.

Because their Humvees were not armored, as was the case with the active Army Humvees, and kits to do so would not be arriving in the near future, the small town Kansas soldiers used their initiative, and welded iron plates on them, “up-armoring” them in the event of small arms fire and Improvised Explosive Devices (roadside bombs). Working in 12-hour shifts at Camp Virginia, Kuwait, the battalion soldiers were able to add armor and machine gun mounts to the battalion’s 79 vehicles in a week. Coordinating the operation was MAJ Doug Hinkley, executive officer of the battalion. As a result, other National Guard, Army Reserve, and Army units came to see the results, and plan for their own armoring program.

With a prayer from the chaplain, the unit began the long convoy march from Kuwait to Baghdad, Iraq with the “monster-looking” vehicles of the 2d Battalion, 130th Field Artillery, departing at 0300 hrs. They stopped for noon lunch at a camp in northern Kuwait, where the servers wear bowties and soldiers eat the “last supper” before crossing into Iraq. After dinner, a Catholic chaplain in a white robe led communion Mass in a sand and gravel lot, and then they resumed the March.

That night they slept on Iraqi soil about an hour south of Baghdad. The next day they arrived at their new home, a row of former Iraqi military barracks near Baghdad International Airport. Here they began their security and force protection mission, as well as operation of the Visitor’s Bureau, a mission they performed through the summer and fall.

On Nov. 8, tragedy struck with the explosion of an Improvised Explosive Device near a Suburban vehicle being used by the Kansas soldiers on a security mission as a convoy escort for the chief United Nations weapons inspector. Killed were SGT Donald A. Clary, Troy, and SFC Clinton L. Wisdom, Atchison. Several others were severely injured. Clary and Wisdom were the first Kansas National Guard casualties of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

The approximately 350 soldiers of the 2d Battalion, 130th Field Artillery, returned home on Feb. 13, 2005 following a year in Iraq as a part of Operation Iraqi Freedom. They were welcomed in a well-attended ceremony at Bramlage Coliseum, Kansas State University, Manhattan.

On July 22, 2009, the 2nd Battalion, 130th Field Artillery, under the command of LTC John Rueger, was deployed in support of MFO 53 and sent to Sinai, Egypt for a year long deployment.