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AGE : 42

UNIT : 2nd Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division

HOMETOWN : Red Oak, Iowa

FAMILY : Wife, Marguerite, and three children

DETAILS : When Iraqis misunderstood his soldiers' mission,

This colonel urged his infantry to back off

To keep from making enemies of civilians.




COMMANDER SHOWS RESTAINT, PREVENTS UNNECESSARY VIOLENCE

The soldiers were moving to the home

Of one of Iraq's leading holy men,

The Grand Ayatollah Ali Hussein Sistani,

Seeking his crucial support

For their stay in this southern Iraqi city.

But as they turned a corner,

A group of Iraqi men blocked their way.

Shouting in Arabic, "God is great,"

The crowd grew into hundreds,

Many of whom mistakenly thought the Americans

Were trying to capture the town's holy man

And attack the Imam Ali Mosque,

A holy site for Shiite Muslims around the world.

Someone in the crowd lobbed a rock

At the troops, then another.

Lt. Col. Chris Hughes,

Commander of the 2nd Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment,

Showed restraint and intelligence.

He yelled to his troops: "Smile, relax."

Then he commanded his soldiers

To take a knee and point their weapons to the ground.

Some Iraqis backed off and sat down.

But many more continued to yell and block the road.

"We're going to withdraw out of this situation

And let them defuse it themselves,"

He told his troops through a loudspeaker.

"All vehicles turn around."

Not all commanders would have done it that way.

But Hughes, 42,

A career military man who lives with his wife, Marguerite,

And three teenage children in Fort Campbell, Kentucky

, Kept his cool as two cultures almost clashed.

Responsible for hundreds of soldiers,

Hughes drew praise from President Bush for his "skill and honor."

"This gesture of respect helped defuse a dangerous situation

And make our peaceful intentions clear,"

Bush said during his weekly radio address.

Nicknamed "No Slack," Hughes' unit

Is described by its official Web site

As "a rapidly deployable battalion

That is lethal, ruthless, violent, feared in combat."

But on April 3 in Najaf,

Hughes also made sure his soldiers understood

Cultural differences and the meaning of restraint.

With his own rifle pointed toward the ground,

The colonel bowed to the crowd and turned away.

Hughes and his infantry marched back to their compound in silence.

And when tempers had calmed, the Grand Ayatollah Sistani

Issued a decree calling

On the people of Najaf to welcome Hughes' soldiers.

"I've been real proud of him," his father, Dr. Patrick Hughes,

Told The Des Moines Register. "He is doing a good job over there

Like the rest of them are."




By Ryan Chilcote

CNN



Lt. Col. Chris Hughes instructs his soldiers

To get down on one knee and smile.