To make the primary mission of WMD search more manageable, ISG was operationally divided up into several sectors each with its own Sector Control Point. The three sectors were North,
Baghdad and South, with Sector Control Point-Baghdad (also known as SCP-B or "skip bee") being the primary and largest. The bulk of the ISG staff and SCP-B were located on
Camp Slayer at the former
Al Radwaniyah Presidential Site on
Baghdad International Airport in western Baghdad. One of the major supporting elements of the ISG was the Combined Media Processing Center (CMPC). It consisted of four components, CMPC-Main (CMPC-M) at
Camp Al Sayliyah, Qatar, CMPC-Baghdad (CMPC-B) located on Camp Slayer, as well as CMPC-North (CMPC-N), and CMPC-South (CMPC-S). The initial nucleus of the CMPC were drawn from DIA document exploitation personnel. By the summer of 2004, the CMPC had grown to over four hundred mostly civilian document and media processors and linguists/translators living and working primarily in CMPC-M at
Camp Al Sayliyah, Qatar, and CMPC-B at Camp Slayer in Iraq. Acting as an independent entity outside of the normal chain of command (ISG reported directly to
Donald Rumsfeld), it surveyed and exploited hundreds of possible WMD sites across the breadth of Iraq with very few problems. There were two incidents which incurred fatalities. The first incident was a paint factory explosion of April 26, 2004, which killed two soldiers, US Army sergeants Lawrence Roukey, and Sherwood Baker, and injured several more. The mission had been previously abandoned because of security concerns. These were the ISG's first casualties in over a year of operations. The second was a vehicle-borne
improvised explosive device (IED) attack against
Charles Duelfer's convoy, which claimed the lives of two of Duelfer's Physical Security Detail, SSG Clinton Wisdom and SPC Don Clary, both of the
Kansas Army National Guard's B Battery, 2/130th Field Artillery Battalion. Throughout the life of ISG, there were two occasions where chemical weapons were found. The first was a single
sarin mortar shell which had been reworked into a roadside IED by
insurgents. The second was a handful of 122-millimeter
rocket warheads filled with inert
mustard gas that was recovered near
Babylon. Both were thought to be remainders from the
Iran–Iraq War, when Iraq was in some sense a US ally, and were useless as
offensive weapons. They were later destroyed by ISG personnel. In late 2004 the ISG and the MCTs (mobile collection teams) undertook some counterinsurgency operations, although many details remain classified. There were other missions and organizations operating within the ISG which are Top Secret and are unlikely to be declassified anytime soon.
Sector Control Point – Baghdad Sector Control Point-Baghdad (also known as SCP-B or "skip bee") was being the primary and largest of the Group's three operational groups. SCP-B, along with the core of the ISG staff, were located on
Camp Slayer at the former Al Radwaniyah Presidential Site on
Baghdad International Airport in western Baghdad. From its founding in the spring of 2003 until disbandment at the end of February 2005, SCP-B was commanded by a series of coalition officers from the
U.S. Army,
U.S. Marines and
Australian Army. Its first commander was U.S. Army Reserve Colonel
George Waldroup, who led the group from its founding until the summer of 2004. He was later picked by U.S. Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld to head the
Strategic Support Branch of the
Defense Intelligence Agency. Following COL Waldroup, USMC COL Frank Johnson was pulled from retirement and took the
reins until October 2004. COL Johnson was followed by Lt Col Andy Carr, an Australian engineer, who was briefly followed by MAJ Peck (now LTC). The final commander of SCP-B was Australian Military Police Major Damien Hick. SCP-B's missions included not only the search for
WMD, but work on
counter-terrorism and the ongoing investigation into the fate of U.S. Navy Captain
Michael Scott Speicher, who was shot down during the
Gulf War of 1991. Initially presumed dead, he was later declared missing when evidence emerged after the war that he had survived the crash of his aircraft. SCP-B was organized into several Mobile Collection Teams, or MCTs, made up of members of American, British and Australian forces, with Americans providing the vast majority. An MCT generally consisted of a commander—usually a major or captain (although MCTs were led by lieutenants and full colonels at times) – and anywhere from ten to twenty other personnel, depending on mission requirements. The majority of SCP-B personnel were mobilized
American National Guard or
Army Reserve Soldiers (although the
United States Navy, Marines and Air Force, as well several coalition forces, were also well represented) as well as some US Army Special Forces Personnel and a small detachment of active duty soldiers from the 1st Cavalry Division. The other key piece of SCP-B were the U.S. Army
Military Police crews assigned to the organization. The Military Police provided
convoy and site security for the MCTs as well as secure transport for ISG personnel in their travels around Baghdad. SCP-B also contained other special units, such as dog handlers (who were mostly civilian contractors), explosives ordnance disposal,
ground-penetrating radar teams, satellite communications, and a WMD transportation and storage group. ==Interim Progress Report==