The soldiers return to Joint Base Dix-McGuire-Lakehurst, N.J., for debriefing, evaluations and out-processing procedures before returning to their regularly assigned Army Reserve or National Guard units.
Operation New Dawn transitions and signifies a formal end to U.S. military combat operations in Iraq. The transition shifts the U.S. emphasis from predominantly military to predominately civilian as the U.S. officials assist Iraqis in accordance with the Strategic Framework Agreement. The three primary missions of U.S. Forces include advising, assisting, and training the Iraqi Security Forces; conducting partnered counterterrorism operations; and providing support to provincial reconstruction teams and civilian partners as they help build Iraq's civil capacity.
Operation Enduring Freedom is the official name given to anti-terrorism military operations involving U.S. troops and allied coalition partners. Active duty and reserve component members from all branches of the U.S. armed forces have been deployed to support the war against global terrorism outside the borders of the United States. U.S. troops serve in South, Southwest and Central Asia, the Arabian peninsula, the Horn of Africa, islands in the Pacific, and Europe.
Harris served in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.
The captain, a signal officer with 16 years of military service, is regularly assigned to the 359th Theater Tactical Signal Brigade, based out of Fort Gordon, Augusta, Ga.
He is the son of George and Gail Harris of Turin, Ga.
His wife, Tiffany, is the daughter of Rick Engel of Menlo, Ga., and Debra A. Hartley of Calhoun.
In 1994, Harris graduated from East Coweta High School, Sharpsburg, Ga., and received a bachelor's degree in 2001 from the University of West Georgia, Carrollton.




