| The following journal entry
comes from a young soldier deployed in the Persian Gulf. He
has shared it, anonymously, so that others will know something
of what young men and women in the military are facing.
“These were the streets where calloused
men walked, shrouded women worked, and curious children played.
They were lined with trash and the cloud of flies too dense
to see through. The power lines like spider webs hanging over
these beautifully sad streets.”
An-Nasiriyah was the town where Jessica was
captured, and a platoon of Mortars overrun. American bodies
were drug through these streets. The Marines before us lost
18 men defending a bridge. So when they told us we were going
into this town, we envisioned a blood bath. Tension grew, and
I learned that the only thing to offer others and myself was
a good sense of humor at the appropriate times.
The fighting ended twenty-four hours before we entered the
town. We left our position from the Iraqi military base that
served as their boot camp. The sun was setting over the marshes
as we loaded onto five-tons. I was armed with my Beretta, but
I borrowed a shotgun off of our point man, who also carried
a rifle. I think I kept it close with me the whole time because
of the security I felt with it. I had no intentions of using
it, but these were untrusting streets.
Our convoy halted as gunfire began just a few hundred yards
to our left. Echo Company was engaging a target and their tracer
rounds bounced off the ground. It was amazing what you could
sleep through. Our men were sleeping in shifts. We were not
planning to sleep at all that night once we finally hit the
deck. I couldn’t sleep. The stars were out and the rhythm
of the guns just echoed in my ears. I reviewed everything I
had learned over and over again in my head—sucking chest
wounds, arterial bleeds, and compromised airways. One can only
think about such things for so long. My mind wandered to family
and friends. I had to shake myself out of it. I tried to keep
from thinking about people and places that I loved while I was
across the border. It only made me homesick. I wanted to keep
focused. I didn’t want to fail my Marines.
After a four-hour wait in the piercing cold of the night,
the trucks jolted and we slowly moved into the town. We drove
by little houses tucked away in a grove of palms and into a
field. The houses of the town lined the other side. We off loaded.
Our platoon was to head back along the road and set up security
while the other platoons got into their footholds. Then as the
sun came up and the people woke up we would be in their front
yards and they could not protest us.
We hiked back through the village in the grove along the Euphrates.
We pushed back along the road. The wildlife of the Euphrates
reminded me of nights in Virginia with all the wildlife of Tidal
Waters calling through the darkness. Frogs and crickets called
out, breaking the cold night. Animals have no concept of anything
around them. They wake up, eat, and go about their daily routine,
then rest. The next day is the same for them, uninterrupted
and simple. They did not know that the animals that were the
highest on the food chain were at war with each other. And the
men that invaded their habitat were armed and scared. They could
not understand these things, and I couldn’t either, but
I wanted to be like them so much that night. I wanted to wake
up in a warm bed and not have to be apprehensive and focused.
A single shot rang out and I heard the sound of the impact
as it bounced off the ground. It was close, twenty feet away,
maybe more. Every one dropped down. It was too loud to be an
AK-47. “It was CAAT platoon,” our radio operator
said as he strolled past us in the middle of the column, “they
said they won’t shoot at us again.” We moved into
our position, and sat. We sat for hours by the river with the
stars, the wildlife, and the cold to keep us awake. In the military
you sit around a lot. You form this ability to block out time.
Two years ago, four hours was a lifetime. Sitting for hours
now is just sitting for hours, and when it is over you never
knew it was there.
We displaced and moved back to the village where we slept
in watches. It was three o’clock in the morning. We had
to stand to at 5:30. I fell asleep with the root of a palm tree
as my pillow and no sleeping bag for warmth. The sleep was often
broken by the sound of roosters and the dogs. When it wasn’t
broken by that I woke up shaking from the cold, and counting
the time until I would see light again. |