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thedrifter
11-24-06, 09:16 AM
Troops Abroad Proud to Serve on Holiday

By WILL WEISSERT
The Associated Press
Friday, November 24, 2006; 12:30 AM

FALLUJAH, Iraq -- It was before sunrise on Thanksgiving morning and a U.S. Marine sat on a frigid concrete curb, reflecting on a holiday spent in his violent patch of western Iraq.

From the Middle East to Central Asia and beyond, U.S. service members like Staff Sgt. Dominco Washington passed a day meant to celebrate American bounty in far-flung deployments, longing for home while focusing on their missions.

"There are times when you think it would be nice to be home, nice to be with the ones you love," Washington, of the 3rd Reconnaissance Military Transition Team, said while waiting in the dark along a wind-swept Fallujah street for a company of Marines searching houses.

"But you can't think too much about yourself, get too down and be a disruption to the other guys," said the 30-year-old, who hails from Norfolk, Va., but lives with his wife and 10-year-old daughter on a U.S. military base in Okinawa, Japan.

From their positions across Iraq's dangerous and insurgent-dominated Anbar province, more than 20,000 Marines quickly and quietly marked Thanksgiving amid their work, while trying to bring some homestyle traditions to Iraq.

There was a flag football tournament on fields of hard-packed sand that became blanketed by blinding dust whenever medical evacuation helicopters took off or landed nearby.

"Thanksgiving is food and football. That's what we do every year. It's America, even if we're in Iraq," said Cpl. Daniel J. English, a native of Antwerp, Ohio, in the 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion.

A television lounge at Camp Fallujah planned to show NFL games live, even though they didn't start here until the middle of the night. Cardboard turkeys, pumpkins and pilgrims in belt-buckle hats were plastered around many buildings.

Inside the base's two sprawling mess halls, three-foot turkey sculptures fashioned out of butter greeted the troops, who piled their trays high with roast turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, cornbread as well as pumpkin and four other varieties of pie. The menu also included prime rib, crab legs, shrimp cocktail, fried chicken and collard greens.

"It's the most important day of the year for us," said Raymond Yung, director of one of the food service crews at Camp Fallujah.

Secretary of the Navy Donald Winter arrived in Iraq on Wednesday and visited the camp while touring several Anbar locations.

"The morale seems very good. Yes, they have thoughts of home as everybody does, but I think that they recognize the importance of their mission and many have told me that very directly and without prompting," Winter said in a lunchtime interview. "The sense that the sailors and the Marines have is that they are making progress."

In the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia, there was no lack of thought for families back home among U.S. personnel at Manas Air Base.

"My wife and 5-month-old daughter, Emily, are waiting for me at home," said Air Force Capt. Karl Recksick of Cheyenne, Wyo. "I have four months left to serve, and I'll do my best to make my relatives proud."

Supporting refueling and cargo missions for U.S. operations in nearby Afghanistan is the main purpose of the base, established in 2001.

Several servicemen wearing Santa Claus hats distributed handfuls of sweets to their fellows, and military machinery was decorated with little Christmas trees and red ribbons.

In South Korea, U.S. Air Force personnel at Osan Air Base chowed down on turkey and mashed potatoes in mess halls.

The two Koreas are technically still at war, and reminders of the uneasy armistice signed in 1953 abound at Osan, some 50 miles south of the demilitarized zone that divides the peninsula. Patriot anti-missile batteries line the golf course, and the latest edition of the base newspaper carried articles on what to do in case of attack by chemical or biological weapons.

Staff Sgt. Benjamin Short, 26, who fixes electronics equipment on F-16 fighter jets, said being at Osan was better than Balad, Iraq, where he spent last Thanksgiving.

"They have a lot of random mortar attacks on that base and that's frustrating. You don't know where they're going to hit," said Short, who is from Seattle. "They're more of a nuisance but they have hurt some people pretty bad."

In Iraq, special convoys delivered turkey to some of the Marines manning remote outposts, but others had to settle for the same rations as a normal Thursday.

"You get used to it, missing the holidays, because you're always gone," said Cpl. Adam Kruse of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force's Headquarters Group.

Kruse left Camp Fallujah on Wednesday for a multiple-day mission to hunt for roadside bombs and said he wouldn't have time to do much Thanksgiving celebrating. A native of Huron, S.D., he will likely still be in the field when he turns 21 Saturday.

When asked what he planned to do for his birthday, Kruse didn't hesitate: "Don't get shot."

Washington and other members of the 3rd Reconnaissance Military Transition Team were still at work near Thanksgiving's dawn, after a search mission in Fallujah's southern Nazaal district that began Wednesday night ran long.

As Americans back home prepared to offer their gratitude over heavily laden tables, Washington was focused on safety in the Iraqi desert.

"While you're here you're thankful for your team," he said. "You're thankful that all the guys with you are all right."

Ellie

thedrifter
11-24-06, 06:33 PM
November 24, 2006
Navy secretary’s visit marks Thanksgiving for sailors, Marines

By Andrew Scutro
Staff writer

COMBAT OUTPOST RAWAH, Iraq — You would not have known it was Thanksgiving in western Iraq. It was just another day. But Marines and sailors at the sprawling Al Asad Air Base might have had a clue when they entered the chow hall.

Towering above the lines waiting for supper stood a gigantic turkey carved out of butter. It looked as big as a pony. Propped up against a far wall was a sheet cake the size of a king-size mattress, festooned with seasonal designs in colorful icing.

The other way to tell was the visit by the Navy Secretary Donald Winter. While Vice President Dick Cheney went to Baghdad for the holiday, Winter came out to Anbar province, now under the purview of the I Marine Expeditionary Force and its attached units. Winter had an all-hands call in Al Asad that filled a Saddam-era auditorium. He said he really just came out to see the troops and thank them for being here. He also made stops in Fallujah and the Haditha dam, where he rode one of the Marine river patrol boats on the Euphrates.

Despite some news reports declaring the mission in Iraq a grand disaster, he assured the crowd that America and government leadership stands behind the effort here. He pointed out that the Senate’s 98-0 vote approving the current defense spending bill was better then the legislative consensus after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941.

“You have all our support,” he said. Winter, who also served supper to sailors and Marines, told them to expect grateful citizens at home and he urged them to explain what they’ve done here, when people ask.

“They want to know. They want to understand,” he said.

Remote combat outposts are spread out across Anbar. From there, detachments of Marines are spread out even further into towns and villages. They use the outposts as home base for re-supply and headquarters. In the hard desert at combat outpost Rawah, Thanksgiving for the 2nd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion based here meant a feast of ham and steak and a short visit from Gen. George Casey, commander Multinational Forces-Iraq. (For the Seabees here, it meant the building supplies they devour were slow in coming.)


“It was mixed blessing because we had a bunch of equipment coming in for our jobsite,” said Chief Equipment Operator John Salguero. “It got bumped for the turkeys.”

A detachment of 30 Seabees from Mobile Construction Battalion 18 based at Fort Lewis, Washington, has been here for a month building hooches for the combat units based at the outpost. So far, they have finished 24 of 49 SWA, or Southwest Asia, huts within a ringed maze of blastproof barriers. The huts are built in parts at Al Asad and assembled in Rawah. Each has room for 16 racks. They’re heated, lit, electrified and rodent-proofed. It takes the Seabees two days to stand one up.

But Seabees are the ones with the tools, and they get lots of requests for home improvements such as tables, chairs, desks, signs, electricity, plumbing, air conditioning and heaters. Builder 1st Class Paul Chacon said, “A lot times when we get out here, we get a lot of requests. And we’re more than happy to help.”

The Seabees in Rawah are also flood-proofing the roads on the outpost. The chalky dust that covers the ground here turns into an impassable paste when it rains. In fact, the dust is so useless here, the Seabees had to import beach sand from the U.S. to line one of the outpost’s wells.

Right beside the American outpost sits a Seabees-built post for an Iraqi army battalion. Off in the distance is the small town of Rawah. While they were working the day after Thanksgiving, the Seabees looked up to see a sky-high plume of smoke coming from the Iraqi compound. The mess hall the Seabees built for the Iraqis last year was engulfed in flames. The warehouse, galley and chow hall burned through the morning.

Seabees, Marines and soldiers from Rawah watched the fire from an overlooking hill. The fire, likely sparked by an electrical malfunction, was one thing but hundreds of gallons of precious well water was dumped on the fire, which kept burning, flames licking out from under the roof.

“No showers till January. Lovely,” lamented one Marine. It means the Seabees will probably have something else to build in Rawah before the leave. But it also means they don’t eat normal food for a while.

“I feel sorry for those guys,” Salguero said, watching the fire.

Ellie