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thedrifter
01-06-07, 07:54 AM
Marines pitch in to show Iraqis the light
Renovations of old, dark bunkers may make troops want to stick around

By Megan McCloskey, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Saturday, January 6, 2007

CAMP TAQADDUM, Iraq — The Marines said their first thought was: ‘How can anyone live like this?’

The bunkers at a nearby Iraqi army base are dark, dank and, frankly, uninhabitable — at least for any long period of time. But live in them the soldiers do, crowded into the concrete rooms, one company per bunker, with no temperature controls and very little light.

The poor living conditions contribute to the Iraqi army’s desertion problem.

“That’s the main reason we’re here,” said Gunnery Sgt. Robert Ruiz, of Engineer Support Company, 9th Engineer Support Battalion, 3rd Marine Logistics Group from Okinawa.

The Marines are doing renovation projects to make the base more livable and foster retention. They recently fixed up the six bunkers, rewiring the power, adding lights and installing heat and air conditioning units.

Some of those who join the Iraqi army can’t go home again because of safety concerns, stranding them on base and making the living conditions especially important, Ruiz said.

One Iraqi army staff sergeant said the renovations are boosting the soldiers’ morale.

“The improvements will encourage the [Iraqi soldiers] to keep working and fighting the insurgents,” he said through an interpreter. “We’ll never forget this big favor for us.”

The Iraqi army base is sparse, really just a designated stretch of sand with the occasional bump of a bunker disrupting the flat land. In the bunkers, the only natural light comes from tiny box windows at the top of tall stone walls, creating an atmosphere of an old-time prison. The Marines even had to chisel out iron bars on the windows to install the air-conditioning and heater units.

The bunker is divided into large rooms accessed through double metal doors. It’s reminiscent of the fallout shelters of the 1950s with bunk beds, a desk in the corner and a stove set up in the hallway.

The Marines found out firsthand what it was like to live in the bunkers. They stayed there on cots that lined the walls as they renovated the place.

“I froze the first night here,” said Cpl. Victoria Wellman, 20, of McMinnville, Tenn.

It took a dozen Marines two to three, 14-hour days to complete a bunker, initially working by flashlight until the wiring was done and new lights were installed.

“There was one single light that barely lit up the room at all,” Wellman said, adding the wires were exposed and dangerous.

The Iraqi soldiers cook their meals in a makeshift kitchen off the side of the rooms.

Sgt. Garival Perez, 31, said the cook relied on the flame from the stove to see until two lights were installed in the hallway.

The cook was “very excited about those two lights. He said ‘Thank you, thank you’ over and over,” Perez said. “He was extremely happy. It’s only two lights, but to him it’s like ‘Wow.’ ”

That type of gratitude from the Iraqi soldiers continually amazed the Marines.

“Some of them gave us food every chance they got,” Lance Cpl. Justin Light, 22, of Peoria, Ill., said. “They seem to have so little, but they give so much.”

Perez said this is the kind of work that sticks with you.

“I’ll go back to the United States thinking about this project,” he said.

Next up, they’ll install shower trailers to replace the makeshift stalls where the soldiers bring in water in pails to bathe. Kitchen trailers also are planned.

An Iraqi caretaker is assigned to each bunker and trained in the upkeep, so they can maintain the improvements themselves.

One Iraqi army first lieutenant said he couldn’t put into words his appreciation for the renovations.

“We needed it a long time ago,” he said.

Ellie