Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
 
Posts: n/a
Default How The Troops See It...

The Iraq Story: How Troops See It

By Mark Sappenfield, The Christian Science Monitor

BROOK PARK, OHIO (Nov. 27) - Cpl. Stan Mayer has seen the worst of
war. In the leaves of his photo album, there are casual memorials to
the cost of the Iraq conflict - candid portraits of friends who never
came home and graphic pictures of how insurgent bombs have shredded
steel and bone.

Yet the Iraq of Corporal Mayer's memory is not solely a place of death
and loss. It is also a place of hope. It is the hope of the town of
Hit, which he saw transform from an insurgent stronghold to a place
where kids played on Marine trucks. It is the hope of villagers who
whispered where roadside bombs were hidden. But most of all, it is the
hope he saw in a young Iraqi girl who loved pens and Oreo cookies. Like
many soldiers and marines returning from Iraq, Mayer looks at the bleak
portrayal of the war at home with perplexity - if not annoyance. It is
a perception gap that has put the military and media at odds, as troops
complain that the media care only about death tolls, while the media
counter that their job is to look at the broader picture, not through
the soda straw of troops' individual experiences.

Yet as perceptions about Iraq have neared a tipping point in Congress,
some soldiers and marines worry that their own stories are being lost
in the cacophony of terror and fear. They acknowledge that their
experience is just that - one person's experience in one corner of a
war-torn country. Yet amid the terrible scenes of reckless hate and
lives lost, many members of one of the hardest-hit units insist that
they saw at least the spark of progress.

"We know we made a positive difference," says Cpl. Jeff Schuller of the
3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, who spent all but one week of his
eight-month tour with Mayer. "I can't say at what level, but I know
that where we were, we made it better than it was when we got there."

It is the simplest measure of success, but for the marine, soldier, or
sailor, it may be the only measure of success. In a business where life
and death rest on instinctive adherence to thoroughly ingrained
lessons, accomplishment is ticked off in a list of orders followed and
tasks completed. And by virtually any measure, America's servicemen and
women are accomplishing the day-to-day tasks set before them.

Yet for the most part, America is less interested in the success of
Operation Iron Fist, for instance, than the course of the entire Iraq
enterprise. "What the national news media try to do is figure out:
What's the overall verdict?" says Brig. Gen. Volney Warner, deputy
commandant of the Army Command and General Staff College. "Soldiers
don't do overall verdicts."

Yet soldiers clearly feel that important elements are being left out of
the media's overall verdict. On this day, a group of Navy medics gather
around a table in the Cleveland-area headquarters of the 3/25 - a
Marine reserve unit that has converted a low-slung school of pale brick
and linoleum tile into its spectacularly red-and-gold offices.


Their conversation could be a road map of the kind of stories that
military folks say the mainstream media are missing. One colleague made
prosthetics for an Iraqi whose hand and foot had been cut off by
insurgents. When other members of the unit were sweeping areas for
bombs, the medics made a practice of holding impromptu infant clinics
on the side of the road.

They remember one Iraqi man who could not hide his joy at the marvel of
an electric razor. And at the end of the 3/25's tour, a member of the
Iraqi Army said: "Marines are not friends; marines are brothers," says
Lt. Richard Malmstrom, the battalion's chaplain.

"It comes down to the familiar debate about whether reporters are
ignoring the good news," says Peter Hart, an analyst at Fairness &
Accuracy in Reporting, a usually left-leaning media watchdog in New
York.

In Hit, where marines stayed in force to keep the peace, the progress
was obvious, say members of the 3/25. The residents started burning
trash and fixing roads - a sign that the city was returning to a sense
of normalcy. Several times, "people came up to us [and said]: 'There's
a bomb on the side of the road. Don't go there,' " says Pfc. Andrew
Howland.

Part of the reason that such stories usually aren't told is simply the
nature of the war. Kidnappings and unclear battle lines have made war
correspondents' jobs almost impossible. Travel around the country is
dangerous, and some reporters never venture far from their hotels. "It
has to have some effect on what we see: You end up with reporting that
waits for the biggest explosion of the day," says Mr. Hart.

To the marines of the 3/25, the explosions clearly do not tell the
whole story. Across America, many readers know the 3/25 only as the
unit that lost 15 marines in less than a week - nine of them in the
deadliest roadside bombing against US forces during the war. When the
count of Americans killed in Iraq reached 2,000, this unit again found
itself in the stage lights of national notice as one of the hardest
hit.

But that is not the story they tell. It is more than just the dire tone
of coverage - though that is part of it. It is that Iraq has touched
some of these men in ways that even they have trouble explaining. This,
after all, has not been a normal war. Corporals Mayer and Schuller went
over not to conquer a country, but to help win its hearts and minds. In
some cases, though, it won theirs.

Schuller, a heavyweight college wrestler with a thatch of blond hair
and engine blocks for arms, cannot help smiling when he speaks of
giving an old man a lighter: "He thought it was the coolest thing." Yet
both he and the blue-eyed, square-jawed Mayer pause for a moment before
they talk about the two 9-year-old Iraqis whom members of their
battalion dubbed their "girlfriends."

The first time he saw them, Mayer admits that he was making the
calculations of a man in the midst of a war. He was tired, he was
battered, and he was back at a Hit street corner that he had patrolled
many times before. In Iraq, repetition of any sort could be an
invitation of the wrong sort - an event for which insurgents could
plan. So Mayer and Schuller took out some of the candy they carried,
thinking that if children were around, perhaps the terrorists wouldn't
attack.

It was a while before the children realized that these two marines,
laden with arms to the limit of physical endurance, were not going to
hurt them. But among the children who eventually came, climbing on the
pair's truck and somersaulting in the street, there were always the
same two girls. When they went back to base, they began to hoard Oreos
and other candy in a box.

"They became our one little recess from the war," says Mayer. "You're
seeing some pretty ridiculous tragedies way too frequently, and you
start to get jaded. The kids on that street - I got to realize I was
still a human being to them."

It happened one day when he was on patrol. Out of nowhere, a car turned
the corner and headed down the alley at full speed. "A car coming at
you real fast and not stopping in Iraq is not what you want to see,"
says Mayer. Yet instead of jumping in his truck, he stood in the middle
of the street and pushed the kids behind him.

The car turned. Now, Mayer and Schuller can finish each other's
sentences when they think about the experience. "You really start to
believe that you protect the innocent," says Schuller. "It sounds like
a stupid cliché...."

"But it's not," adds Mayer. "You are in the service of others."

For Mayer, who joined the reserves because he wanted to do something
bigger than himself, and for Schuller, a third-generation marine, Iraq
has given them a sense of achievement. Now when they look at the
black-and-white pictures of marines past in the battalion headquarters,
"We're adding to that legacy," says Schuller.

This is what they wish to share with the American people - and is also
the source of their frustration. Their eight months in Iraq changed
their lives, and they believe it has changed the lives of the Iraqis
they met as well. On the day he left, Mayer gave his "girlfriend" a
bunch of pens - her favorite gift - wrapped in a paper that had a
picture of the American flag, the Iraqi flag, and a smiley face. The
man with the lighter asked Schuller if he was coming back. He will if
called upon, he says.

Whether or not these notes of grace and kindness are as influential as
the dirge of war is open to question. But many in the military feel
that they should at least be a part of the conversation.

Says Warner of reaching an overall verdict: "I'm not sure that
reporting on terrorist bombings with disproportionate ink is adequately
answering that question."

Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
OT--I voted for the resolution...before I voted against it NOYB General 18 November 29th 05 10:39 PM
So where is...................... *JimH* General 186 November 28th 05 02:29 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:09 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017