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Wednesday, June 13, 2007 |
“We’re Waiting To Get Blown Up” |
from The Military Project:
“We’re Waiting To Get Blown Up” “It’s Just More Troops, More Targets” “When Are We Going To Get Out Of Here?” In Iraq, Loathsome Stupid Piece Of Shit Lieberman Lied About What Soldiers Think About The War; But - Oops - A Reporter Was There!
[Thanks to Ward Reilly, Veteran, who sent this in.]
“We’re not making any progress,” Hedin said, as he recalled a comrade who was shot by a sniper last week. “It just seems like we drive around and wait to get shot at.”
May. 30, 2007 By Leila Fadel, McClatchy Newspapers
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Spc. David Williams, 22, of Boston, Mass., had two note cards in his pocket Wednesday afternoon as he waited for Sen. Joseph Lieberman. Williams serves in the 82nd Airborne Division from Fort Bragg, N.C., the first of the five “surge” brigades to arrive in Iraq, and he was chosen to join the Independent from Connecticut for lunch at a U.S. field base in Baghdad.
The night before, 30 other soldiers crowded around him with questions for the senator.
He wrote them all down. At the top of his note card was the question he got from nearly every one of his fellow soldiers:
“When are we going to get out of here?”
The rest was a laundry list. When would they have upgraded Humvees that could withstand the armor-penetrating weapons that U.S. officials claim are from Iran? When could they have body armor that was better in hot weather?
Williams missed six months of his girlfriend’s pregnancy when he was given six days’ notice to return to Iraq for his second tour. He also missed his baby boy’s birth. Three weeks ago, he went home and saw his first child.
“He looks just like me,” he said.
“I didn’t want to come back. . . . We’re waiting to get blown up.”
Williams wasn’t sure if he’d say how he really felt. But if he could, he’d ask about body armor.
“I don’t want him to snap his fingers to get things fixed,” Williams said, referring to Lieberman. “But he has influence.”
Next to him, Spc. Will Hedin, 21, of Chester, Conn., thought about what he was going to say.
“We’re not making any progress,” Hedin said, as he recalled a comrade who was shot by a sniper last week. “It just seems like we drive around and wait to get shot at.”
But as he waited two chairs down from where Lieberman would sit, Hedin said he’d never voice his true feelings to the senator.
“I think I’d be a private if I did,” he joked. “It’s just more troops, more targets.”
In the past two months, the unit has lost two men. In May alone, at least 120 U.S. troops died in Iraq, the bloodiest month in 2007 and the highest number since the battles of Fallujah in 2004.
Spc. Kevin Krasco, 20, of Medford, Mass., and Spc. Kevin Adams, 20, of Moosup, Conn., chimed in with their dismay before turning the conversation to baseball.
“It’s like everything else in this war,” Adams said, referring to Baghdad. “It hasn’t changed.”
Then Lieberman walked in, wearing a pair of sunglasses newly purchased from an Iraqi market that the military had taken him to in southeast Baghdad. He’d been equipped with a helmet and flak vest when he toured the market, which he described as bustling.
Earlier, Lieberman had met briefly with Iraqi soldiers and Iraqi police at a Joint Security Station; there are 31 throughout the city now. The senator, who’s steadfastly supported the Iraq war along with the current surge of more than 28,000 additional American troops, said things were better.
“I think it’s important we don’t lose our will,” he said.
“To pull out would be a disaster.” [He said just before leaving Iraq for the safety of Washington DC.]
The soldiers smiled and greeted him, stood with him for pictures and sat down to a lunch of roast beef and turkey sandwiches.
It was unclear if they ever asked their questions.
As Lieberman walked out, he said that congressionally mandated withdrawal would be a “victory for al-Qaida and a victory for Iran.”
“They’re not Pollyannaish about this,” he said referring to the young soldiers he ate lunch with. “They know it’s not going to be solved in a day or a month.”
It isn’t clear whether Williams mentioned the last line on his note card, the one that had a star next to it.
“We don’t feel like we’re making any progress,” it said. Labels: democrats, iran, iraq, leiberman, military project |
posted by notoempire @ 9:52 PM |
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Resources and Additional Information
Poison DUst Radioactive DU Weapons in Iraq. You thought they came home safely from the war. They didn't. Today more than 1/3 of all 1991 Gulf War vets are on VA Disability Benefits. Meanwhile U.S. use of radioactive DU weapons has increased six-fold from 1991 to Gulf War II! read more
Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War From the authors of Trust Us, We’re Experts! and Toxic Sludge is Good for You!, here is the first book to expose the aggressive public relations campaign used to sell the U.S. public on the U.S. war against Iraq. read more
Addicted to War: Why the U.S. Can't Kick Militarism Updated to include the war in Iraq. "Addicted to War is not only a witty and entertaining portrait of our war-dependent economy, but a truly relevant insight not available in the mainstream media, something our children should know before they must make their choice whether or not to become fodder for the military machine."—Susan Sarandon read more
Metal of Dishonor: Depleted Uranium, How the Pentagon Radiates Soldiers & Civilians with DU Weapons A devastating exposé of the Pentagon's new weapons comprised of Depleted Uranium. This is the book you've heard about, but won't see in most bookstores. Now in it's second printing you can read scientists; Gulf War veterans; leaders of environmental, anti-nuclear, anti-military and community movements discuss: the connection of Depleted Uranium to Gulf War Syndrome and a new generation of radioactive conventional weapons. read more
We Won't Go: The Truth on Military Recruiters & the Draft. A Guide to Resistance. As the bloody colonial occupation of Iraq drags on into its third year, the Army continues to miss its recruiting quotas--falling short by a staggering 42% in April of 2005.
Maj. Gen. Michael D. Rochelle, commander of Army recruiting, predicted that 2006 could be the toughest recruiting year since the draft was ended in 1973.
This book is aimed at increasing recruiting problems by helping young people and their parents counter the lies of the recruiters. read more
CD: Revolution in Crawford, Texas: Audio-Documentary Produced by KPFK's Page Getz In August 2005, Cindy Sheehan pitched a tent in a ditch down the road from Bush's ranch to protest the loss of her son Casey and the illegal occupation of Iraq. More than ten thousand people showed up including veterans from every war and many more Gold Star families.
These are their stories... read more
Enemy Combatant: My Imprisonment at Guantánamo, Bagram, and Kandahar Moazzam Begg was seized at midnight from a family home in Pakistan in 2002. He was accused by the United States of being a terrorist—an "enemy combatant"—and held for more than three years, two of them at the notorious U.S.prison at Guantánamo Bay. read more
Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower From the cover: Suggesting to Americans that their country has a compelling lust for political, economic and military hegemony over the rest of the world, divorced from any moral considerations, is akin to telling them of one's UFO abduction, except that they're more likely to believe the abduction story.
William Blum has compiled evidence that will make believers of such skeptics. In Rogue State, he shows that "close encounters" between the United States and alien nations have demonstrably been the cruelest kind. read more
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The Military Resisters Support Network (MRSN) is an resource for members of the military and military families who are opposed to the criminal war in Iraq. The MRSN contains information on military discharges, the rights of military personnel,
Canada, and links to organizations working to end the occupation and bring the troops home.
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