Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Leaving Iraq ends US mission veiled in ambivalence
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
More Yahoo! Services
Account Options
New User? Sign Up
Sign In
Help
Yahoo! Search
web search
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Africa
Europe
Latin America
Middle East
North America
Leaving Iraq ends US mission veiled in ambivalence
By HAMZA HENDAWI,Associated Press Writer -
Monday, October 19
Send
IM Story
Print
EDITOR'S NOTE _ Since January, AP correspondent Hamza Hendawi has embedded at regular intervals with a U.S. infantry company in Baghdad to gauge how the military mission in Iraq is changing. Here, Hendawi accompanies the unit on its journey back to the United States.
___
BAGHDAD (AP) _ There are just a few days left before U.S. Army Capt. Nathan Williams finally gets to go home.
Music fills his company's small headquarters as his men cheerfully haul out computers into shipping containers, shred documents and write handover notes. Already the men have vacated their trailers and are living in air-conditioned tents almost the size of basketball courts.
As violence in Iraq is sharply down and Iraqi forces are taking more responsibilities, the United States is preparing for the withdrawal of all combat forces by August 2010 and everyone else by 2012. That means in the coming days and months, tens of thousands of soldiers will be making the same journey as Williams and his troops, from Iraq to Kuwait and finally to the U.S. _ the long journey home.
Williams' Alpha company is known by its foreboding nickname "Apocalypse." Its commemorative T-shirt has a black skull on the back and the ominous words "Straight to Hell!" Yet the company's track record speaks of a war winding down fast and a diminishing role played by the American military in Iraq.
Two platoons from Williams' company, 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment have already left for home at Fort Riley, Kansas. But the official end of the 12-month deployment comes when the battalion's colors were folded in a brief ceremony held Sept. 22.
"About a year ago, I told you we will bleed together, we will sweat together and sometimes we will cry together," battalion commander Lt. Col. John Vermeesch tells the soldiers standing in formation at Camp Victory. "In the end, the people of northwest Baghdad are better off."
For the next two days, Williams, 28, and the 63 men left of his company pass the time cleaning their weapons, packing, working out in the gym or watching DVDs on their laptops.
______
For a driven young officer who dreamed of an army career as a boy and a company of men hungry for combat, coming to Iraq in November 2008 posed challenges starkly different from what they had anticipated.
Williams' company was in only two fire fights in the 12 months it spent in Iraq and suffered its only casualty in June, when a soldier lost a foot in a roadside bombing.
The Baghdad district of Hurriyah, where they were stationed, saw some of the most brutal sectarian killings and cleansing in 2006 and 2007. But, by the time Apocalypse's men arrived, it was calm, with the militias blamed for the violence routed by U.S.-backed Iraqi forces earlier in 2008.
Operating out of a Saddam Hussein-era bomb shelter, they patrolled the streets, trained Iraqi security forces, gave out micro grants to small businesses and organized garbage collection. Their job was to keep crime down and make sure the Iraqi forces could sustain operations without U.S. help.
"We had to change our metrics to suit the mission," Williams said. "The soldiers accepted that but did not fully understand it...It remained hard for the soldiers to come to a war and not fight."
By June 30, Apocalypse, like other U.S. military units in urban centers, left Hurriyah in northern Baghdad for Camp Victory six miles to the south. And in the nearly three months the company stayed there, not once did the Iraqis accept Williams' repeated offers of aid.
Still, Williams is in no doubt that he has accomplished his mission.
"My soldiers asked me whether we have succeeded in our mission and I told them flat out 'Yes, we did'," said Williams recalling a Sept. 16 meeting attended by the company's 135 soldiers just days before the first of its platoons left Iraq for home.
"We provided an umbrella of security for Hurriyah's 400,000 people, refurbished 10 schools, two clinics and built three soccer fields and a service station for municipality trucks," said Williams.
"But the most important thing is that we are taking everyone home alive and well."
Williams and the 63 men from his company still in Iraq start the journey home Sept. 24.
They have orders to be packed and ready to move shortly before midnight.
Williams' wife, Jennifer, comes to say goodbye before they left Camp Victory for the nearby Baghdad airport. An army captain herself, she is due to leave for home a few days later.
Sheltering behind a blast barrier wall outside the tent, the couple hug and kiss.
"Honey please do list," says a small note she hands him along with a hot cup of coffee. "Connect the car battery, stop the forwarding of mail, wash dusty dishes and remove the sheets on the furniture," reads the note.
It is almost sunrise when they board the C-130 transport aircraft that takes them to Kuwait. It lands at Ali Al Salem air base nearly an hour later and the men are swiftly moved to Camp Virginia, an inhospitably barren transit facility for U.S. soldiers heading home.
_______
The journey out of Kuwait begins soon after sunset on Sept. 26, with the short drive back to Ali Al Salem base in buses with windows covered with curtains.
What follows is a briefing on what the soldiers can or cannot take home _ like porn material, pirated DVDs, war souvenirs _ and a thorough customs search conducted by Coast Guard personnel. Every item carried by the 310 men and women heading home is individually searched.
There are several more hours of waiting, more roll calls, the brief drama of a rifle missing its soldier and the excitement over a college football game shown on a large screen.
It is almost sunrise when everyone climbs on the buses again and heads to Kuwait's airport, where a World Airways MD-11 sits waiting on the tarmac well away from other aircraft.
The cabin is decorated with the Stars and Stripes and drawings sent by American children. The cockpit and cabin crews express their appreciation over the intercom for what the soldiers have done. They say they are honored and privileged to be taking the soldiers home. Patriotic songs play on the intercom system.
A few minutes after takeoff, most passengers, exhausted, sleep, many with their mouths open.
There is a one-hour refueling stop at Leipzig, Germany, and a longer one at Bangor, Maine, where veterans of the Vietnam and Korea wars are at hand to greet the soldiers.
The journey's final leg to Topeka, Kan., takes just over three hours and the bus ride to Fort Riley another hour. It is almost midnight when the homecoming ceremony began at Fort Riley.
Vermeesch, the battalion commander, is the first to enter the ceremony's venue, a gym. It is like the long-awaited appearance on stage of a mega pop star at a massive concert.
There is artificial white smoke, music and a showbiz-style introduction by an announcer, with wild cheers from the crowd of several hundred men, women and children. Most are wearing party clothes. Many carry banners.
"Daddy, you are our hero," announces one banner held high by a child.
A bear of a man, Vermeesch sprints to the middle of the gym floor and stands still facing the crowd of family and friends. After a pause, all 309 men and women who returned home with him follow into the gym floor, again sprinting to their place in a rapidly growing formation.
The cheers became louder as more and more soldiers joined the formation. Silence falls when the national anthem is played, only for the gym to erupt again into a happy mayhem when the "DISMISS!" command is shouted.
Everyone descends from the terraces to greet the soldiers. There are endless kisses, embraces, tears and loving words.
There is no one waiting for Williams. He greets the spouses of some of his men, says goodbye to others. He collects his bags and heads to the town house in the nearby town of Manhattan that he and his wife kept paying rent for while away in Iraq on their second tour since 2005.
He takes a Tylenol pill to help him overcome the jet lag.
_____
Seen the next day from Manhattan, a college town, Baghdad could be on a different planet. His first lunch at home was Mexican at a trendy restaurant.
"Iraq does seem like a far away place, but for some reason I cannot put it out of my mind," Williams, in shorts, a sweat shirt and a Red Sox baseball cap, says.
He could not stop thinking during the journey home or his first day back about what might be happening back in Baghdad or whether he and his men made a big enough difference in the district where they served.
"I think I will always hope that things will continue to improve there. If they don't and they get worse, it will be difficult to accept that all we tried to do there did not result in success," he confides, sipping his second beer.
For now, he says, he wants to do all the things he could not do in Iraq.
He wants to drive his car with the windows down for the rest of the fall and for as long as he can endure going into the cold of a Kansas winter, a contrast to traveling in Iraq in armored Humvees and MRAPS (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles) with the windows firmly shut.
"I will wear shorts all the time, I will drink lots of coffee and I will go to work in civilian clothes and change to my uniform when I get there," he enthused.
Williams will be a perfect fit in Manhattan, a college town.
His boyish looks prompt the waitress at the Manhattan restaurant where he ate his first meal out after redeployment to demand to see an ID when he orders his first beer.
Smiling and clearly flattered, he obliges. It's good to be home.
Recommend
Send
IM Story
Print
Related Articles
Ukraine opens election campaign, Orange dream faded Reuters - Monday, October 19
Revolutionary Guard commanders killed in Iran bomb AP - Monday, October 19
Merkel talks tax to break coalition deadlock Reuters - Monday, October 19
Iceland 'reaches Icesave deal' with Britain, Dutch AFP - Monday, October 19
Suicide bomber kills 35 in attack on Iran Guards Reuters - 2 hours 38 minutes ago
News Search
Top Stories
Britain planning tax raid on banks: report
Stoner downs Rossi to win Australian MotoGP
Iceland 'reaches Icesave deal' with Britain, Dutch
Hurricane Rick gains monster Category 5 status: forecasters
ThyssenKrupp to slash up to 20,000 more jobs: report
More Top Stories »
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Popular
Most Viewed
Most Recommended
Huge crowds at Dublin funeral of Boyzone star
Bank of America reports 1.0-billion-dollar loss
Hurricane Rick gains monster Category 5 status: forecasters
Police convinced 'balloon boy' family telling truth
Huge dinosaur find in China 'may include new species'
More Most Viewed »
Oldest hominid skeleton sheds light on human origins
Boyzone singer Gately dies in Spain
More Most Recommended »
Elsewhere on Yahoo!
Financial news on Yahoo! Finance
Stars and latest movies
Best travel destinations
More on Yahoo! News
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Subscribe to our news feeds
Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS
» More news feeds | What are news feeds?
Also on Yahoo
Answers
Groups
Mail
Messenger
Mobile
Travel
Finance
Movies
Sports
Games
» All Yahoo! Services
Site Highlights
Singapore
Full Coverage
Most Popular
Asia Entertainment
Photos
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Community |
Intellectual Property Rights Policy |
Help
Other News on Monday, 19 October 2009 Guards generals among nearly 50 killed in Iran attack
Britain planning tax raid on banks: report
Microsoft hopeful technology will spur growth
Earnings leap at Saudi Sabic
Bomb kills 5 near Baghdad cafe, say police
Suicide bomber kills 35 in attack on Iran Guards
Around 270,000 victims of human trafficking in EU: UN
Leaving Iraq ends US mission veiled in ambivalence
Stoner downs Rossi to win Australian MotoGP
Eight dead, 29 wounded in Baghdad bombings: police
| International
|
Wounded US troops return to Iraq to find closure
Intense diplomacy to rescue Afghan vote
Egypt warns Hamas it won't wait over unity deal
Two kidnapped Darfur aid workers freed: official
| International
|
Doctor in France accused of being Rwanda war criminal
| International
|
Iran bombing kills 5 Revolutionary Guard leaders
Taliban vow to defeat army in Pakistan offensive
'Dangerous' Hurricane Rick heads for Mexico coast
Florida Woman Dies After Being Thrown From Golf Cart
Update: Larimer County Sheriff's Department: 'Balloon Boy' Story Was A Hoax
Rising seas threaten Shanghai, other major cities
Veterans find healing on the water
SKorea considers resuming limited aid to NKorea
White House casts doubt on Afghan reliability
US plane with Marines forced to land in India
US warns it needs credible Afghan partner
India offers £61 million to help Sri Lanka refugees
Casinos in Ohio? Promise of jobs may tempt voters
Obama looking at all options for creating jobs
NY House race seen as test for GOP, Obama
White House official says Afghan government is key
Kerry: Targeted attacks in Afghanistan not enough
Picking a fight: Obama vs Fox News
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
Def Leppard cancels third leg of tour
'Wild Things' delivers $32.5M box-office rumpus
Depp, Richards light up Spike TV's 'Scream 2009'
Where the Wild Things Are tops weekend box office
| Entertainment
|
Uighur leader slams Book Fair for honoring China
| Entertainment
|
US warns it needs credible Afghan partner
British economy in for painful recovery: report
Google goes global with Apps, has 2 million customers
Iran promises crushing response as attack toll rise
| International
|
'Darwinian medicine' in focus at World Health Summit
Pakistani forces pound Taliban in S. Waziristan
| International
|
Israel may have planted spy gear in Lebanon: U.N.
| International
|
German coalition deal by next weekend: Merkel party
Japanese car makers out to electrify Tokyo show
Afghan election ruling due on Monday
| International
|
Motorcycle bomb wounds 28 in troubled Thai south
| International
|
Egypt warns Hamas it won't wait over unity deal
Philippine emergency teams prepare as typhoon nears
| International
|
Eight dead, 29 wounded in Baghdad bombings
Botswana's President Khama wins new term
| International
|
Buying cheap goods may support human trafficking
| International
|
SKorea's top diplomat urges NKorea to disarm
AP Newsbreak: New medical marijuana policy issued
Google goes global with Apps, has 2 million customers
| Technology
|
Rising seas threaten Shanghai, other major cities
Catholic Diocese of Wilmington files bankruptcy
Taliban vow to defeat army in Pakistan offensive
Ex-Wis. Rep. Johnson, longtime TV journalist, dies
Fake security software in millions of computers: Symantec
| Technology
|
Start planning for Pacific warming refugees: scientist
Taiwan urged China not to boycott southern city: report
49-year-old female chimp dies at Toledo Zoo
Farrakhan: Don't be 'pacified' by Obama election
Foodies mourn loss of Gourmet magazine
Appeals, prayers for Irish priest abducted in Philippines
Elvis' hair sells for $15K at Chicago auction
Balloon dad never shy about his bizarre stunts
Sheriff: Boy-in-balloon was hoax, charges expected
Sotomayor says nomination tightly scripted
Korea c.bank chief urges asset price vigilance
Seoul shares fall; Lotte down on China Times deal
S.Korean bonds rebound, foreign investors eyed
Seoul shares fall; Jinro below IPO pricing
NZ services sector expands for third month in row
People smuggler among asylum seekers: Australia
Bill Cosby and hip-hop artists unite for "Emergency"
Elvis' hair sells for $15K at Chicago auction
Bill Cosby and hip-hop artists unite for Emergency
| Entertainment
|
Elvis hair sells for 18,300 dollars at auction
Robbie Williams comeback beaten in British charts
Talks ongoing to revive canceled Southland
| Entertainment
|
Barbra Streisand auctions items for charity
"Where the Wild Things Are" tops weekend box office
Italian writer wins prestigious German literary prize
'Peace cotton' smooths its way into Benin
'Wild Things' tames weekend box office
Uighur leader slams Book Fair for honoring China
Iran starts uranium talks with powers after warning
Democracy in Russia a 'mockery': Gorbachev
US balloon drama 'was a hoax': police
World 'catastrophe' if no climate deal: British PM
EU should drop milk deregulation: France
Darfur kidnapped aid workers to return home
Iran starts uranium talks with powers after warning
| International
|
Iran: US, Britain, Pakistan linked to militants
Elvis hair sells for $18,300 at auction
British PM to warn world economies of climate 'catastrophe'
Iran promises "crushing" response as attack toll rises
U.N. prosecutors file shorter Karadzic indictment
| International
|
Report on Afghan election fraud released Monday: official
Afghan election report out Monday: official
Thousands of poor Iraqis queue for oil jobs
Somalia's Shabaab rebels say shot down U.S. drone
| International
|
Iran will up uranium enrichment 'if Vienna talks fail'
Darfur kidnap victims endured mock assassinations
| International
|
Iran says will not halt enrichment even if gets fuel
Drug feud shooting kills 8 in Puerto Rico
| International
|
Did Rajaratnam's money find way to Tamil Tigers?
| International
|
The nation's weather
Hurricane Rick weakens to Category 3 storm: forecasters
American soldier dies in vehicle accident in Iraq
SKorea's top diplomat urges NKorea to disarm
Pakistan steps up border offensive
Indonesia arrests captain of asylum seeker ship
Adviser: Obama waits on finished health care bill
Apple's on a roll, but iPhone sales pivotal
| Technology
|
Pakistan targets Taliban leadership
Analysis: Washington's overplayed hand on Russia
Cambodian couple arrested for torturing young girl
Balloon boy case a hoax; charges coming, Sheriff says
Spotify to launch mobile offering with 3, HTC
| Technology
|
Philippines on high alert ahead of Typhoon Lupit
Tajikistan police kill 4 militants in gun battle
Federal judge shutters Idaho grazing allotment
Pakistani forces pound Taliban in South Waziristan
Kerry holds talks in Islamabad over aid row
China starts manhunt after jailbreak: state media
Philippines warns of tough times as deficit soars
JAL shares surge on government rescue report
Pakistani stocks fall sharply amid seccrity worries
Pakistani stocks fall sharply on security worries
SKorean education spending hampers economy: bank
Sri Lanka shares tumble after US fraud charges
Seoul shares turn up; weaker won helps exporters
China's Nasdaq-style board late Oct trade: report
Business group: SKorea-EU trade deal could push US
Taiwan sells 273-day T-bills at 0.243 pct yield
'Balloon boy' reminder that TV is full of shams
Frankfurt Book Fair suffers drop in attendance
New Trends In U.S. Holiday Shopping
South Carolina Supreme Court To Hear Gov. Sanford's Ethics Case
Father of Smith's daughter set to finish testimony
Police Searching For Person Responsible In Fatal UConn Football Player Stabbing
Elvis' hair leaves the building -- sold for $18,300
| Entertainment
|
Beyonce postpones Malaysia gig amid Islamist ire
| Entertainment
|
Three Runners Die In Annual Detroit Marathon
Overseas box office still looking "Up"
Evergreen State Congressman Hospitalized For Collapsed Lung
Ageing French hunters target young blood
Faced With Sexual Abuse Cases, Catholic Diocese Of Wilmington, DE Files For Bankruptcy
China experts to search abroad for looted relics
Screen Actors Guild makes White permanent director
Small Chinese character reform triggers big controversy
Overseas box office still looking Up
| Entertainment
|
Polanski undergoing medical treatment: lawyer
| Entertainment
|
Talks ongoing to revive canceled "Southland"
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights