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![]() Living the high life deep in the desert
Submitted by: 1st Marine Division Story Identification Number: 2004411115740 Story by Cpl. Paula M. Fitzgerald CAMP MUDAYSIS, Iraq(April 7, 2004) -- Marines like it rough. Just ask the artillerymen of Battery I, 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division. The battery, which is currently performing as an infantry unit, is here supporting 1st Marine Division's security and stabilization mission. Unlike many of the camps situated throughout Iraq, Camp Mudaysis is not as equipped with many of the "creature comforts" many Marines have come to take for granted. The camp is a five-hour drive from the 3rd Battalion's headquarters at Ar Ramadi, so getting supplies to the Marines is a logistical challenge. Capt. John G. Lehane, battery commander, said his warriors are doing just fine without e-mail, laundry service or even daily showers. "Most of the Marines out here now were here for the war," Lehane, of West Hempstead, N.Y., said. "Compared to last year, the Marines know they have it pretty good this time around." During the invasion of Iraq last summer, the Marines of Battery I served in their primary role as an artillery unit and lived in fighting holes and two-man tents. According to 22-year-old Sgt. Nicholas R. Massey, showers were far and few between. "We may not have it as good as some of the other Marines in Iraq," the Standish, Maine, Marine added. "But no one really complains because at least this time we have hard structures to live in." The camp once belonged to the Iraqi military and was used as an air defense site during the Gulf War in the early 1990s. Bombs heavily damaged several of the prism-shaped "bunkers," and the camp was abandoned shortly afterward. Shell casings from the war can still be found lying beneath the orange dirt organic to Iraq. Now, the Marines are living and working from these bunkers and are no longer subject to the area's sandstorms and powerful winds except when guarding the perimeter, patrolling the area or helping with working parties. "Everyone is sleeping inside air conditioned bunkers on cots," Lehane mentioned. "And we have port-a-potties, so there's no more digging holes." Lance Cpl. Glen L. Menas, a 25-year-old from Daytona Beach, Fla., described the accommodations here as "paradise compared to last year." "Everybody has their own talents to make this place feel like home. It's nice being here because it's our camp," Menas said. "Our commanding officer is the camp commander too, so there's not as much hassle as some of the bigger camps have." Still, less hassle doesn't necessarily mean less responsibility. "The Marines want to make Camp Mudaysis a nice place to be," Lehane explained. "They keep the area police called. The bunkers have doors because the Marines wanted to have doors. They take a lot of pride in their camp." Most of the troops operating from other camps in Iraq have access to laundry service, Internet cafes, fully operational PXs, three ordinary meals a day, daily showers, well stocked gyms and televisions. The fitness center at Camp Mudaysis has not yet been equipped with lights, which has led to the gym's nickname "dark gym." That doesn't discourage the artillerymen from exercising almost everyday because they also run or play sports like soccer. However, showers are limited to every other day because water is in short supply. For most of the Marines here, the hardest thing to adjust to was the food. The chow hall serves at least two hot meals a day, called Tray Rats; the third meal is substituted with Meals, Ready-to-Eat. "I don't really mind eating Tray Rats," Menas said with a smile, "because I know they're packed full of fiber." Many visitors have stopped by the camp to check up on the Marines' well-being and are usually surprised by the harsh living conditions. "People always ask us what the Marines need out here, but I tell them we're fine because I haven't heard any of the Marines complain," Lehane said. "They all seem to be pretty happy with what they have." ![]() When not providing security to the camp here or patrolling the outside area, Marines with Battery I, 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division use the space near their living area as a soccer field. The buildings, called bunkers, belonged to the Iraqi military but were abandoned some time after the first Gulf War. (USMC photo by Cpl. Paula M. Fitzgerald) Photo by: Cpl. Paula M. Fitzgerald http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn20...E?opendocument Ellie
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IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY HUSBAND SSgt. Roger A. One Proud Marine 1961-1977 68/69 http://www.geocities.com/thedrifter001/ ![]() |
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![]() A quiet weekend in Fallujah as Marines bolster defenses
By: DARRIN MORTENSON - Staff Writer FALLUJAH, Iraq ---- While Marine leaders announced progress in talks with Iraqis on resolving the standoff in Fallujah over the weekend, troops continued to bolster defensive positions and make the best of long, strange days on the front line. Some temporarily retreated to their operating bases to shower, call home and grab fresh socks and such. They quickly returned. Others attended church services, manned guard posts or patrolled for insurgents who might be sneaking through their lines. For almost everyone, the weekend brought the quietest two days in almost two weeks since the fighting began. 11 p.m. Saturday: War of words Instead of the thumping of mortars or thundering fire of the AC-130 Spectre gunship that nightly enforces the curfew in Fallujah, troops bedded down Saturday to sounds of rock music and invective being hurled across the no-man's land between American and insurgent positions. An Army psychological operations, or "psyops," team in the employ of the Marines taunted insurgents with rock music blasted from a public address system atop a Humvee. The opening selection was the band AC-DC's song "Hell's Bells," which was followed by more heavy metal and a string of bawdy insults spoken in Arabic challenging the insurgents to come out and fight. But insurgents fought back only with more words. Using a public address system on one of the many local mosques that is normally used to praise Allah, the insurgents threatened to kill all the Marines occupying a house along a key escape route from the city. The U.S. troops threatened right back. According to translators traveling with the Marines, the late night talks ended in profanities slung in Arabic across the dark, otherwise silent city. 6 a.m., Sunday: The smell of battle Dawn brought not the expected enemy offensive locals had warned about, but instead a cool, shifting spring breeze that smelled of death. Corpses ---- human and livestock, the bodies of those who fell during last week's intense street fighting ---- had lain silent in the city's no-man's land, but were now making themselves known. Relaxing some of the rules of the cordon and acknowledging that not everyone in the city is an insurgent, U.S. military officials allowed Iraqi ambulances to enter the city to pick up the dead for burial. But no vehicles ventured into the closely monitored neighborhood bordering the Marines' positions in the northwest, where troops reported killing dozens, if not hundreds, of insurgents last week. Until nature completes its course, and while the cease-fire keeps Marines from advancing beyond the no man's land and into the city, the Iraqi dead refuse to be forgotten. Noon, Sunday: Miracles in strange places A rocket-propelled grenade slammed into a wall near a schoolhouse where Marines manned defensive positions. The blast rocked the neighborhood and seemed to yank troops out of the comfort zone some had created during the last two very quiet days of cease-fire. After failing to spot the shooter but firing a few grenade rounds in that direction just in case, the Marines eased back a bit ---- but not all the way. Battle could start up again at any moment. When the battalion chaplain arrived a couple of hours later for Sunday services, he asked troops if they remembered any miracles Jesus had performed. Private First Class Philip Marquez, 20, of Coachella, offered the first example. "I was saved when my NVG (night vision goggles) bag got shot," he said in all sincerity. Marquez was struck in the hip with a bullet during the fighting last week. The bullet shattered some plastic equipment but did not penetrate his body. It wasn't exactly the biblical answer the chaplain was looking for. But he agreed: it was a miracle. Later, when Marquez hunched behind a machine gun for his guard duty on the roof, he said he knew of another recent miracle. On April 6, when the Marines first set the cordon around Fallujah, his squad was ambushed as they were on patrol on nearly the same street block of beige brick houses he now guarded with the machine gun. His friend was struck in the head by the first volley of enemy fire. "I actually thought he was dead," Marquez said, watching the street below and describing his horror at seeing his buddy bleed. But the Marine survived. And Marquez said got to see him briefly Saturday when he returned to base for a shower and a meal. "I just said 'Wow!'" Marquez said. "Man, all our prayers were answered." 6 p.m. Sunday: Squared away While the troops had some time on their hands during the cease-fire to count their blessings, clean up and rest, some of their leaders also had spare time. Some of those who were not planning the next military move or worrying about defenses turned to traditional military matters like uniformity and discipline. One senior noncommissioned officer in particular was hounding the troops daily about whether their shirt sleeves were rolled down or whether they were shaved and their chin straps fastened as the Marines worked to shore up defenses and rest up for more fighting. Sharp and squared away in his full gear ---- a shining example of the discipline he expects from his men ---- he attended a briefing with the battalion's officers just before dark Sunday. Walking by all the captains and majors assembled outside a building, he got his boot caught in some wire and tripped. "Yeah," said someone fresh in from the front lines. "But he looked good doing it." Staff writer Darrin Mortenson and staff photographer Hayne Palmour are reporting from Iraq, where they are with Camp Pendleton Marines. Their coverage is collected at www.nctimes.com/military/iraq. ![]() Lance Cpl. Anthony Dilling, 21, from Oneil, Nebraska, left, hands a sandbag up to Capt. Jong Kim, 20, from Santa Clara, Calif., as the two try to stabilize a covering they built for shade over one of two gun positions on the roof of the house where they and Marines of 2nd Platoon, Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment are staying at in northwest Fallujah, Iraq on Sunday, April 18, 2004. http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2004..._454_18_04.txt Ellie
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IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY HUSBAND SSgt. Roger A. One Proud Marine 1961-1977 68/69 http://www.geocities.com/thedrifter001/ ![]() |
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![]() Spanish Leader Pulling Troops From Iraq
By DANIEL WOOLLS MADRID, Spain - Spain's prime minister on Sunday ordered Spanish troops pulled out of Iraq as soon as possible, fulfilling a campaign pledge to a nation recovering from terrorist bombings that al-Qaida militants said were reprisal for Spain's support of the war. Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero issued the abrupt recall just hours after his government was sworn in, saying there was no sign the United States would meet his demand for United Nations control of the postwar occupation _ his ultimatum for keeping troops there. Zapatero's Socialist party won the March 14 general election amid allegations that outgoing Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, by backing the war in Iraq, had provoked commuter-train terrorist bombings that killed 191 people three days before the vote. Though Zapatero had promised to remove Spanish troops, his immediate action was a bombshell, and a setback for the United States as Spain's new foreign minister prepared to travel to Washington to discuss the dispute. The Bush administration has been eager to maintain an international veneer on the increasingly besieged coalition force in Iraq, which is dominated by its 130,000 American troops. In a five-minute address at the Moncloa Palace, Zapatero said he had ordered Defense Minister Jose Bono to "do what is necessary for the Spanish troops stationed in Iraq to return home in the shortest time possible." He cited his campaign pledge to bring the 1,300 troops in Iraq home by June 30, when their mandate expires, if the United Nations failed to take political and military control. "With the information we have, and which we have gathered over the past few weeks, it is not foreseeable that the United Nations will adopt a resolution" that satisfies Spain's terms by its deadline, Zapatero said. The latest polls show 72 percent of Spaniards want the troops withdrawn. The government did not say when it would start removing its forces, but officials in Cairo said Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher was told by his Spanish counterpart, Miguel Angel Moratinos, that Spain would pull out of Iraq in 15 days. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity. Egypt's foreign ministry later backtracked from that in a statement, however, saying the Spanish leader said "the date will be announced in Iraq and has not yet been fixed." In Washington, U.S. officials said Zapatero's announcement was not a surprise. "We knew from the recent Spanish election that it was the new prime minister's intention to withdraw Spanish troops from the coalition in Iraq," said a White House spokesman, Ken Lisaius. "We will work with our coalition partners in Iraq and the Spanish government and expect they will implement their decision in a coordinated, responsible and orderly manner." Mariano Rajoy, who ran against Zapatero in the election after Aznar decided not to seek another term, said the decision made Spain "much more vulnerable and weak in the face of terrorism in the face of terrorism." Zapatero has "thrown in the towel" rather than try to exhaust all possibilities of getting a U.N. resolution to meet his demands, Rajoy said. But many other politicians praised Zapatero, including Jose Antonio Labordeta, a congressman from a small party based in Aragon in the northeast. "What Zapatero did is keep his word, which is rare in this country. For the first time, we have come across a politician who keeps his word," Labordeta told the news agency Efe. Bono, the defense secretary, is reported to have met secretly in Washington with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on April 5. Moratinos, the foreign secretary, said he will travel Tuesday to Washington to discuss Spain's plans with Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice. Before Sunday's announcement, the newspaper El Pais said Moratinos would offer nonmilitary cooperation, such as training Iraqi police, if Zapatero made good on his vow. Now, it appears the visit was designed from the outset to announce the withdrawal decision, not to talk about how to keep Spanish troops in place. In his announcement, Zapatero indicated that nothing argued for him to reverse the course of his campaign pledge. "These circumstances have led me to take the decision to order the return of our troops with the maximum safety and thus in the shortest time possible," Zapatero said. "More than anything, this decision reflects my desire to keep the promise I made to the Spanish people more than a year ago," he said. He said Bono would give details in coming days of the process of bringing the soldiers home, and that he himself had convened an urgent meeting of Parliament to discuss his decision. Zapatero said Spain's government would continue to support Iraq's stability, democratization, territorial integrity and reconstruction. Spain will also support any U.N. or European Union effort to help Iraqis' recover sovereignty and hold free, democratic elections, he said. Spanish troops have been stationed in south-central Iraq with responsibility for Diwaniya and the flashpoint Shiite holy city of Najaf. Eleven of the Spaniards have died since August, including seven intelligence agents in a highway ambush in November. In a videotape found the night before the election, an Arabic-speaking man claiming to speak for al-Qaida said the bombings were punishment for Aznar's support of the war. Before then, Aznar's party had been expected to easily win. Zapatero's warning of a possible Spanish withdrawal had prompted some U.S. lawmakers to charge such a move would appear to be appeasing terrorists. Zapatero rejected this, saying his idea of removing them came long before the March 11 bombing. Aznar, a close Bush ally who deployed the troops, said Sunday that withdrawing them would only lead to more violence and chaos in Iraq. "That will not be good for Spain, not a good day for the coalition, and a very good day for those who don't want stability and democracy in Iraq," Aznar said on "Fox News Sunday." http://www.nctimes.com/articles/200...s/d821mq5g0.txt Ellie
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IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY HUSBAND SSgt. Roger A. One Proud Marine 1961-1977 68/69 http://www.geocities.com/thedrifter001/ ![]() |
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