MILINET: A Marine's Eye-View of Fallujah
Master Sergeant Joe Riggs sends this "letter to home" by an anonymous Marine.
(Probably a Battalion Commander)
All: I
haven’t written very much from Iraq. There’s really not much to write
about. More exactly, there’s not much I can write about because
practically everything I do, read or hear is classified military
information or is depressing to the point that I’d rather just forget
about it, never mind write about it. The gaps in between all of that
are filled with the pure tedium of daily life in an armed camp. So
it’s a bit of a struggle to think of anything to put into a letter
that’s worth reading. Worse, this place just consumes you. I work
18-20-hour days, every day. The quest to draw a clear picture of what
the insurgents are up to never ends. Problems and frictions crop up
faster than solutions. Every challenge demands a response. It’s like
this every day. Before I know it, I can’t see straight, because it’s
0400 and I’ve been at work for twenty hours straight, somehow missing
dinner again in the process. And once again I haven’t written to
anyone. It starts all over again four hours later. It’s not really
like Ground Hog Day, it’s more like a level from Dante’s Inferno.
Rather
than attempting to sum up the last seven months, I figured I’d just hit
the record setting highlights of 2006 in Iraq. These are among the
events and experiences I’ll remember best.
Worst Case of Déjà Vu
- I thought I was familiar with the feeling of déjà vu until I arrived
back here in Fallujah in February. The moment I stepped off of the
helicopter, just as dawn broke, and saw the camp just as I had left it
ten months before - that was déjà vu. Kind of unnerving. It was as if
I had never left. Same work area, same busted desk, same chair, same
computer, same room, same creaky rack, same . . . everything. Same
everything for the next year. It was like entering a parallel
universe. Home wasn’t 10,000 miles away, it was a different lifetime.
Most Surreal Moment
- Watching Marines arrive at my detention facility and unload a truck
load of flex-cuffed midgets. 26 to be exact. I had put the word out
earlier in the day to the Marines in Fallujah that we were looking for
Bad Guy X, who was described as a midget. Little did I know that
Fallujah was home to a small community of midgets, who banded together
for support since they were considered as social outcasts. The Marines
were anxious to get back to the midget colony to bring in the rest of
the midget suspects, but I called off the search, figuring Bad Guy X
was long gone on his short legs after seeing his companions rounded up
by the giant infidels.
Most Profound Man in Iraq
- an unidentified farmer in a fairly remote area who, after being asked
by Reconnaissance Marines (searching for Syrians) if he had seen any
foreign fighters in the area replied “Yes, you.”
Worst City in al-Anbar Province
- Ramadi, hands down. The provincial capital of 400,000 people.
Killed over 1,000 insurgents in there since we arrived in February.
Every day is a nasty gun battle. They blast us with giant bombs in the
road, snipers, mortars and small arms. We blast them with tanks,
attack helicopters, artillery, our snipers (much better than theirs),
and every weapon that an infantryman can carry. Every day.
Incredibly, I rarely see Ramadi in the news. We have as many attacks
out here in the west as Baghdad. Yet, Baghdad has 7 million people, we
have just 1.2 million. Per capita, al-Anbar province is the most
violent place in Iraq by several orders of magnitude. I suppose it was
no accident that the Marines were assigned this area in 2003.
Bravest Guy in al-Anbar Province
- Any Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician (EOD Tech). How’d you
like a job that required you to defuse bombs in a hole in the middle of
the road that very likely are booby-trapped or connected by wire to a
bad guy who’s just waiting for you to get close to the bomb before he
clicks the detonator? Every day. Sanitation workers in New York City
get paid more than these guys. Talk about courage and commitment.
Second Bravest Guy in al-Anbar Province
- It’s a 20,000 way tie among all the Marines and Soldiers who venture
out on the highways and through the towns of al-Anbar every day, not
knowing if it will be their last - and for a couple of them, it will be.
Best Piece of U.S. Gear - new, bullet-proof flak jackets
. O.K., they weigh 40 lbs and aren’t exactly comfortable in 120 degree heat, but they’ve saved countless lives out here.
Best Piece of Bad Guy Gear
- Armor Piercing ammunition that goes right through the new flak jackets and the Marines inside them.
Worst E-Mail Message
- “The Walking Blood Bank is Activated. We need blood type A+ stat.”
I always head down to the surgical unit as soon as I get these
messages, but I never give blood - there’s always about 80 Marines in
line, night or day.
Biggest Surprise
- Iraqi Police. All local guys. I never figured that we’d get a
police force established in the cities in al-Anbar. I estimated that
insurgents would kill the first few, scaring off the rest. Well,
insurgents did kill the first few, but the cops kept on coming. The
insurgents continue to target the police, killing them in their homes
and on the streets, but the cops won’t give up. Absolutely incredible
tenacity. The insurgents know that the police are far better at
finding them than we are. - and they are finding them. Now, if we
could just get them out of the habit of beating prisoners to a pulp . .
.
Greatest Vindication
- Stocking up on outrageous quantities of Diet Coke from the chow hall
in spite of the derision from my men on such hoarding, then having a
122mm rocket blast apart the giant shipping container that held all of
the soda for the chow hall. Yep, you can’t buy experience.
Biggest Mystery
- How some people can gain weight out here. I’m down to 165 lbs. Who has time to eat?
Second Biggest Mystery
- if there’s no atheists in foxholes, then why aren’t there more people at Mass every Sunday?
Favorite Iraqi TV Show
- Oprah. I have no idea. They all have satellite TV.
Coolest Insurgent Act
- Stealing almost $7 million from the main bank in Ramadi in broad
daylight, then, upon exiting, waving to the Marines in the combat
outpost right next to the bank, who had no clue of what was going on.
The Marines waved back. Too cool.
Most Memorable Scene
- In the middle of the night, on a dusty airfield, watching the better
part of a battalion of Marines packed up and ready to go home after six
months in al-Anbar, the relief etched in their young faces even in the
moonlight. Then watching these same Marines exchange glances with a
similar number of grunts loaded down with gear file past - their
replacements. Nothing was said. Nothing needed to be said.
Highest Unit Re-enlistment Rate
- Any outfit that has been in Iraq recently. All the danger, all the
hardship, all the time away from home, all the horror, all the
frustrations with the fight here - all are outweighed by the desire for
young men to be part of a Band of Brothers
who will die for one another. They found what they were looking for
when they enlisted out of high school. Man for man, they now have more
combat experience than any Marines in the history of our Corps.
Most Surprising Thing I Don’t Miss
- Beer. Perhaps being half-stunned by lack of sleep makes up for it.
Worst Smell
- Porta-johns in 120 degree heat - and that’s 120 degrees outside of the porta-john.
Highest Temperature - I don’t know exactly, but it was in the porta-johns. Needed to re-hydrate after each trip to the loo.
Biggest Hassle
- High-ranking visitors. More disruptive to work than a rocket
attack. VIPs demand briefs and “battlefield” tours (we take them to
quiet sections of Fallujah, which is plenty scary for them). Our
briefs and commentary seem to have no affect on their preconceived
notions of what’s going on in Iraq. Their trips allow them to say that
they’ve been to Fallujah, which gives them an unfortunate degree of
credibility in perpetuating their fantasies about the insurgency here.
Biggest Outrage
- Practically anything said by talking heads on TV about the war in
Iraq, not that I get to watch much TV. Their thoughts are consistently
both grossly simplistic and politically slanted. Biggest offender -
Bill O’Reilly - what a buffoon.
Best Intel Work
- Finding Jill Carroll’s kidnappers - all of them. I was mighty
proud of my guys that day. I figured we’d all get the Christian Science Monitor for free after this, but none have showed up yet. Talk about ingratitude.
Saddest Moment
- Having the battalion commander from 1st Battalion, 1st Marines hand
me the dog tags of one of my Marines who had just been killed while on
a mission with his unit. Hit by a 60mm mortar. Cpl Bachar was a great
Marine. I felt crushed for a long time afterward. His picture now
hangs at the entrance to the Intelligence Section. We’ll carry it home
with us when we leave in February.
Biggest Ass-Chewing
- 10 July immediately following a visit by the Iraqi Deputy Prime
Minister, Dr. Zobai. The Deputy Prime Minister brought along an
American security contractor (read mercenary), who told my Commanding
General that he was there to act as a mediator between us and the Bad
Guys. I immediately told him what I thought of him and his asinine
ideas in terms that made clear my disgust and which, unfortunately, are
unrepeatable here. I thought my boss was going to have a heart
attack. Fortunately, the translator couldn’t figure out the best
Arabic words to convey my meaning for the Deputy Prime Minister.
Later, the boss had no difficulty in convening his meaning to me in
English regarding my Irish temper, even though he agreed with me. At
least the guy from the State Department thought it was hilarious. We
never saw the mercenary again.
Best Chuck Norris Moment
- 13 May. Bad Guys arrived at the government center in the small town
of Kubaysah to kidnap the town mayor, since they have a problem with
any form of government that does not include regular beheadings and
women wearing burqahs. There were seven of them. As they brought the
mayor out to put him in a pick-up truck to take him off to be beheaded
(on video, as usual), one of the bad Guys put down his machinegun so
that he could tie the mayor’s hands. The mayor took the opportunity to
pick up the machinegun and drill five of the Bad Guys. The other two
ran away. One of the dead Bad Guys was on our top twenty wanted list.
Like they say, you can’t fight City Hall.
Worst Sound
- That crack-boom off in the distance that means an IED or mine just
went off. You just wonder who got it, hoping that it was a near miss
rather than a direct hit. Hear it every day.
Second Worst Sound
- Our artillery firing without warning. The howitzers are pretty close
to where I work. Believe me, outgoing sounds a lot like incoming when
our guns are firing right over our heads. They’d about knock the
fillings out of your teeth.
Only Thing Better in Iraq Than in the U.S.
- Sunsets. Spectacular. It’s from all the dust in the air.
Proudest Moment
- It’s a tie every day, watching my Marines produce phenomenal
intelligence products that go pretty far in teasing apart Bad Guy
operations in al-Anbar. Every night Marines and Soldiers are kicking
in doors and grabbing Bad Guys based on intelligence developed by my
guys. We rarely lose a Marine during these raids, they are so
well-informed of the objective. A bunch of kids right out of high
school shouldn’t be able to work so well, but they do.
Happiest Moment
- Well, it wasn’t in Iraq. There are no truly happy moments here. It
was back in California when I was able to hold my family again while
home on leave during July.
Most Common Thought
- Home. Always thinking of home, of Kathleen and the kids. Wondering
how everyone else is getting along. Regretting that I don’t write
more. Yep, always thinking of home.
I hope you all are doing well. If you want to do something for me, kiss a cop, flush a toilet, and drink a beer. I'll try to write again before too long - I promise.
Semper Fi,
|