Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Mission growing blurry
By Bill Nemitz, Staff Columnist Portland Press Herald Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Staff photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette
AP photo
The sun sets Tuesday behind a soldier standing near a tent for transient soldiers at Forward Operating Base Stryker, not far from Baghdad International Airport.
Staff photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette
Staff photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette
Sgt. Paul Eubank of East Millinocket watches soldiers of the 1-121 Field Artillery Battalion prepare to join a convoy out of Camp Navistar in Kuwait.
CAMP NAVISTAR, Kuwait - It was the middle of the night inside a tent for transient soldiers at Forward Operating Base Stryker near Baghdad International Airport.
A young woman, an Army specialist, sat on a dusty, vinyl-covered couch with her elbows on her knees, her chin cupped in her hands, listening to the lady on the big-screen television promote the next cable news segment.
"The U.S. military!" the TV anchor said with all the drama she could muster. "Is it working or is it broken?"
The soldier looked down at the half-finished crossword puzzle on the table in front her.
"I vote broken," she said in a thick Southern drawl.
Or, at the very least, war-weary.
This is the third time I've traveled to Kuwait and Iraq to write about Maine soldiers serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Twice in 2004, I embedded with the Maine Army National Guard's 133rd Engineer Battalion as it traveled all over northern Iraq adding roads, schools and health clinics to an infrastructure decimated by decades of war and oppression.
This time, photographer Shawn Patrick Ouellette and I touched down first with the Army Reserve's 399th Combat Support Hospital at Contingency Operating Base Speicher in Tikrit. Then it was on to the Maine Army National Guard's Alpha Company, 1-121 Field Artillery Battalion, here at Camp Navistar on the Kuwait-Iraq border.
Different units with different missions, to be sure. Yet the friendly competence with which these Mainers do their jobs -- whether working in an operating room or guarding a 45-truck supply convoy as it rolls north into Iraq -- has not changed.
That said, this is not the place -- nor is it the war -- I witnessed three years ago.
These days, as you go from one military installation to another, a palpable weariness hangs over Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Where once you couldn't go an hour or two without hearing or seeing some reference to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that reminder has all but vanished.
In three weeks, I came across only two references to the terrorist attacks 5‡ long years ago.
One was a "Remember 9/11" banner hanging silently inside the chow hall at COB Speicher. Day in and day out, soldiers with full trays walked beneath it -- but nobody seemed to look up.
"That? That's been up there forever," one soldier replied when I finally asked about it one day.
The other echo from the past was the same slogan -- "Remember 911" -- written on a wall inside a latrine at Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait. Scrawled in bold letters next to it was another message: "That was Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia, you dummy. Not Iraq."
As the reasons for getting into this war have grown blurry, so has the sense of mission itself.
Once, Maine soldiers left no doubt that they were here to win Iraqis' "hearts and minds," to help build a vibrant democracy, to make right all that Saddam Hussein spent decades making so wrong.
Now, Saddam is long gone. And for most soldiers, the mission is to simply put in your year and get out in one piece.
"Every day is Groundhog Day," said Maj. Sherryl Kempton, 60, of New Sharon, who runs the 399th CSH's acute care clinic. The phrase, taken from the Bill Murray movie of the same name in which the same day endlessly repeats itself, has become a mantra for soldiers all over Iraq and Kuwait.
Compounding the monotony is the U.S. military's growing isolation from life outside the barbed wire.
Three years ago, Maine soldiers mingled frequently with Iraqis -- especially those in the friendly towns and villages of Kurdistan.
Now, against the ever-increasing drumbeat of insurgent attacks, impenetrable checkpoints and security barriers -- and, for units that do venture out, armor plating and thick, ballistic glass -- separate the soldiers from the "locals."
Few if any of the soldiers with whom we stayed these past three weeks said they have any meaningful contact with everyday Iraqi civilians -- except, of course, for those who come into the combat support hospital bloodied by the last roadside bomb or sniper attack.
Roughly half of the patients receiving any kind of treatment at the 399th CSH are U.S. soldiers -- most are stationed at COB Speicher and come in with a variety of relatively minor maladies.
But the worst cases -- those that come in by medevac helicopter and require emergency surgery -- skew much more heavily toward the ongoing civil war among the Iraqis.
"I thought we'd be working on more American soldiers" inside the operating room, Staff Sgt. Derek Bisson, 24, a surgical technician from Hollis, said during a lull two weeks ago. "But instead it seems like 90 percent Iraqis, 10 percent Americans. It's like, why are we here again?"
To be sure, many soldiers still believe -- some fervently -- that Iraq would descend into even bloodier chaos without the U.S. military's presence.
Alpha Company's Sgt. Gary Jandreau, 45, of Fort Kent, nicknamed "The IED Magnet" because he's survived so many insurgent attacks, figures it "would be 100 times worse if we weren't here."
But in the next breath, Jandreau says, "These people are crazy. They've been fighting among themselves for thousands and thousands of years -- and I don't think that's going to change."
Jandreau volunteered for his first overseas deployment because after 27 years with the Maine Army National Guard, "I really wanted to see it. I really wanted to see what the Middle East was all about. I wanted to be part of this whole thing."
And now, as he counts the days to his late-July homecoming?
"After being here and seeing it," he said, "I don't want to ever come back here again."
Jandreau's buddy, Sgt. Lenny Hanson of Calais, served with the Maine Army National Guard's 152nd Field Artillery Battalion at Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad in 2003 and 2004.
Hanson, 31, volunteered for this second tour because, "I thought coming back again might help put away some of what I brought back from that deployment."
Be careful what you wish for?
"Oh, yeah!" said Hanson, who along with Jandreau barely escaped with his life during a four-hour firefight in Baghdad last October. "Oh, yeah."
Still, despite their ambivalence toward a war that never was supposed to last this long, these men and women from Maine serve with honor, with humor and, when necessary, with unfathomable courage.
And wherever they go in this dusty theater, they carry an unparalleled pride in the place they call home.
Last week, as he prepared for a five-day trip to Baghdad in his state-of-the-art armored security vehicle, Sgt. Michael Harrington, 30, of Randolph looked up and asked, "Hey, are you going to do a write-up on us guys?"
"That I am," I replied.
"You want to send back a message?"
"Start talking."
Harrington paused to collect his thoughts.
"Ah just thank you -- to all the Maine people," he said. "Because since we've been over here -- and a lot of us have noticed it -- they've given us an opportunity to see them at their best. Every holiday, every chance, all the time, we are constantly getting care packages from people we don't even know. Girl Scouts, kids in school, just random strangers and people who just really care about us. And it kind of warms all of our hearts to see Maine people at their best like that."
It works both ways, sergeant.
To you and all of your comrades who shared your stories and your lives with us these past three weeks, stay safe.
And come home soon.
Staff Columnist Bill Nemitz can be contacted at 791-6323 or at:


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pauline of portland, ME
May 11, 2007 11:27 AM
Good artcle. I'd like to ask the newspaper, since we are at war, to have an article EACH DAY about the Iraq war? Or have two articles: one from the perspective of the soldiers and one from the perspective of administration that used lies and denial to start and still continue this war.

Our Portland paper could be groundbreaking in the nation by regularly investigating the war. It could lead the way for the nation to break the denial about the war. It could bring about a "watergate" break where people read the truth.report abuse
pauline of portland, ME
May 11, 2007 11:23 AM
Good artcle. I'd like to ask the newspaper, since we are at war, to have an article EACH DAY about the Iraq war? Or have two articles: one from the perspective of the soldiers and one from the perspective of administration that used lies and denial to start and still continue this war.

Our Portland paper could be groundbreaking in the nation by regularly investigating the war. It could lead the way for the nation to break the denial about the war. It could bring about a "watergate" break where people read the truth.report abuse
Iamthere
May 4, 2007 7:08 PM
You all say lies were told to get us into this war. Well you are wrong. We got the biggest weapon of mass destruction "Saddam"and his croanies. Any person or persons that orders a town of human beings gassed for fear of an assasination attempt and kills thousands of people is a weapon of mass destruction.
If we are losing this war it's because wars were never won politicly. Viet-Nam is a fine example of a politicly fought war.
So while Congress tries to cut our funding remember we don't have the military we could have had because the already were cutting spending on the military and closing bases and thinning out the number of troops we had.
Also remember most of us over here are willing to fight and die if neccesary for you to think and say what you want.
Stop the fighting at home and support us.We will do our best to make you proud.
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Mitch of Freeport, ME
May 2, 2007 11:16 PM

Tim of Oregon,

You have an interesting definition of 'lucky'report abuse
tim ty of portland, OR
May 2, 2007 8:41 AM
Everybody wants to be a soldier and get paid the bucks,but when it comes time to do the duty all you hear is whaaaaa! I don't want to fight,it's a wasted war we're there for no reason,I want to go home and get paid and do nothing.
Soldiers were ment to fight and by god that's what there doing,if you don't beleive me ask Mr Bush he'll tell you,we don,t need cowards in this war.
Bush means business!! He's letting the world know we don't back down from a good fight,Im surprised that so little have died in this war I thought it would've been in the tens of thousands,I guess we're lucky this time maybe next time we will not be so lucky.report abuse
Mitch of Freeport, ME
Apr 29, 2007 11:30 AM
Thanks to Bill and Shawn for continuing to give the soldiers on the ground a voice in this conflict.

To the people who attack Bill's writing, or claim the piece is a left wing hack job...

I suspect your own motives, and question if there is any truth would dig you out of your entrenched positions. I challenge those of you who speak in such fervent support of the continued war to volunteer to go yourself, as a member of the military or a civilian employee. Or encourage your own kin and friends to join up to continue the fight. The effort certainly needs your enthusiasm and dedication. Or does that dedication only apply to typing on a keyboard?

I was there in Mosul, Iraq with Bill, and worked with him (and Greg) daily. You might not like the perspective he offers, perhaps you wish it were not so, but I have seen the man at work, and the dedication he puts into his writing, and the personal risks and sacrifices he takes to bring the story to us. The man's credibility is well established for me. I might have wished he would have emphasized a different part of the story, but he never twisted the story to fit an agenda. His writing is an honest and often raw view of real soldiers words and experiences.

I appreciate the perspective on the war that reporters on the ground offer. I wish there were more like Bill, Shawn, and Greg to make the hard choices to go and face the danger to give us the real story.

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McLoon of Wade, ME
Apr 28, 2007 12:45 PM
Thank you, soldiers for serving our country at Camp Navistar. I am so proud of everyone of you. We all hope that you will be home safe and sound by the middle of July 2007. Can't wait.
Stay safe and remember we love you.report abuse
M. Smith of Richmond, ME
Apr 28, 2007 8:42 AM
More garbage from Bill Nemitz and his reporting from the war zone. ...about as real as reality tv.report abuse
angela of Augusta, ME
Apr 27, 2007 10:10 AM
I have been there and back...Bill Nemitz came over with us (the 133d) twice, and each time he was right in the middle of action-so he can definately relate to declining motivation that this war is bringing upon our troops. Each day that goes by, I wonder WHEN my next deployment will be...because it is only a matter of time before I go again. Like so many people have said, this is a war that has been going on forever and a day now-and we just came into the middle of it to try and protect the innocent civilians that are there. There are innocent people there, but let's put the shoe on the other foot for a minute. What would happen if Iraqis came to the US and started to get in the middle of our internal contrevery? We would do the same exact thing...make groups of rebels to attack the invaders. These Iraqis are not all bad, and some need help because they do not wantto help themselves or cannot help themselves...but in my mind the way I see it-we would do the same exact thing Iraq is doing now if the roles were reversed. But then again, we are America and we have to be the dominant Nation in the world-even when it means negrelcting our own sad state of affairs to go care for another nations. I would like to see our troops come home too. report abuse
NeoConBuster of Houston, TX
Apr 27, 2007 9:40 AM
There is nothing left to win in Iraq. Our troops have won everything there was to win. They smashed the Republican Guard, greased Uday and Qusay, freed the Kurds and got Saddam hung. Now our troops are just referees between the Shiites and the Sunnis. And a referee doesn't win anything. It's time to bring the troops home. Once we do, the Sunnis and the Shiites will turn on Al Qaeda. They don't want them there any more than they want us.report abuse

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