Im A Nazi, Youre A Nazi
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Forum Description: These men and women put their lives on the line every day for us and we say THANKS! Forum dedicated to Lance Corporal Jeremy Scott Sandvick Monroe, USMC - KIA Iraq 8 OCT 2006
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Topic: Im A Nazi, Youre A Nazi
Posted By: rivet
Subject: Im A Nazi, Youre A Nazi
Date Posted: 29 September 2009 at 06:22
Allrighty folks, I offer to your discriminating readership another portion from my Desert Diary.
Since this part of the forum is open, in the interest of maintaining
decorum, I've sanitized the essay by replacing certain words with their
symbolic counterparts. Hopefully this will be good enough for the
Staff; if not, moderators please move to the protected forum or delete
post as you determine is required.
"It occurs to me that there are many
games being played out here. Of multitudes compressed in both space
(literal) and (in this political context) time, come forth a variety of
methods in dealing with the tedium.
The more obvious, of course, are the group games. Those 'organized'
activities' which label us even from a great distance unequivocally
American: Football. Running. Volleyball.
Brits do not Volleyball, they Rug.
We also have those military games: the organized pompposity of
battalion formations; the hurry-up-and-wait games and the
junk-on-the-bunk games. Yes, even out here we are not exempt from the
inevitable layout inspection. The administrative juggernaut must press
on.
However, beneath these diversions run an undercurrent of cooler, darker
waters. Within these rivers lay The Mindgames. Whether from psycophant
lieutenants or bitter sergeants eager to play tit-for-tat, those games
convolute the days into surreal horror.
THIS IS NOT SUPPLY boldly states the Battalion S-4's sign. SEE YOUR
UNIT SUPPLY SERGEANT. (S-4 is the Army designator for...supply).
The supply sergeant has none. "Go see S-4" he declares.
"We are not the Engineer's" the water purification/storage team is
proud to announce, surrounded by stacks of plywood, heavy equipment,
tools, wire, hoses, and water pumps. They defiantly add "and we don't
fill the shower tanks. Bring your own work-detail".
It's a trying thing to roust four others so one can shower.
As well, one of our own was blown up, and five others injured yesterday
when a 66mm rocket he was dismantling went off. Apparently the idiot
brought it back from a live-fire exercise planning to make it into an
ashtray. While attempting removal of the base and fins it exploded,
traumatically amputating his hand and part of his leg. Five bystanders
miraculously also survived with minor injuries, although our Battalions
Transportation Officer's tent is no longer.
This of course, is a clear reminder that soldiering is a very, very dangerous game.
Desert Journal Entry- 1990.
For nearly four months now, we- The Falcon's (2nd Brigade, 82nd
Airborne Division)- have waited. Being the first unit on Arabian
soil, dispatched by the President to hold "the line in the sand", we
endure heat, flies, sand and uncertainty; everything except the enemy
we expected and are trained to meet. Without a doubt, we all would've
rather met the enemy instead of the unknown, the indeterminate waiting
and the vague reports on potential chemical attacks coming from higher
headquarters. Yet no sign of an Iraqi attack, not even mobilization for
that purpose, simply perplexing quiet, a stillness that's more
maddening and potentially frightful than the horrors of all out warfare.
The warfare we look forward to is the worst kind- trench-clearing. And
the only approach to those deathtraps is wide open desert, a situation
best suited to the defender. By this time, we realized the Iraqi's
would probably not attack, it's far too late for that. It will be the
Allies who do the attacking, but when?
If there had been an opportunity for the Iraqi's it would have been in
the first few weeks of our arrival, ill-prepared for the environment
and precariously short on supplies. Paratroopers are shock troops, by
virtue of our method of travel (whatever you can carry on your back and
jump out of a plane with) and design, we are woefully limited, suited
only for short, violent surprise action lasting no more than a week at
best. Although highly mobile, our desert mission in the opening gambit
is a good example of how not to employ us. Lightly armed flesh and
blood cannot withstand an armoured attack for long, yet there is no
doubt we'd have held ground to the last man. That is simply how all
paratroopers are. It was only our ability to project American power to
the area on no-notice that won us the thankless task of first line
deployment in the Gulf.
No, the task now, it is becoming clear as the rhetoric increases, will
be to remove Iraq from Kuwait. The days in this inferno drag on
endlessly, one blurring into the other with the incessant mindless
drudgery of an encamped army gnawing, driving us to extremes in an
effort to pass the time.
In the beginning we played basketball and touch football on the
concrete-like desert floor, but that had degenerated into full-contact
bloodsports, eagerly hurting each other to avenge perceived injustices
on or off the field, or to simply vent frustration. Carried to the
point of jeopardizing mission readiness with the manpower drain due to
injury, those sports are now prohibited. Only running and volleyball
are the "authorized physical activities" and volleyball is being
scrutinized for the amounts of mysterious accidental contacts that
result in bleeding.
Cardgames and chess continue their rise in popularity, with informal
championships held throughout the companies, but they still can't erase
the undercurrent of fear and anger. All this is clear to our officers
and the growing number of units entering the theatre, so much so that
the Army dispatched a team of psychoanalysts to ascertain the depths of
our situation. Our entire 4th Airborne Infantry Battalion endured a
week of scrutiny. Afterwards, we learned their findings were twofold;
when we go to war send these guys first, and until then keep them
separate from the rest of the Army.
We're beginning to feel ugly.
I'm acutely aware of the situation, but powerless to change it.
Certainly I can force myself to greater interaction, attempting to
occupy my mind with details rather than the situation, but that is much
easier said than done, when surrounded by literally nothing and faced
with soldiers just as surly as I am. It's only a matter of enduring it
as best as one can. And endure we will, each in our own way enveloped
in our private misery, hoping the world will send us forward into
battle or back to America, which is becoming only a memory, buried
under the mounting drifts of hot sand.
Yesterday, on another hot, still afternoon the everpresent wind
strangely quiet and portending another thick sandstorm, our Battalion
Commander held another one of his bi-monthly addresses. Gathered by the
volleyball pits, the battalion stood in formation, sweating under the
sinking sun to listen to the latest word on the situation, once again
hoping for a thread to hang on to, anything which would give us an
inkling to the future. Again, it was in vain, for he had nothing to
give, battalion commanders being a dime a dozen in combat theatres,
arenas for the virtual cosmos of General-Officers stars and their
infinite arrogance. Able to provide only guidance and example, he could
motivate as best he could, although on this day that commander lost a
few good troops.
Exhorting his soldiers towards patience and reticence, he spoke of a
long tradition of warriors the 4th Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry
Regiment carried on, of the fortitude that they all displayed, as we
Gold Falcons were not the first to campaign in the desert. Tracing our
lineage to the such examples of the Afrika Corps, the Italian Army in
Ethiopia and Alexander's Macedonians, the commander urged us to emulate
them.
"Hey, weren't all those invaders and conquerers?" I caustically
whispered to "Auggie Dog", my fellow squad leader and roommate back at
Fort Bragg. He stood muttering to my right.
"Hey, your right, Riv" he whispered hoarsly back, sweat running
down the side of his cheek. "Who's macedonia? Is he talking about
Alexander the Great?"
"Sure is" I hissed back. "And get this- all those b@$&*^%@$ were
thieves, plunderers and rapists. I sure as h=?! don't consider myself
part of that group...."
"F~^>!*#@ Nazi's even!" Auggie cut me off. "Well, we are now. He
just said so." We started snickering and laughing under our breath.
"You two just shut the F%$# up. Now" a voice growled behind us. It was
our Platoon Sergeant: that man was everywhere. He paused, beads
of sweat flew past our faces as he exhaled and them made his way back
to the end of the platoon, silently slipping the same way he'd come.
As the Battalion Commander continued his address, smoothly playing on
patriotism and naivety, I grew bitter on the tack that had been taken
for the continuance of this uncertain venture. Later on when recalling
these events, I pinpoint that moment as the one I became a civilian
again.
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FIRE IS OUR FRIEND!
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Replies:
Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: 29 September 2009 at 22:33
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So much for officers.
I like your writting rivet. thanks for the post.
Do you do such for your profession?
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Posted By: rivet
Date Posted: 29 September 2009 at 22:40
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Well thank you Bear. I appreciate that. The only writing I do for my profession (Food manufacturing industry- Quality Assurance & Food Safety) is for technical reports, investigations, periodic quality reporting and such, including daily emails.
I've always had a passion for the written language and love to write. It's a real joy to read well-constructed sentences that carry a power all of their own.
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FIRE IS OUR FRIEND!
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