Mike's Place
By
Michael L. Craner
Long before the sun begins to rise, it begins to gradually
lighten the landscape. The stealthy figures I watched all night with the night
vision are moving less furtively and more like early risers, heading to work…
whatever job they might have.
As the sun breaks the horizon casting golden rays on the
war torn town I’m suddenly reminded where I am, as if on cue the smells of
poverty and destruction become once again noticeable.
My shift is nearly over, I’ll be relieved soon, and none to
soon either. I’m always nervous on guard duty, because you never know what will
happen during the night, and if it does, you’re somehow responsible for allowing
it.
It seems most of the people in this town are simply trying
to get their lives back in order and pose little threat to us, but you never
know who anyone is. No one is ever what they seem, and when kids are chasing
you down the road with an RPG you don’t know if they’re trying to trade it for
food, or just get a clear shot at you.
We’ve pushed Saddam Hussein back out of Kuwait, but things
seem curiously stalled. You would think we would continue to push inward and
take him to hold him for war crimes, but the word is that it will never happen.
To depose Saddam would only allow someone worse to come in and take over.
I tug at the collar of my flak jacket, trying to release
some of the built up heat and move my sore muscles. I have never understood the
flak vests. It’s well known they won’t stop a bullet, just stray shrapnel,
hardly worth the discomfort, yet it’s something. It’s all we have aside from an
M16 with empty magazines and a Kevlar helmet.
See, I’m not a tanker or grunt, I’m a satellite
communications technician and apparently our commander’s feel arming us is a
bigger threat to them than for their defense, (and ours). It’s a common
scenario I would see the rest of my years in the Signal Corps.
Somewhere below the rooftop where I’m stationed I smell
breakfast being warmed up from the foil tins they come in. Little better than
T-Rations, they still set my stomach to growling despite the knots it’s tied in.
I’ve made it to another day, and God willing, I’ll see the
sunset too.
Fast forward sixteen years…
I made it! I came home! I deployed again several more
times to that theater and others like it, most of the time the only difference
was the name of the country. The people were much the same, the situation was
the same. It was all a bunch of bullshit, but we did the job we were told to
do.
Today there are a couple guys I used to run around with
that are now the platoon sergeants, and company commanders, and they’re probably
floating the same BS orders we followed back then, because it all comes down
from the top.
Most of the others I served with are out now too and making
their own lives. I’ve been in contact with several, but the common bond we once
shared has been lost with most of them. Most of us are trying to forget,
because for each of us, there was something that didn’t make sense, and
forgetting it seems the only logical thing we can do to deal with it, but we
can’t ever really forget.
I think they, like me, still think back on it, and they’re
looking at politicians differently now, and speaking out however they can, for
whatever good it will do.
Six years ago, I honestly believed that there were weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq, and I still believe that they were there, but were
moved, and exaggerated. I believe Saddam needed to be removed from power, and I
rejoiced the day that bastard took a long drop from a short rope. He was an
evil man who studied and admired the likes of Hitler, and would have done more
to be like him if he knew he would get away with it.
But war is war, and the ones it affects most are those who
have the least control over what they can do. To me, Islam has shown its evil
face. I no longer am naïve enough to believe that it is a religion of peace.
It is barbaric and evil as Satan himself. To me, Allah is just another name for
Lucifer, and I am against any further support of any kind for its followers for
any reason.
I do see the need for a proper withdrawal of troops from
the theater though. It’s nothing that should be rushed like so many Democrats
would have us do. The only reason for a rapid withdrawal is if we were to
follow it up with a few nukes, but that’s not a proper response at this time.
They say we rushed in on false intel and didn’t have a
realistic plan; well rapid withdrawal without a realistic plan would be even
more foolish. Stay the course? Not exactly, but let’s not run home with our
tails between our legs either.
There are brave men and women on the front lines that are
depending on us to make the right choices to protect them, and the people they
have fought so hard to protect these past years. Let’s bring them home, but
let’s make sure what they did will mean something too.
Click on author's byline for bio.
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