Saturday, July 3, 2010

4th Message


Leah,

In my temp room last night I found a Time Life Magazine about America...pictures and text about the country at the start "Then" and "Now."  I was reminded of what a special and blessed land we live in and the great blessing it is to be born in America.  Yes, there were times of slavery and female suffrage but we have progressed in those matters.  In the US you can pretty much go where you want to go and do what you want to do and succeed or fail based on your effort and determination.  No so in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Much hatred, segregation, and discrimination that makes most similar subjects back home seem trivial - almost whining.

Iraq is hot, dusty, dirty, a heavily fractured country that is nearly broken.  The Iraqis that are trying to build a nation are at risk every day.  They are shot, families killed or targeted by car bombs.  It is a regular routine.  One of the gentlemen I work with was shot through the neck but was fortunate to survive w/o lasting impact due to being taken to our medical facility in the IZ.  He goes to his work place every day but the stress of the weekly, almost daily bombs show on his face.

I have been at Sather, Liberty, Victory based near the Baghdad Airport.  I have been several placed in the IZ.  I have now been to FOB Warrior at Kirkuk.  Tomorrow I'll be in Tikrit.  I see thousands and thousands of young Americans toting weapons everywhere they go, living in hot, dirty environments, missing family and friends, living simple lives with few possessions or free time, and doing jobs from simple administrative to country building to bomb disposal to road clearing to security details to medical support to front line fighting.  They are almost all the same...early 20s and relatively happy to be doing what they are doing...tolerating the hardships the are asked to endure very well.  Reminds me of the people of Alma that had burdens put on their backs that were made light in the Lord, except here the terminology is "embrace the suck."  Yes, it is not home and things are different, dirty, unpleasant at times, frustrating and strange.  But this is what your American military do.  They go to unpleasant places to do darn near impossible jobs to give others the opportunity for freedom and self-determination and sometimes do so at great peril.

I am proud to be a part of this mission.  I am meeting pleasant Iraqis who want a better life, a safer country but at the same time their planing is poor and execution worse.  Part of it is cultural and part of it is the complexities of fractured Middle Eastern life.  The best we can do is be the best Americans we can be - generous, long suffering, kind, and free.  While many may fight against us, their souls desire the same self-determination we take for granted.

I feel your prayers as the yoke here is easier and the burden lightened by them.

Give everyone my love,

Gary

Hello from Kirkuk...oil and Kurds.


Thursday, 1 June 2010
>
>This evening Lt Col Young and I took the Rhino convoy to VBC. We are
>flying to Kirkuk tomorrow. Kirkuk is a heavily Kurdish are but also
>where my fixed and rotary wing simulators, planes, helps, maintenace,
>and instructor pilots are. MSgt Velasco who I supervise and looks
>after day to day contractor operations is there also. The purpose of
>or trip is mostly orientation so we can better manage the various
>efforts there.
>
>We are spending the night in transient tents. The have beds, lockers,
>and good air. I stayed in a nearby tent when I first arrived on
>country and I rembered that one bed had a memory foam topper that was
>really nice, so I snuck into that tent and borrowed it for my use
>tonight. I wish I could figure out a way to get this back to the IZ
>where it would be appreciated every night instead of my the occasional
>traveler. Heck, some traveler left it behind and I an sure it has been
>lonely.
>
>We have to check in for our flight at 0700 so I better get to bed.

Friday, 2 July 2010

Wow...what a bad nights sleep! The AC is the tent blew like crazy all night and could not be turned down. I nearly froze with the thin blankets here. I had to put on socks, rotate my head to the foot of the bed to get out of the direct wind blast a little, and put my gaiter (for dust) on my head. I got up once in the middle of the night to stand outside to stay warm.

We got on the C-130 flight just fine. One take off was aborted but then we tried again and took off fine. It was hot and sweaty but made it safely. We spend the day meeting people, seeing our aircraft, going over issues and process and getting to know FOB Warrior, Kirkuk. Kirkuk is in the Kurdish areas of Iraq and as you may recall the Kurds and the Turks cross the boarder to harrass each other once in while, sometimes not to far from here. Also, Iran is only about 50 miles away.

Kirkuk is also the center of Iraq's oil industry. You can see oil refineries from here, especially the stacks where they burn off the excess gasses. You can see some hills in the distance. Supposedly on a clear day you can see mountains further off.

This seems to be the wild west out here. The base is rough, dirty, and of course everyone on base carrys a weapon. It is hot also. Supposedly it gets cold here in the winter...we are further north and closer to the mountains...although you can't see them today for the haze.

Tony and I are staying in some DV CHUs...seperate rooms in a connex with an adjoining bathroom we share. I have a TV *with* a signal (AFN) and a laptop that works OK. And most importantly, I can control the AC! Life is good.

Hope you are all well. Love,
Dad

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

The Dining Facility


27 June 2010

The Dining Facility (DFAC)

One of the key parts of our day and the yard stick by which we measure our battle rhythm is when we eat. The DFAC as we call it has certain hours for breakfast, lunch, and dinner and therefore becomes the great clock by which we measure time and break up the day. Breakfast from 6:30am to 8:30am. Lund from 11:00am to 1:30pm. Dinner from 5:30pm to 7:00pm. Midnight chow from 11:30pm to 00:30am.

Before we go to eat we often ask the other guys in the office if they want to go. We eat because it is time. We eat because it breaks up the day. We eat because it is a social event. We eat because it is there.

Our DFAC is a couple of trailers slapped together and some uneven floors...not too pretty but lots of choice and service. There are salads, fruits, nuts, cereals, breads meats, veggies, deserts and all kinds of drinks. Granted, sometimes it doesn't taste too good and the Mexican fare is really unfamiliar territory to the Middle Eastern and Indian cooks and workers but all it all there is always plenty of good food to eat. About a week and a half ago I noticed a guy in the corner cutting fruit so I checked it out. You just go up and ask for some fruit and whatever fresh fruit he has he cuts up...honey dew, cantaloupe, water melon, and pineapple usually. The watermelon and pineapple are always good. The other melons are not always ripe but good when they are. Pretty cool to have the ready service. I also just found out that there is another guy that operates a blender behind the dessert counter. He will blend whatever you give him or ice cream that he has behind the corner so you can make fruit smoothies, shakes, juices, etc. What a luxury!

The dessert counter looks great but I have not yet partaken of the baked goods. Typically there are several types of cookies, cobblers, cheese cakes, and regular cakes (carrot, chocolate, etc.). The guys tell me the cakes look much better than then taste and sometimes they are a bit dry.

Our base has a lot of internal folks on it. Not only we have lots of contractor personnel from around the Middle East and India, Nepal, etc. but the military folks we see at the DFAC every day are from England, Austria, Australia, Italy, and Netherlands. There are probably others but I cannot always identify where they are from. Folks of all nationalities tend to sit with their friends or the people they work with.

I have started to skip breakfast at the DFAC and have yogurt or oatmeal in my room just to cut back on the calories. It is hard to cut calories and have just a little bit of so many choices. Generally for lunch and dinner I have two types of salad, some fruit and some protein and water. I have splurged twice with banana smoothies, a few times with cheese tortellini, and once with lasagna. In general though I have tried to cut back the sweets, desserts, sugary juices, and breads.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Your Bahgdaddy


Saturday, 12 June



The organization I am in is called ISAM for Iraq Security Assistance Mission. This morning we had what apparently is part of a regular inter-organizational competition called the ISAM Olympics. This morning’s events were darts, pool, ping pong, and foosball. My office is ISAM-AF for Air Force. I represented my office by playing on our pool team. In pool we came in a very close second. Bummer, I sunk 4 balls in a row to nearly win the game but the last shot was too difficult. ISAM-AF came in second overall.



I worked out really hard at the gym today. My running coach would be proud of how hard I pedaled the exercise cycle today. My goal is to flatten my belly, put on 10 lbs, and substantially increase my aerobic capacity.



Normally when we going to the dining facility, if we have been wearing our body armor we take it off and store it in bins just outside the facility. The Marine and I just got back from visiting one of the Iraqi defense agencies in town and still had our armor on…my stuff weighs at least 50 lbs. Anyway, the Marine didn’t want to take his off because he didn’t trust leaving it in the bins outside. So, not to be a wimp, I wore mine in to the dining facility also. We were the only two in the joint that had our gear on. Got several funny looks but he was oblivious to them.



I have internet in my CHU (Container Housing Unit…house in a connex box) for $77/mo for slow internet. It is a lot for a little. We will have to see if I continue it. I am there mostly between 8 am and 10 pm…sometimes later. Yes, we are at work a lot. A little too much I think. I get a ½ day off on Friday mornings and then am supposed to get another ½ day off on another day. Right now I am scheduled on Mondays mornings but I went back to VBC (Victory Base Complex) on Monday. One of my co-workers needed a battle buddy. We never go off the FOB alone, even when in an armored convoy as we did to and from VBC (which in around the Baghdad airport about 11 miles from here.). I met some of my counterpart and established relationships and opened up dialog with them. They are Air Force guys that work the requirements that I help execute. You see, I am sort of an arms dealer for the Gov’t. My friends at VBC work with the Iraqis to find out what they need and to advise them on what they need to build a stable and functioning military. They then give those requirements to me and I work with stateside agencies to deliver the goods and services. I wish I could get a cut off all that money. Mostly the Iraqis pay for their stuff but sometimes we help them out too. The deal is we (and they) need to build up sufficient capability in Iraq that they become self-sufficient in their own security. The sooner we do that, the sooner we can minimize our presence. The Iraqis though are struggling with many different factions and opinions that wish for success and failure. Sometimes that don’t just wish but they sabotage the success of our projects administratively or actually kill people and blow things up…mostly against each other lately. I think the bad guys know the more trouble they cause with us the more likely it is we stay longer.



Due to the Rhino schedule we had extra time at VBC today. I toured the Al Faw Palace and sat in Sadam's throne. We also climbed through the Flintstone/Bedrock village Sadam made for his kids/grandkids. Poverty and opulence side by side in this country is amazing…as it is in many 3rd world countries.



Sweat my brains out on the Rhino back to the FOB. It got up to at least 120. This will be a familiar theme as I complain about the heat as it gets hotter and hotter for the next few months. It truly is amazing to carry on as if everything is normal when you are getting blasted by a 115 to 120 F wind. No joke...it really feels like you are walking into a massive hair dryer at times.



My boots are killing my feet. I was getting blisters on my heels. I have been using moleskin and double socks and that has helped until I find a better pair...which it turns out is not that easy to do here.



On Tuesday of this week I went over to DGA&S (Director General for Armament and Supply) for the Iraqis. I will work with this organization a lot as they help us get our work though the Ministry of Defense. They are in the IZ with us but a few miles from here so we go armored up and in an armored vehicle. The IZ is tightly controlled but that job has mostly been given over to the Iraqis so you always have to be cautious. Anyway, when I was at some training in Ohio prior to coming over here I met some very high level Iraqi Generals in the Ministry of Defense. One of the very high ranking ones is running DGA&S. I had heard from another Iraqi that I met in Ohio and had since met again at DGA&S that Staff Major General Kareem wanted me to see him. I tried on two other occasions but he was out. I hear the best time to catch him is before 10 am. So, today I was able to get to his building by 10 am so I went straight in to see him while wearing my body armor and I still had a magazine in my gun. I get permission to go in his office and the translator also seems to double as a body guard. It is understandable given my warlike apparel. Anyway we had a short and cordial re-acquaintance meeting and then we did some work that I did not expect him to request of me. Normally my General is the one who discusses work with him…not my boss and full Colonel and certainly not a Lt Colonel. Ooops. Can’t help it if the Big Dog wanted to talk with me. I do not suspect the General and I will do much business in the future. It was cool to get a private audience with him and share some “Honey” brand water. You could tell by the aides scrambling around that this was a big deal.



I went to the shooting range on FOB Prosperity today (Saturday 19 June 10). I got to shoot my 9mm that was brand new and never had rounds down the barrel before. I also shot a 9mm submachine gun that was very cool and a lot of fun. Who hasn’t wanted to put a machine gun on full auto at least once? I also shot a lot of ammo through and M-4…a shorter M-16. I actually shot two different ones. Once with a really cool holographic site. It was easy to shoot well with that site. I did some combat skills shooting where I had targets down range on my right and left and the instructor would call out threat right or left and I had to quickly put two bullets through the right target. We call that double tapping. I did this as I was walking toward, away, standing, and keeling and changing out magazines as the instructor called out directions to go forward, back, stand, kneel, etc. It was fun though really hot and sweaty with all the body armor, helmet and side arm on and shooting the M-4. I had to put gloves on because the M-4 was so hot from the sun and my shooting 150 rounds though it.



I am safe. Hazards do abound around us but we have a pretty secure protective bubble and we do all we can to travel as safe as we can also. I feel the prayers and am grateful for them. Give everyone my love and thanks.



Love and miss you all. I stayed up to 1230 am to write this so don’t be afraid to expend a little energy and write back,



Gary/Dad

Monday, June 14, 2010

Hello again from Bagdad.


Monday, 7 June:

It became clear I was never going to get a helo flight out so I kept asking around until I found a bus driver that knew where the Rhino stop was on Victory. So I called the bus company again that supposedly could get me to the right destination and gave them a more clear picture of where I was and where I was going and this time they said they could accommodate me. About ½ hr later I met a small van where I loaded up all my gear…a good 200 lbs if you count the body armor, helmet and back pack also. Why do I keep bringing up the weight? It is hard to strap all that weight to your body and they drag heavy awkward bags over poor terrain for any distance. The van met me about a football field away from where I was all morning so it was no small task dragging it out to the van where the driver was not on contract to help me load up – thanks buddy.

So, we drove from one side of the Victory Base Complex on and near the Baghdad Airport to the other side of the Complex to the actual Victory Base proper. The place where I was to meet the Rhino was a dirt patch between a road and a parking lot hear the Al Faw (sp?) Palace. It is the fancy palace with Sadam’s throne that is on a small man-made lake. Anyway, I arrived 3hr before the Rhinos were to arrive so I sat with my luggage out in the heat and the dust drinking a bottle of water that had been left out in the sun all day (they have water bottle stacked up everywhere here). After about an hour another guy arrived and helped me lug my gear to a nearby building that he had access to. With my gear secured (I couldn’t just leave it on the side of the road to seek shelter) we took a 10 min. walk to The Green Bean which is a Starbucks-like coffee shop. We had mango smoothies and cooled off in their AC. Whew, was that a blessing. About 1.5 hrs later we dragged my gear back to the curb and met the Rhinos which are technically called MRAPS. I do not know what that stands for but they are a sort of wheeled armored personnel carrier that can hold about 8 people to include a driver, navigator, and gunner that stands up in a turret of sorts. There was also an armored baggage truck. After a roll call, mission and emergency procedures briefing, we loaded up several Rhinos and took the 11 mile/30 minute ride from the VBC (Victory Base Complex) or BIAP (Baghdad International Airport) to the IZ (International Zone) and FOB (Forward Operating Base) Union III. The ride was uneventful and the seats were very uncomfortable, especially has you had to strap yourself down very tight with a 5-point harness and lightly padded seats. Baghdad looked rough…3rd world mud huts with satellite dishes to 2-3 story concrete flats like you might find in Okinawa or Ecuador. Lots of dirt fields, little vegetation except palm trees, concrete rubble and debris everywhere and Iraqi police and military check points at every major intersection or bridge. It looked pretty bleak.

Once we arrived at the FOB I was met by one of the guys from my office. He helped me drag my gear to the billeting office where I was assigned a room in the building until I get assigned my permanent living quarters. The room has three beds, three lockers, three little metal cabinets as pseudo night stands. A micro fridge for a few bottles of water and hard tile floors. Very plain but best accommodations to date. Unfortunately the bathroom and showers are located in a trailer in the gravel parking lot out back. I am the only one in the room so I moved the beds and lockers all around to make a semi-private space in the back of the room…just in case I am here for a while and I get roommates.

I went to dinner at the DFAC which is OK. Not as good as at Sather by any means but good enough. Plenty of variety really but they say that it is much the same thing every day so it will get boring. The process to eat at the DFAC is: 1) clear your weapon, 2) show the guard your ID, 3) go into the building and wash your hands, 4) scan your ID to log in, 5) grab plastic plates, bowls, and utensils, 6) get whatever food and drink you want, 7) go into the very busy dining room and eat, 8) carry your tray outside and dump the trash into garbage cans, 9) stack your tray with all the trays of the same color, 10) leave and repeat for the next meal.

I met my boss, Col Vanderwerf or Col “VW” and a few of the guys from the office at dinner. After dinner I went to the office to see my work area and look for the container Leah shipped and the one I shipped. Neither have arrived. Bummer. I can get a long for a while with what I have though.

Tuesday, 8 June

I fell asleep hard and quick around 10 PM and since my new boss said to not come in the first ½ of the day tomorrow, I slept in until 8:30 AM. That is the most sleep I have had since this trip began. It felt good but I think the major time zone shift as well as the heat, dirt, travel, stress, etc. caught up with me. I felt a little out of it for ½ the day. Anyway, I got up, showered, and went to breakfast only to find that breakfast was already over and I would have to wait until 11 AM for the lunch service. I had plenty of water to waiting was not a big deal. I took the time to walk around the FOB a little and explore. It is not a very big place. It has a small Green Bean just in the main entrance to the biggest building (the former Baath Party HQ). At the opposite end of the FOB there is a tiny BX about 1/3rd the size of a basketball court. There are also “Haji shops” where the local vendors sell their wares…movies, shoes, luggage, crystal, rugs, knickknacks, perfume, jewelry, etc. The Haji shops are in the building that was to be the mausoleum for Michael Affleck, a Syrian that was one of the founders of the Baath Party. I understand he was never buried there.

On the FOB we have two ways of doing laundry: 1) two self-service trailers where you can do your own or 2) a drop off facility with a 48 hrs turn around where laborers run your laundry through scalding hot water washers and dryers. #2 is free so guess which one I’ll be using? Apparently they throw your laundry together so in an attempt to keep my whites white I’ll drop them off on the day I pick up my colors and vice versa.

I made the mistake of going by work. Col VW is all excited about me hitting the ground running and doing lots of urgent work so he pontificated about work and why we are so busy and why we need to be there 15 hrs per day. It is not as bad as it may seem since that include lunch and dinner and gym time but still, the philosophy of all you have to do in Iraq is work, eat, poop, and exercise is a little aggressive given that we are no longer in a combat role as much as we are in a security assistance one.

Anyway, the good Col, who actually does seem like a nice guy, gave me a tour of the roof of the building we work in. As I mentioned, it was the former Baath Party HQ but we put a big bomb down the center during the war. Although the center was destroyed, there was a lot of renovation to make office out of the salvageable parts that remained. From the roof top I could see key landmarks in Baghdad that are very close to us like the big Crossed Swords, the Military Parade Grounds, and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. I could also see the new US Embassy complex, various Mosques, the 14th of July Bridge, the Tigris River and many of the key Iraqi building you would recognize from the pictures from CNN.

After the tour I started working some of my in processing and getting to know the office and my co-workers. When fully staffed there are 8 of us Majors and Lt Cols working for a Colonel who works for a Brigadier General. Our mission is security assistance and that means helping the Iraqi’s procure equipment, skills, and training to build competent capabilities. While we are the Air Force team, we do have some projects that touch some of the other services areas of responsibility. It looks like I’ll be working on arranging pilot training, some fixed and rotary wing maintenance, some fixed and rotary wing simulator operations and maintenance, and the relocation of some of those assets from Kirkuk to Tikrit.

Wednesday, 9 June

I went to the gym last night. It is a pretty well stocked gym. Maybe 10 stationary bikes, 10 elliptical machines, 20 treadmills, 5 rowing machines, 5 stair climbers, free weights, nautilaus-type machines, and cable machines. I understand this is all relatively new. Supposedly the stuff was to go elsewhere but with the pending drawdown of other places they decided to put it all right here. It looks like there will be very little waiting for any machine you might want to use.

Today was my first full regular day at the office. We wear our full battle rattle into work and then only have to keep out primary weapon with us the remainder of the day. My weapon is the 9mm Berretta. At the end of the day you wear your body armor back to your quarters. If the threats increase then we will keep our gear closer or wear it more often. The temperature got hot today. I don’t know for sure but I think it was as least 115 degrees F. Supposedly in a month or two it will peak as high as 140. That is going to be a bit uncomfortable. Already if feels like you are walking into a very large hair dryer when you go outside. Put the body armor on top of that and it gets quite toasty.

To my surprise I was assigned my very own “CHU” today. A CHU is a containerized housing unit. Basically they take those sea-land connex boxes and build living quarters in them. Normally they are divided in half and each side has two people and they are “dry” in that there is no water or plumbing. However, there are some that have a toilet and show in each side and only enough living space for one person. These are “wet” CHUs. I was lucky enough get a wet CHU so no more communal shower or long walks to stinky community bathrooms in the middle of the night. My CHU even has a mini fridge, mini microwave and a TV/DVD. No cable, satellite, or internet so I’ll have to continue to hunt for internet service. The CHUs are somewhat insulated and have a window shaker style AC unit. Also, every few CHUs there are large concrete walls called T-Walls that separate and protect the CHUs and “duck and cover” bunkers every so often for blast protection. Let’s hope we will not need them for this next year.

I hit the gym again late tonight. I am not liking this business of getting to the gym around 10pm.

Thursday, 10 June

Learning my job and all my projects is really difficult since the guy I replaced when home the same day I arrived. The projects are complex and sifting through the piles of papers, notes, files on the computer, databases, etc. is like building a puzzle only you don’t know what the puzzle is supposed to look like. This is the part of the job I hate…not being competent yet being responsible. Tonight I had to update the status on every project and subproject for the General’s notes. What a pain that was because I frankly don’t know what I don’t know. I hope I don’t get hammer tomorrow night when we meet with the General. I got back so late…about 10pm…that I did not go to the gym. Plus I got my boxes today and needed to stow all my gear and that took a while. It is surprising how little stuff I was getting by on since I left San Antonio. Now I feel like I got too much crap. A lot of it is military gear that I really don’t have a need for but was supposed to bring. I also have a very large and heavy chem gear bag that I have to have but hope like heck I never need.

We got a new Marine Lt Col into the office today. He and I tackled the boxes, goodies, and care packages that were strewn around the office and on the conference table. He is a little OCD and he needed something to do because he did not have computer access yet. Anyway, there were goodies, mainly candy and cookies, along with some toiletries and health care items. Some of this stuff has been there for almost a year. There was a ton of Easter candy also. I know the good people who sent these packages with their love and well wishes meant well but the Bunny ears, coloring books and blow up Easter animals probably didn’t understand that a bunch of gun toting guys in a “country in transition” would probably not play with such items. It would be nice to give some of this to kids but I don’t the Muslims would appreciate Easter the same way we do. In general though we are separate from the local populations with concrete walls, checkpoints, and guns so there will not be a lot of interacting with the locals.

I also got my laundry back from the free drop off location today. My green boot socks lost ½ their color. My PT gear looked like it aged a bit too. I dropped my whites off when I picked up my colored laundry. I wonder if all that “lost” color is going to find its way to my whites?

In the office we have a pile of DVDs. Some are from home and some from the Haji shops. I decided to put in the new Russell Crow Robin Hood movie but it would not play in the DVD player in the room so I played it on my laptop. The Haji shop movies are apparently cheap pirated movies. This movie looked and sounded like someone was filming the screen in a movie theater in Russia. All the movie text and sub-titles were in Russian so I did not understand all the historical background. For the first ½ of the movie it looked like someone’s head was blocking the lower right corner of the screen. The quality and audio was so poor that I couldn’t get into the movie and shut it off and when to bed.

Friday, 11 June

Friday is our ½ day off. Apparently the Iraqi’s don’t work on Fridays. We don’t have to come into work until after lunch around 12 or 1 pm. Of course if you stay until 11pm it is not really a ½ day off but maybe a 1/3 or ¼ day off. Anyway, I was able to sleep in until 8:30am and then went to the gym. I came back to my CHU, cleaned up and geared up and went to lunch and then into the office. The body armor did not feel as heavy today. Maybe my body is starting to normalize a little.

At lunch I grabbed a soy milk box. Geez was that nasty! One sip and my throat clenched. I read the side panel and it contained water, soy beans, wheat and barely extract (is this soy beer?), carbonation, seaweed and sea salt. Yuck. It tasted like a thick pesticide shake that was brewed in old stinky shoes. I hate to waste food but that went in the trash.

Friday’s is also when our church meetings are. Me and three others met at the FOB and walk over to the massive new US Embassy compound. It took about 20 minutes to get everyone in through their security and they took my iTouch so I didn’t have my scriptures, hymn books and manuals. I got the iTouch back when I left the compound but it would have been nice for the meeting. About 14 (10 men, 4 women) of us met in a small conference room. It was a strange gathering. We mostly sat around a table with our water bottles. There was no designated head of the room or pulpit. Someone conducted and the Branch Pres. was in a corner of the room and ran a computer that played the music for the hymns we sung w/o books…except the four people with their iTouches!!! Apparently if you have a badge you can take stuff like that in. If you do not, you are out of luck. I need to get me a badge for the Embassy. Anyway the meeting was very simple – hymns, sacrament and a 10 min or less talk. I bet we were done in ½ hour. We then took a short break and had a Sunday School lesson for about 30 minutes where there was little discussion. I ended up participating as much or more than anyone. I found it all a little steril and weird. For example, I only met the people I walked from the FOB to the Embassy with. No one else came up and said hello and no welcomes or introductions were made either. Because I had a meeting with the General and our Air Force Team I got one of the people who came over with me to go back. When you cross between the FOB and the Embassy you always have to have a battle buddy. The road is controlled by the Iraqi’s but it is a little a little war zone’ish, with heavily armored SUVs zipping up and down the street and you are outside the big protective concrete walls. I definitely kept my head on a swivel. I would have felt better if I had a magazine in my gun and a round chambered but the road is supposedly safe…as long as you have a battle buddy that is. Speaking of guns, it was weird wearing a gun in an exposed shoulder holster during church. Maybe next time I’ll take if off during the meeting but the other military guy was wearing his and at least two others hand theirs concealed.

The meeting with the General was OK. A little long and he did call me out with some questions on about four of my projects. I really didn’t have any good answers because I frankly just haven’t unraveled the puzzle on this stuff yet. Did I mention I hate being responsible yet not competent? After the meeting a couple of the guys came up to me and told me not to sweat it. That was nice but I still don’t like this part of the job. I finally left work about 11pm. There were 5 of 9 people still in the office when I left. Crazy.

More later...

Love,
Dad/Gary

Monday, June 7, 2010

Qatar to Iraq



Yesterday morning I got up about 5:30am. IT was already quite bright. I think the time zone is off by almost two hours from what we are used to. I headed to the pool and swam some laps for exercise and to stay cool. After that I got some breakfast, killed some time, mailed my work BlackBerry back to the office, killed some more time, then packed up, turned in my bed linens and started forward movement processing at 1:30 pm. We loaded up on a C-130 and head to Iraq at 6pm. It was crazy hot and the wearing the body armor and helmet and dragging about 125 lbs of luggage had me sweating profusely. Water was coming out of me as fast as I could put it in. It would have saved time to just dump the water over my head instead of bothering to drink it and have it dump out my pore and into my eyes and everywhere else. My core temperature was getting very high. Once airborne I ripped open my body armor to ventilate – whew! I thought I was going to meltdown.



So a few hours later, flying w/o lights we landed at Balad, north of Baghdad. We were on the ground about an hour there and then headed to Baghdad. We arrived at BIAP/Victory Base/Sather Air Base a little before midnight. I eventually got a bed in transient tent, where I was the only occupant, for the evening. I then got up around 5 am, got a shower in the show trailer down the road, turned in my linens, found the chow hall, and checked in at helo operations for a ride to the IZ in downtown Baghdad. However, due to the dust storms, the helos are not flying right now. The air is thick with a talcum-like dust. My eyes are getting caked with it and my lungs can feel it down deep. Lovely, eh? At least the temperature is not brutally hot yet. So, here I sit at helo ops with little likelihood of getting a flight until late tonight. So, I finally got a hold of someone in the office I’ll be working in and they put in a request for me to travel by Rhino (an armored bus). It doesn’t leave until about 8pm but that is not the real problem. The problem is the Rhino departure point is about ½ hr from here, I have a ton of gear to wear and drag (dog tags are now on and sidearm strapped to my leg) and I have yet to figure out how to get from here to there. The third party national that I spoke with on a phone that apparently schedules a bus that could get me from here to there did not seem toknow where I was nor where I was going. Other than helo ops and the Rhino yard, I do not know either as a newbie here stuck in a dusty haze. Fun, fun. While I ponder the possibilities and look for a way forward I realize why they say the hardest part is just getting to your final destination (and then getting back out to go home). By being persistent and tenacious and I will find a way to get to the IZ by tonight. I could easily see how I could get lost for a day or two really easy before anyone started to look for me. Weird huh?



It is 10 am now. I have ½ a day to figure out how to get to the other side of the Victory Base Complex and past all the Ugandan manned checkpoints. In the mean time the chow hall (or DFAC for Dining Facility) is not far away and they have all the food I could possibly eat. I had some banana milk and white cantaloupe with my breakfast. They were both good. The scrambled eggs may not have been powdered and the turkey bacon was also good. Jealous?



More later….if I don’t run out of battery power which is always a problem.



Love,

Gary/Dad

Trip to the sandbox.


I got a shower and was sweating the second I got out. Made shaving
with the electric razor a little less effective! The shower/bathroom
units are called "cadillacs." I guess it is because the are an upgrade
to the old shower/shave tent. Essentially they are trailers with
showers, sinks, and toilets but have little to no air conditioning and
smell like porta potties that have been in the sun too long. Lovely eh?

I got a 3 hr nap so i am ferling a bit better. The tent like thing I
sleeping in has 22 bunk beds for 44 people. Right now my tent is 1/3
full. Of course when I got in there was only one person in the entire
place and he was sleeping in my bunk so I just took another one.
Hopefully I will not cause the same issue for someone else. I have all
my "3-day gear" stowed in a footlocker. The other 200 lbs of gear is
in a bin being palletized for shipping to Baghdad so I cannot get at
that. I mostly have what I need for my anticipated short stay.

The tent AC is currently keeping the temp at about 80 degrees so it is
livable.

So, the temp is about 97 degrees and somewhat humid. Baghdad is 117
and more dry. I hope the dry heat does not feel 20 degrees hotter than
this does!

If you cannot tell, I am doing everything on my iTouch right now
because it is easier than lugging around my laptop. I have my iTouch
in an armband so I can carry it with me from wifi zone to wifi zone.
Everyone appears to have laptops and are constantly searching out
power outlets and wifi. We are slaves to how we communicate. This is
so much better than sending letters home that take weeks to get there.

The uniform from now on is the ABU ( new camo uniform that is very
hot) or PT gear, no civilian cothes at all. PT gear is the Air Force
t-shirt and shorts that have no pockets except for an ID card slot. No
place for a wallet or keys so I keep my wallet locked up, my ID card
in the slot and my foot locker key on my dog tags around my neck.

I got some dinner at the dining facility which is not too bad. Later
my group met up to discuss our flight plans. We leave for Baghdad
tomorrow afternoon after a couple hrs of out processing, starting with
linen turn in at 1:30pm. That is the same time as the LDS church
service so I will miss that.

It is 9:00pm here so I will stay up a bit longer before trying to get
some sleep. I want to acclimate to this timezone soonest. By the way
it started to get dark by 6:30pm which seemed odd for this time of year.

Still have not seen a single plant on this portion of the base.

Love to all,
Gary