Sometimes certain things can push a person to do something
that is completely against the grain. I had a plague that many young
ladies could relate to, an unfortunate relationship with the wrong guy. This
relationship reached its head the day after pay day. I went to fill
up my car to find my barely employed boyfriend of the time had spent my entire
paycheck on illegal substances, while I had slept. I quickly
addressed the problem and made it clear our lives were forever separate. His
only request came as a shock, “Please just do not join the military; if you do
I will kill myself.” This thought had never crossed my mind before,
but it was growing on me. At just twenty years old I joined the army, and if
you had known me just two weeks prior to enlistment it would not have seemed my
style. Some would have even considered me an antiwar animal loving
hippy, and it was not very far from the truth. Three days later I
was shipping off for basic training. So when asked why I joined,
throughout my military career I had the pleasure of spiting the bastard again,
“Because my ex-boyfriend said he would commit suicide if I had joined.” The
truth though of course was more complex. I was escaping my problems,
and needed a fresh start at life. The military held promises of
discipline, education, and new life experiences. In the end the
promises held true, but in ways I would never have imagined.
Basic training was like being thrown from a warm bed into icy
cold waters. It was pretty obvious from the start that I did not
belong, but at least from looks of disbelief and fear in the eyes of others I
was not alone. Drill Sergeants knew who did and did not belong, and
made a point of picking on those who didn't. It was their jobs
to turn undisciplined civilians into soldiers, and sometimes that required
breaking someone down to nothing and building them back up into something or
someone else. Luckily for me, I really did not have much left to
break down and I quickly built back up into a new more confident person. Although
some of my colleagues back home would consider it unwise to give me a gun, the
army found me fit to fight and I graduated from Basic Training.
After learning what it means to be a soldier, we are sent to
Advanced Individual Training (AIT). I joined the army to become an automated
logistical specialist, fancy words for a supply clerk. Advanced Individual Training
was designed to teach me how to perform my job in the Army. AIT was like a
college campus, with one big difference: the drill sergeants. Everyone woke up
earlier than dawn for physical training, and after personal hygiene time and
breakfast we moved off to classes for the rest of the day. Our weekends were
usually free, as long as everyone followed the rules.
I received my orders to report to Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas.
El Paso is a city sitting on the border of Mexico in the middle of the desert.
If basic training taught me anything it was that nothing tastes better than
freedom. My first year in the military consisted of working hard and partying
harder. Building lifelong friendships with my fellow soldiers and preparing for
the inevitable deployment.
In the fall of 2009 we deployed to Kirkuk, Iraq. My unit’s area
of operation contained the northern part of the country. I was completely lost
in the sauce, as were many of my newly arriving colleagues. We were bombed on
our very first night and I will never forget the feeling of true terror, not
knowing if that night would be my last. I will also never forget the
complacency one develops towards the booms in the night; I became so adjusted
to mortaring I frequently slept straight through the loud booms and glaring
sirens. Just as I became adjusted to my surroundings
the army reminded me that first and foremost a soldier is an infantryman and
that our military occupational specialty came second.
One day I was sitting on a wooden box in the supply yard smoking
with a few of my team members, when I see my platoon sergeant driving a gator
truck in our direction. He made the point that we were sitting on a coffin, and
that was bad luck. We were quick to hop off, and seeing as the mood was ruined
we began to walk away. I quickly
discovered that the bad luck would be mine when my platoon sergeant pulled me
aside to talk privately. I had been voluntold (military slang for you have been
mandatorily volunteered) to join a tank unit to search Iraqi women at
checkpoints throughout the city of Kirkuk.
I never considered leaving the wire an option, seeing as my job on the
forward operating base was considered essential. Within a week I had been
outfitted with an excessive number of weapons magazines, and received a
refresher course on searching a person.
A refresher course did not prepare me mentally for the unique
challenges ahead of me. When I was married with my new platoon I became all too
aware that I was in a man’s world, and I was not welcome. Combat MOS soldiers are not practiced in
working with females, and their platoon sergeant gave strict orders to only
speak to me if it was deemed necessary. For a few days they would not speak a
word to me. Within a week things had relaxed, and it seemed that only the
leadership had a problem with my presence. It took a lot longer for the joint
force task members to speak to me. They were the police officers of Kirkuk, and
their Muslim beliefs forbid them to speak with me. Eventually with the
persuasion of our interpreters and a common love for chai tea even broke down
their barriers. My love for culture overshadowed the fact that we were sitting
at a checkpoint in the middle of the war and at any moment disaster could
strike.
At first I had my reservations about taking part in a war I did
not agree with, but after working with some of the locals I realized that we
actually helped liberate a people known as the Kurds. The Kurdish are a race of
people who originated in Northern Iraq encompassing portions of Turkey, Syria
and Iran; their roots can be traced back several thousand years. Throughout the twentieth century hundreds of
thousands of Kurds became victims of genocide, many escaped to other countries while
some stayed and formed a military unit known as the Peshmerga. The arrival of
US troops to Iraq marked a turning point for the Kurds, and the Peshmerga
played an important role in the support of the Iraq War. Our checkpoints were
of no exception, and with the Iraqi Elections on the horizon our fellow joint
force task members began to show their true colors. In order to stamp out
discrimination among the police force, the Iraqi officers were forbidden to
show their allegiance to any particular political party. In silent protest they would stuff their
party member’s flag in their back pocket. Almost every officer had a red white
and green flag with a blazing sun in the center, the flag of Kurdistan peeking
out of their back pockets. The
interpreters later informed me that the Iraqi team we were coupled with were
actually undercover Peshmerga. This would explain why they were willing sit,
speak, and drink tea with a woman such as myself.
Being assigned to the checkpoints was a blessing in disguise,
and there was nothing I appreciated more than meeting the women of Iraq. Due to
religious reasons our male counterparts were forbidden to speak or even look
upon an Iraqi woman, and that is where my job came in. In the process of
searching females for explosives I came upon the unique opportunity to speak with
a people who were otherwise silent and unseen to the world. Most women would
dress in black from head to toe, and in the presence of their men remained
completely silent. Once separated from their men it was like night and day,
they uncovered their faces and the silence was broken. After searching my group
of females I always stole a few moments to answer their questions and ask a few
of my own. More often than not I was questioned as to why my family would allow
me to come to such a dangerous place, or if I would marry their sons. They were
shocked to find out that I had the freedom to choose what I did or did not do,
and of course I never did accept a marriage proposal. Election Day was a big
day for the Iraqi women, and everyone who filed in to my search area proudly
showed a black finger. For the first time in their lives they were allowed to
vote.
By the end of deployment I am proud to say I was never once shot
at and one tried to blow me up, but I know I made a difference in people’s
lives. More importantly I will never regret the sacrifice our soldiers made in
Iraq, and although we went there for the wrong reasons I know some Kurds who
will always be grateful that we helped make their way of life possible. By the way, my ex boyfriend never did commit
suicide and is working on becoming a better more sober person far away from me.
This is already a powerful draft!
ReplyDeleteThis is a really great draft. It's so full of detail that I can visualize the events as I'm reading it. Good job!
ReplyDelete