Our Military XXII: Greetings from Iraq on the 4th

My brother’s best friend from college and the Marines and – as I can say from my own experience – just a plain ‘ole great guy is currently serving in Iraq. He wrote this e-mail on the 4th July and I think it’s really worth reading to put things into perspective:

To All My Family and Friends,
Hello everyone. I am writing you today from a free Iraq. I want you all to know that I am doing well and are in good spirits as I fight for freedom and democracy half way around the world. For those of you who have not gotten a chance to see the other e-mails that I send or read the letters of my Commanding Officer, let me bring you up to speed on what I have been doing over here for the past four months.
My battery operates and controls the ground of an area larger than the state of Rhode Island. Within this area, we work hand-in-hand with the local community to repair and rebuild the infrastructure that has been neglected for the last 14 years. In the four months we have been here we have been able to stabilize and repair the power grid for the main town and its two suburbs. We have improved water production and created a sanitation department to start picking up all of the trash in town. We started a farming CO-OP to help local farms get the equipment and advice they need to plant crops in this region. We have delivered school supplies to the local schools and helped to start and adult literacy program. While this may not sound like much, this is more than what Saddam provided for his own people.
We have helped to stabilize the area by working with the Iraqi Police Service and the Iraqi National Guard. We conduct joint patrolling and training to create a secure and safe environment in this area. We have worked very hard to screen and evaluate Iraqi’s to serve in the Iraqi Security Forces. We will soon see the products of our efforts, as the first group will head to Baghdad to begin training in the coming weeks. We have also been working with the Iraqi Border Guards and Customs Police. Our efforts with them helped in the opening of the Iraq-Saudi Arabia border. This is allowing millions of gallons of fuel, heath care, and food to begin flowing into the country. This will provide much needed relief to the country of Iraq.
But the most important part of this whole process is that not one single shot has been fired at Coalition Forces in anger since October of last year. This is completely related to the aggressive and professional attitude of the Iraqi Security Forces in the area. We have become a team working for the improvement of a free Iraq.
This has been a very rewarding experience for me. I have taken some time to reflect on what we are trying to accomplish here. Especially on the Fourth of July and the 228th year of our independence. Just 6 days ago Iraq took its next step to becoming a democracy or at least not a dictatorship. Despite what you might see on the news, hear on the radio, or read in the newspapers, good things are happening in this country. The majority of Iraqis want to live a normal peaceful life with all the normal things that we have in America. There are only a couple of thousand people in a country of 24 million that are trying to stop the good things that are happening in this country. Just a few thousand have taken the attention of all the major news networks in the country and put an evil face on what is being accomplished over here. The terrorists never had better allies than the American News Networks!! It is because of the media that the terrorists continue to fight.
Please take everything you see on the news or read in the paper with a grain of salt. There are Marines, Soldiers, and Sailors in parts of Iraq that are having great successes in the communities that they are living around. Our story is not being told and it is the story that should be told the most. Please help the Americans around you to realize that we are struggling to create a free and democratic country over here and it takes time. It took 14 years for the United States to have a constitution that worked after we declared our independence. It then took another 150 years before everyone in this country could vote. After World War II we had troops on the ground for years helping to rebuild Europe and Japan. This is not an easy process. It takes time and a lot of hard work. Remind other Americans to be patient. You cannot buy freedom on the shelf in a store. It is paid for with blood and hard work.
I wish you all the best on this Fourth of July. I love you all very much. I will be coming home soon. My count down has me here for just less than 3 more months. Remember, Freedom is not Free!
Semper Fi
God Bless
Lt. Adam – From a distant outpost in Western Iraq

13 Comments

  1. OK, Steve, calm down. That’s cool and all but I think you’re kinda missing the point here…
    Frank, thanks for sharing that amazing letter. It was no less than brilliant and my only complaint was that it hasn’t been read on the air or reprinted in newspapers across the land. We ARE doing the right thing.
    Keep the “Our Military” series rolling, ok? They’re not only entertaining, they’re informative and empowering.

  2. More stories and accounts like that need to be broadcast in the media. It’s always great to get firsthand accounts from people who are actually there, and not rely on some reporter adding his/her dramatic flair to a story.

  3. First-God bless Lt Adam,Thanks for all you & your brethren do!
    Second-Frank,you need to post a list of what these guys need.I’ve always wanted to send care packages,but I figured if I sent soap & razors-a semi load of soap & razors would already be sitting there unused.I want to show my appreciation to all who serve in harm’s way,but have yet to see a list of what’s scarce for them.
    Magazines,shampoo,toothpaste-I have no clue what they need vs. have too much of.
    A voice from somebody there is what’s needed,& it appears you’ve got connections to a GREAT A merican over there.
    I can’t be the only one thinking this,please let us know:what,where to send packages.
    Thanks,CS

  4. First-God bless Lt Adam,Thanks for all you & your brethren do!
    Second-Frank,you need to post a list of what these guys need.I’ve always wanted to send care packages,but I figured if I sent soap & razors-a semi load of soap & razors would already be sitting there unused.I want to show my appreciation to all who serve in harm’s way,but have yet to see a list of what’s scarce for them.
    Magazines,shampoo,toothpaste-I have no clue what they need vs. have too much of.
    A voice from somebody there is what’s needed,& it appears you’ve got connections to a GREAT A merican over there.
    I can’t be the only one thinking this,please let us know:what,where to send packages.
    Thanks,CS

  5. Thursday Foray

    Frank J. has a letter from a Marine in Iraq on the Fourth – it’s a great read. Not your usual Frank J. post (more like your usual Blackfive post….hhhmmm…HEY!). It’s going to be Frank’s blogiversary on Friday the 9th

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