
|
Our first stop this morning was to sift through the rubble of a former air defense artillery site
to find any leftover fuses. Most the ordnance exploded when the site was destroyed, but the fuses
that screw into the nose of the shells contain a small amount of explosive and can be dangerous,
particularly to all the kids that play in the area. "This goes against everything we learned
about UXOs.", Matt remarked. What he meant was our training taught us to not mess with unexploded
ordnance, ever. Here Matt holds up the tungsten sabot core from an armor piercing round.
|

|
In this photo you can get a pretty good idea of how these armor-piercing sabot rounds work.
I'm no ordnance expert, but you can see how there is a rod-like round in the core with a
plunger-like disc which is probably what makes it propel into the target on impact. The inset
is what the fuses we were looking for look like.
|

|
"Holy shit! A 120mm mortar round!" Thank god there was no fuse in the round (observe hollow
screw-in point), but still pretty disconcerting to happen upon. This would make one hell of
an IED. (What CNN calls "roadside bomb" we call "improvised explosive device", or "IED".)
We didn't touch this one, we just marked it and left it for the EOD (explosive ordnance disposal) guys
deal with.
|

|
Everywhere we go, we get mobbed with kids. They are impossible to get rid of. What makes it really
complicated is they commonly have really cool shit to sell sometimes. In this photo Matt is buying a
Benchmade automatic, a knife that sells for $180 in the PX, here he is buying it for thirty bucks.
They mob us, annoy and insult us to no end, they have stolen knives, pens,
and sunglasses right off our vests, they have stolen cameras and GPS devices out of Humvees, and they
basically make it impossible for us to do our jobs. Later in the day I would whack one of
these kids in the shin hard with an Asp baton in an attempt to get him to
go away, but it wouldn't work. His response was basically, "Dude, that really hurt. Why'd you do that?
I'm not gonna leave you alone." I got in a staring contest with another kid-- and lost. Just like
the detainees we commonly deal with, they know how to posture, they have the macho front routine down pat,
they even know how to take a beating, but they will flip into abject apology mode in an
instant if it suits their purposes. If they're not shamelessly begging us for food and water, they're
spitting at us. I'm no sociologist, but this behavior seems endemic of Arab culture.
|

|
Our next two stops were to a couple of the poorest families in the area. We dropped off some
food for them. This was the second of the two stops. None of the men were there when we
came by, so very little organization was present on how to disseminate the goods. The children disputed
bitterly.
At this location there were four families living in an abandoned set of buildings. In the seventies
these buildings were a clubhouse for the town's semi-pro soccer team. But after some of the people
in the area attempted to assassinate Saddam (one of his body-doubles actually), he decimated the
town. The soccer field was destroyed and the clubhouse was converted into an air defense artillery
site. These families were using the buildings to house a group of water buffalo and about a dozen
cute little snot-nosed ankle-biters.
|

|
This is our company commander. He is an assistant district attorney in Manhattan. He is the kind
of guy that uses terms like "broad" and "fella". In my humble opinion, he is the only sane man in
our command structure. We trust him. And he's no dummy. He made sure to take his helmet and
sunglasses off before offering an open packet of Pringles to this girl because, you see, the
civil affairs guys were snapping pictures of everything he did.
|

|
A girl behind a tree and a caricature of an oppressor both eye me warily.
|

|
Little Iraqi girls.
|

|
Somehow the youngest ones are taught how to look like poster children for Amnesty International.
|

|