Friday, March 30, 2007
Jail break
I don't know if I mentioned it or not, but this camp also doubles as a prison camp for some 14,000 or so detainees. Last night a couple of them escaped. The Tactical Operations Command called us and asked if they could use our assets to help in locating the escapees, so we gathered the guys and headed back to work. It's 8 am Saturday morning now (11 pm Friday night back home) and I'm headed for the hooch for a couple more hours of shut eye before coming back for todays primary mission. I'm starting to get used to not sleeping. More soon and pictures later in the week...T.
Thursday, March 29, 2007
First 9 Days
Day 1 (Mar 21) – After getting to have dinner with my sister Nancy and the kids, and having my brother Pat drop me off at the airport I was able to talk United out of a business class seat to Frankfurt. Food, half of a James Bond movie, and I was out. I think I slept 5 and a half hours out of the 8 and a half hour flight. We took off at 11 at night, so day 2 started almost right after I got on the plane.
Day 2 (Mar 22) - We got an hour and a half on the ground in
Day 3 (Mar 23) – I was determined not to mess with the new time zone, so I forced myself to stay up all day. I’m pretty sure I looked like a zombie, but I spent the day checking out the new camp. Subway, Nathan’s Hot Dogs, a donut shop, Baskin Robbin’s Ice cream. If you looked past the tents, and the uniforms, and the Humm-Vs, and the sand…we weren’t too far from home. The base exchange sells everything from clothes to snacks to electronics. The USO had free internet, but the lines were always a couple of hours long and filled with junior enlisted guys who had no other means to contact home. There’s a base theatre and a chow hall and all the other stuff we need to keep us busy in our down time. The guys that were my temporary hosts were busy setting getting me a gun and making sure I had a place to spend the next night. This base was predominantly filled with Marines, but had a bunch of Army and Navy guys, as well as soldiers from
Day 4 (Mar 24) – Today’s big event was to get my Humm V qualification. I had a 20 year old Sea Bee (construction man in Navy terms) pick me up at my tent after morning chow and we went into the sand dunes to see what skills I had with the big rig. We spent an hour and a half trying to tip that thing over. It’s rated to go up and down 60 degree embankments and can drive sideways on them up to 45 degrees without rolling over. I think I gave it a good workout. We drove over big logs and mud puddles that were put on one of those courses you see on car commercials to prove what a vehicle could do. It was like big kid go karts. After I finished screwing around out there, I went to the Tactical Operations Center (TOC) to get a briefing on my Close Quarters Combat training and Convoy training that I’d be leaving for the next day…it would last 3 days. They issued me a 9mm Berretta that I soon discovered would be at my side from that moment on. After I finished this, I was told to go away for the rest of the day and continue to acclimate myself to the new time zone. I was tired by 2 PM, but I knew I had to stay awake until 10 so I’d be ready for tomorrow’s events. I walked the 3 mile perimeter of the camp just to keep from getting tired…I only made it until 9 PM.
Day 5 (Mar 25) – After getting up at 2 am I had a hard time getting back to sleep. I laid there until 6 and finally gave up. I headed out to the TOC and talked to my guys about the plan for the day. They were going to drive me to the
Day 6 (Mar 26) – Wake up was 4 am, but I had already been up…rinsed off with my water bottle, and eaten my MRE (Meals ready to eat) out of the plastic bag it came in by the time everyone else started to got up. I wasn’t tired, but I knew I would be later. I just hoped it would be after we finished our close quarters combat drills. By 5:30 we were assembled on the range and waiting for the sun to come up so we would have enough light to see what we were shooting at. The drill would be to move and shoot in close proximity to the rest of our group and we made our way throw a series of scenarios. I now know that nothing keeps you awake more than an M-16 going off less then a foot from your ear as you are concentrating on walking…or running…and shooting well enough to hit a target. We finished the drills by 9 am, in time for the next sand storm to kick up. A few minutes later I experienced my first “mud storm”. That’s what happens when it starts to rain in the middle of a sand storm. It actually comes out of the sky as mud and cakes to you immediately. The sand out here isn’t like what you find on the beach. It’s the consistency of talcum powder, and it goes everywhere you don’t want it. After a few minutes all the sand is wet enough not to fly in the air any longer…and it turned into a regular downpour. Wouldn’t have been a big deal, except we were given strict instruction not to bring a change of clothes for this little expedition except socks and underwear. We were all soaked to the bone…and the desert is still chilly this time of year. After a couple more briefings and lunch, we all got into a few dozen Humm-Vs and headed off to practice a “dry run” of the convoy training that would help us to identify IEDs (improvised explosive devices), and how to react in the event our convoy is ambushed. Sergeant Flowers has distinguished himself as both the class clown, and one of the non-comms who can keep his team in order. He came up to me and informed me that he had worked it out so I would be on his tactical team in the trail gun truck, which is a modified Humm-V with a turret on top and a 50 caliber machine gun mounted to it’s roof. He also warned me that his team only talked in British accents once the tactical scenarios began. I became Luftenant Commander Maloney to he and his crew, and our duties included guarding everyone else’s backsides and making sure no one violated the integrity of the convoy. Once out on the course, our dry run only lasted an hour before the lighting started striking so close that we had to get the guys down from the turrets so they wouldn’t be zapped. We decided we were ready for the real deal the next day and headed back to camp. The rest of the day was spent talking our way through the scenario and trying to find creative ways to dry our clothes without offending the female soldiers. Each meal was an MRE, with different main dishes in different airtight bags. None of them were good, but we were too hungry to care.
Day 7 (Mar 27) – Another 4 am wake up call, and we were on the road by 6 am. Another 3 hours of sleep for me before the plywood floor became too uncomfortable to lay on anymore. Our group of 15 Humm Vs and a couple of 5 ton trucks were the first to be evaluated on the course. Fake roads, fake buildings, but real people and cars trying to do threatening things to the convoy to test the soldier’s skills. Explosions going off to simulate IEDs, and dummy IEDs planted to test our ability to find them. We kicked ass. These guys were awesome at what they did, and they brought me up to speed quickly. We left the course confident, but wet once again as the rain fell once again through the turret opening in the roof. I was glad to put this training behind me and head back to
Day 8 (Mar 28) – We cruised over to
Day 9 (Mar 29) – We made it to the ship by 11:45 PM only to be told by the Skipper that we wouldn’t be departing until 2:30 AM. He also informed us that the only place he had for us to lie down was on the deck plating of the ship, and once the wind started blowing over the bow it was bound to get pretty cold. We opted to stay up all night and drink coffee and watch the first for episodes of “24” on the TV in the galley. We got underway on time, but after the second episode the Skipper called us all to the main deck of the ship to inform us that he lost power on one of his engines and had to turn back for the Naval Base. We decided the trip wasn’t meant to be, and decided to head up to
Monday, March 5, 2007
Slideshow
www.nrlakeview.com/tom/TomsParty_1A.wmv
This may take a few minutes to load depending on your internet connection.