Back in March of this year a severe, late-season
winter blizzard hit Bangor, Maine on the same day
as I’d been due to catch an early flight to New
York City. That morning the snow had piled so high
and was still coming down at such a rapid rate that
it was near impossible for any taxi to come pick me
up from home in good time. When a cab finally
arrived and I reached the airport — after an
extremely slippery, wild ride in which my driver
was forced to follow dangerously close behind snow
ploughs as to reach our final destination — I had
missed my flight. All was not lost as there was
another flight in five hours’ time and I’d just
need to stay put and wait it out, but I was pissed
off and annoyed and short tempered for the delay.
Well, that is until I took the escalator up to the
waiting lounge of the Bangor Airport and regained
some perspective.
There, waiting in the lounge alongside a few other
stranded local passengers like myself were about
three hundred U.S army soldiers. Bangor Airport,
due to its past life as a former air force base with
large-capacity runways, and because of its
geographic location tucked away in the far
northeast of the nation, is one of the last points
of departure and first points of return for
American servicemen and women on their way to and
returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Here, then,
delayed since about four that morning was a throng
of tired young soldiers waiting on mechanical
repairs to their transport carrier that they might
soon, via Germany, complete their deployment to
Iraq. Instantly any irritation I may have been
harbouring about getting into New York a few hours
late dissipated.
What stood out the most in observing these
patiently waiting troops was how young they were.
Really young. Even those soldiers among them who
bore the rank of sergeants, lieutenants, too, still
looked far younger than my thirty-one years of age.
I could only imagine the kind of potential
responsibilities they’d be dealing with at a time
when they should have still been only mastering the
art of shaving. And what a complete mix of
ethnicity they represented. These troops — who I
later learned were primarily in origin from the
south — were white, African-American, Asian,
Hispanic and more. They really did seem to
represent a complete cross-section of American
diversity. And yet, they also seemed to largely
represent one core demographic of America as well –
the impoverished working class. I had plenty of
time on my hands until my own flight and so, soon
enough, I’d struck up a conversation with a soldier
who hailed from Tennessee and was invited into
playing a couple hands of no-money poker in a
circle with four other waiting soldiers. Two were
farmer’s sons, two were from small Mississippi
towns where unemployment had left them with few
other options than the army, and one, a Hispanic,
openly conceded that he was a U.S resident but not
yet a citizen, and hoped by having committed to
military service that it might help speed up his
citizenship. For this, he was nicknamed ‘Green
Card’ by the others.
The few hours we shared in the airport terminal
— the troops ended up departing before
I did — provided an extraordinary insight into what makes
up a large part of America’s military forces today.
These were men barely into their twenties who, on
the evidence, seemed at least somewhat motivated to
‘the official cause’ of securing and stabilizing
Iraq, and yet they were also very honest about the
core reasons for why they had signed on to go to
war: financial security, freedom from unemployment
and poverty, a means of support for their wives and
children and, at least for one, hopefully,
citizenship. We cracked jokes and played cards,
they asked a great many questions about Australia
and ‘The Crocodile Hunter’ and, in general, we kept
things light and friendly. At the same time
however, there was an unmistakable and completely
understandable air of nervous tension that hung
over the room as these kids contemplated — or tried
to forget — the risks and dangers they would soon
face a day’s plane ride away.
“Be safe and get back to your families before too
long” was the best I could muster as we bade
farewell and I soon found myself sitting in an
unsettlingly quiet airport lounge pondering how in
the hell I’d allowed something like a slightly
delayed flight to New York to ever bother me in the
slightest.
Five months later I was back in New York and seated
in a Hells Kitchen bar with two friends enjoying a
quick afternoon beer as respite from the searing
summer heat. Before too long we were approached by
a recently returned serviceman from Iraq who,
having just turned twenty-four, was on a three day
drinking binge to celebrate with his Vietnam War
veteran father. We chatted awhile, shared a round
of beers and swapped observations of Australia
versus America. There were more inevitable
questions asked of us about ‘The Crocodile Hunter’.
The pair was well hammered, but they were fine.
Then, upon the father excusing himself to go to the
toilets, the young soldier’s mood darkened, and in
his drunken stupor he decided to share with us two
tales from his time abroad in Iraq.
First up, he explained that as far as he had been
concerned during his two tours of duty, it didn’t
matter if it was an insurgent or a five-year-old
boy who ever came within his field of range,
because in Iraq he blew either one away without a
moment’s hesitation. He elaborated: “I ain’t
waitin’ around for someone to get me. You don’t
know who’s who, so I’d just pull my trigger on the
kid and say fuck it. Easy as that.” Now I’ll
concede that unless one day I have the misfortune
to witness it firsthand I’ll never be able to truly
appreciate the complexities and uncertainties
generated in that ‘fog of war’. Who am I to be able
to make confident declarations about what should or
shouldn’t happen in the heat of battle? And yet, in
listening to this young soldier speak I recalled
Chris Hedges’ recent article ‘The Other War’ in
Nation, wherein some fifty military veterans had
gone on the record — in disturbing detail — about
attacks on Iraqi civilians. The one account from
Hedges’ article that stuck with me as this soldier
had told of shooting an Iraqi child that “got too
close” was that of Sgt Kelly Daugherty of Colorado.
In the piece she explained, “There was then a
little boy — I would say he was about ten — a little
Iraqi boy, and he was crossing the highway with his
three donkeys. A military convoy hit him and the
donkeys and killed all of them. Basically your
order is that you never stop.”
Moments later, a fresh beer in hand, the serviceman
shared with us another story, this time of the
occasion when he was on an American base in Iraq
and needed to go to the toilet to relieve himself.
Upon opening the door to one cubicle that was
unlocked he found a female soldier seated on the
toilet. Rather than apologize and look for another
vacant toilet, he gleefully told us of how he
figured, “Shit, I’d been away from home too long,
so what the fuck!” With that, he closed the cubicle
door behind him, pulled down his pants and,
pointing at his crotch, demanded of his fellow
soldier — a soldier of lesser rank — “well don’t just
look at the fuckin’ thing, suck it!” With a roar of
laughter he added, with a flourish, “Because that’s
how I roll! I needed a blowjob, so she had to give
me a blowjob!” When, upon this punch line, he
raised his hand looking for us to celebrate his
‘triumph’ with a high-five I’d heard enough. We
politely wished him and his father well and made
for the exit.
This man had served his country through two tours
of Iraq and now, having left the marines six months
earlier for civilian life, said that he was now
contemplating taking a ‘standing offer’ from the
army to rejoin the military services at a higher
rank and rate of pay. Why go back? Because, he had
said matter-of-factly, the money was too good to
turn down, and “hell, what else am I gonna’ do?”
I wondered — was it a desperate, overstretched
nation that would take a man back who so cheerfully
could recount a tale of killing an Iraqi civilian
and, potentially, of having coerced a female fellow
soldier into a sex act? Or was this an honourable
man and a good soldier who had been transformed
into a desperate, tragic figure, shaped by the
miseries and experiences of war? Either way I
couldn’t help but think about those young, smiling
soldiers I’d met earlier in the year and who had
just been ‘looking for a way to get by’ in life.
What changes had they been through since I last saw
them? I wondered if they were all still safe and
okay. If they were the same nervous but hopeful men
I’d chatted to briefly over a game of cards. Or if
they too had been transformed for the worse- their
own perspectives far changed since waiting in an
airport lounge for a flight to Iraq on one bitterly
cold March morning in Bangor, Maine.
Ezy Reading is out as often as can be…
Ezy Reading can be contacted at
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