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----- Original Message -----
Support for the Troops
Never Stronger
June 29, 2005 American Forces Press Service By Capt. Steve Alvarez, USA
WASHINGTON
- When I came home from Iraq a couple of months ago, I kept the promise I made while I was still there: I wouldn't watch the
news, and I'd step away from the war, ignoring the events that had consumed my life 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It
was time to catch up with my family and make them the focus of my life 24/7.
For about a month I was able to successfully
ignore the constant horrid imagery and sensational reports filed from Iraq. But as a public affairs officer and self-proclaimed
news junkie, I soon found myself scanning headlines on the Web and tuning into radio news programs, instead of my favorite
jazz station.
I don't think the charred skeletal remains of a vehicle-borne explosive device are the watermark of
this war. The images I see back here are not the same indelible images I saw in Iraq - those of a resilient country making
its way back from decades of oppression - helped by the many friendly nations that liberated them.
But now I'm on
the sidelines, and instead of feeling and hearing the car bomb explode and seeing its eerie black plume of smoke rise nearby,
I read about it. And rather than witness history as I did for a year, I find myself writing my comrades to get accurate accounts
of what is happening in Iraq.
What I saw in Iraq was the boundless bravery of a seemingly endless line of Iraqi recruits
gathered to join the Iraqi army, the smiles and waves of Iraqis as we convoyed through the city of Sulaymaniyah, the first
flight of the Iraqi air force, and the sound of Iraqi tank guns as they thundered for the first time in years in support of
liberty, not tyranny.
I remember the jubilation of my Iraqi friends as they showed off their ink-stained fingers,
a badge of honor on their fingertips, indicating they had voted in their country's first democratic election in decades. I
remember the Iraqi female military police soldiers who became pioneers for women in that region by joining the Iraqi military,
clearing not just personal hurdles, but cultural ones.
Mostly, I remember the thousands of Iraqi and coalition troops
that each day hunted the enemy and kept me safe. I remember the drivers and gunners on convoy, the pilots and crew chiefs
in the sky, the sentries and tankers at the gates, and all of the warriors who were out there trying to make Iraq a better
and safer place.
Someday, probably decades from now, the actions of this generation and its brave men and women will
grace history books. The lesson, I'm confident, will be that they left a peaceful and productive imprint on the region and
its people, and forever changed the landscape of the Middle East.
Despite what is being reported and what is reflected
in media opinion polls, there is no doubt in my mind that the public is behind the troops in Iraq.
While I was in
Iraq, I received hundreds of Christmas cards from students at an elementary school and from members of a church in Florida.
A sorority from Indiana sent dozens of letters and cards of support, and Americans from all over the country sent me e-mails
from places like Chicago, Sacramento, and Texas just to name a few.
Wool caps made by an Internet knitting club kept
me warm during the cold winter months in Iraq and donated phone cards kept me in touch with my family who waited for me more
than 6,000 miles away. Care packages stuffed with goodies and comfort items were never in short supply at our command. In
fact, we had to appoint a "morale sergeant" to manage all of the goodwill pouring into our compound.
When I came home
in uniform on R&R, strangers approached me at the airport and shook my hand, patted me on the back, and thanked me. Airline
employees did what they could, offering passes to their VIP lounges and upgrades to first class, and those airlines who had
nothing to offer did what they could-extra pillows, fistfuls of peanut or pretzel bags and free headsets. But their "thanks"
alone was enough for me.
Ask any returning war veteran and I'm sure you'll find their experience was similar. At one
point I was so overwhelmed by the outpouring that I found myself in an airport restroom trying to keep my composure after
a mother walked passed me with her two sons and one of them said aloud, "Thank you, Soldier," his brother waving anxiously
at me.
On my return to the war after R&R, a few other soldiers and I were dining on one last restaurant-cooked
meal in the airport when the waitress approached us and told us that another patron had paid for our meal.
We thanked
the man but said we couldn't accept his offer. He replied that it was "the least I can do for you guys," adding, "We're all
proud of you."
In my town when I came home after the war, I passed homes displaying yellow ribbons and flying U.S.
flags. At my welcome home party, a restaurant donated food for more than 100 guests and people all over the city made it a
point to express their support and gratitude.
The support I received bordered on immense. Never had I expected such
support, and never had I received so much for merely doing my job.
My memories of Iraq will forever be engrained in
my mind alongside of the memories of the incredible outpouring I received when I came home. They are one.
Last weekend,
keeping true to the promise I made to make my family the 24/7 focal point I attended a baseball game on Father's Day and during
the seventh inning stretch there was a salute to U.S. military personnel serving the war on terror.
A singer proudly
sang "God Bless America" and all around me, people joined in and sang along.
My personal opinion poll has found, plus
or minus a few percentage points, that the American people unconditionally support the soldiers in Iraq. I arrive at this
conclusion having experienced their support firsthand, and having been held in their warm embrace upon my return from the
war.
And the support continues today. When I recently learned about the opinion poll results I e-mailed one of my
stateside supporters who befriended me during the war. I wrote him to say hello, and to restate my appreciation for his support
during my deployment.
I asked him if he had heard about the media opinion polls and he replied as I had when I learned
of the poll.
"News to me."
© 2005 DefenseLink. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's and
do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.
- * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * " S u p p o r t O ur S o l d i e r s " - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - *
*********** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *********** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *********** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *********** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
U n
i t
e d
W e S t a n d G o d B l e s s A m e r i c a ***** Were
it not for the BRAVE, there would be NO "Land of the Free!"
Chuck *Doc* Stewart Syracuse, New York Patriotic
Graphics - http://geckocountry.com/milgraphics.htm Military and Veteran Links - http://geckocountry.com/military.htm Doc's Military Site - http://geckocountry.com/dedication.htm Doc's wife Nancy's Patriotic Prints - http://geckocountry.com/prints.htm Visit the site of Nikki Mendicino, a 15 year old (oops...16 year old now) POW/MIA activist and Veteran Advocate for
the past seven years. Read about her many accomplishments and awards. http://nikkiusa.com/Everyone has a photographic memory...some just don't have film.
Remember our
POW/MIA's I'll never
forget!
* - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - *
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Why are the two teenage boys' in the below picture eyes
closed?

I found this great PTSD article on a military
base. It was in a FAMILY MAGAZINE for American troops.
PTSD does not only hit our military men
and women. It impacts a great number of Americans, who never left home...
Child abuse, elderly abuse, marital abuse,
street crime victims (rape), etc. are some of the biggest sufferers.
Understanding PTSD is a great way from keeping
it from passing down through generations.
MORE AND MORE LIBERAL-DEMOCRAT
LEADERS ARE LINING UP TO COMPARE THIS WAR ON TERRORISM WITH
THE VIETNAM WAR. SINCE HOLLYWOOD'S MOVIES WERE MOSTLY ALL
WRONG ABOUT THE VIETNAM WAR AND YOU WERE NOT TAUGHT ABOUT
THE VIETNAM WAR IN SCHOOL, LEARN IT ON THE INTERNET...
THE BELOW ARTICLES COME FROM THE BOOK
DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS OF
THE VIETNAM WAR
***
IS HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF...
(Who Are Today's Terrorist Connections?)
Two recently discovered documents captured from the Vietnamese
communists during the Vietnam War strongly support the contention that a close link existed between the Hanoi regime and the
Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) while John Kerry served as the group's leading national spokesman.
Researchers Troy Jenkins and Tom Wyld located
the two Vietnamese communist documents referenced above in the archives of the Vietnam Center at Texas Tech University, in
the Douglas Pike Collection. Douglas Pike was a leading authority on the Vietnam War who collected over 2 million pages of
original documents now archived at the Vietnam Center. James Reckner, Ph.D., Director of the Vietnam Center at Texas Tech,
verifies that the documents in the Pike collection are original and authentic. The Circular and the Directive are listed as
items numbered 2150901039b and
2150901041 respectively.
IS HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF...
(Who Are Today's Terrorist Connections?)
Yes, the American Liberal News Media is one
connection.
Amnesty International: Insurgents are guilty
The Amnesty International report — "In Cold Blood: Abuses by Armed Groups" — said (terrorist)
insurgents were guilty of direct attacks intended to cause the greatest possible loss of civilian life, indiscriminate attacks
resulting in the deaths of civilians, targeting humanitarian organizations, abductions and killing captured and defenseless
police and military personnel.
"There is no honor nor heroism in blowing up people going to pray or murdering a terrified hostage.
Those carrying out such acts are criminals, nothing less, whose actions undermine any claim they may have to be pursuing a
legitimate cause," Amnesty said.
Rights Group Denounces Iraqi Insurgents
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