En ondertussen zeggen alleen nog de hele en halve gangsters in de politiek dat ze in de eindzege geloven.
Soldiers Return, but for Families, Iraq Battlefields Are Not Far Off By Lisa W. Foderaro The New York Times
Fort Drum, New York - The last time Bobbi Plautz welcomed home her husband, Travis, from Iraq, he was a changed person. He listened to different kinds of music and craved different kinds of food. He stayed up all night and wrestled with nightmares.
"He came home and had a 5-month-old baby and was overwhelmed," Mrs. Plautz said of her husband, a staff sergeant with the 10th Mountain Division. "But he slowly got back to being the guy I married: funny, playing practical jokes."
As she waited in a gymnasium close to midnight with her son, Zander, now 3, and scores of other families bearing balloons and signs, Mrs. Plautz was preparing herself for another period of readjustment.
Hours earlier, the soldiers of the 10th Mountain Division's Second Brigade had spilled off a jet at a nearby airfield, some bending down to kiss the ground, others whooping into the cold night air. But despite the joyous homecoming, the 120 soldiers who landed Thursday evening - a fraction of the 3,500 Second Brigade soldiers returning to this sprawling military base this fall - were about to take on a new and uncertain challenge: the return to normalcy.
Coming home from war is always fraught. But for these soldiers, it is all the more so because of the length of their deployment, which was extended midtour from one year to 15 months. For almost half the soldiers, it was at least their second tour, which meant some had missed the birth of a child or been apart from spouses for most of their young marriages.
As the soldiers stepped off the plane, they carried, along with their oversized packs and M-4 rifles, a good deal of emotional baggage: the division reported that 52 members of their brigade were killed on this tour; two are still missing. The extension of their tours was especially hard.
"That was pretty catastrophic for them," said Maj. Gen. Michael Oates, the commander of the 10th Mountain Division, after greeting the men and women on the airfield.
Given the length of this tour - the Army deploys its members longer than any other military branch in Iraq - as well as the round-the-clock stress the troops endured, many family members were clearly on edge as they anticipated the soldiers' return to domestic life.
Samantha Wilmet, 23, held her 9-month-old baby, Jasmine, clad in a pink shirt that read, "I'm here to pick up my Daddy," and wondered how her husband's first tour had affected him.
"I'm not sure what he went through," Mrs. Wilmet said of her husband, Specialist David Wilmet. "My husband is a closed-mouth kind of guy. I know he's had a hard time. I had plenty of friends say it's going to change him, it's going to change him. I wonder: Will it or won't it?"'
Lees verder: http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/110307F.shtml
zondag 4 november 2007
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