I hope this is true... I got this in email and checked out snopes but didn't see any reference to it... it isn't that it is unbelievable there is just so much nonsense sent around.
Anyway, I HOPE this is just how it happened...
Below is the editorial column from the Arkansas Democrat Gazette on Tuesday, February 1, 2005. I thought it was worth passing on . . . hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
The New Arab Street Dispatch from an American soldier
One of those small miracles of electronic journalism
occurred over the weekend as we were trolling the Net for reports of the Iraqi elections. Somehow, out of all the jibber-jabber floating around out there in cyberspace, an e-mail from an American soldier popped up on our screen. It had been forwarded to us (and apparently anyone else she could think of) by his proud wife Ronda. It was
from Major Scott Stanger, of Benton, Ark., currently in Baghdad as operations officer, 1-53rd Infantry, 39th Infantry Brigade, Arkansas Army National Guard.
After reading it, we can understand why she's so proud of him. Here is his update from Baghdad:
An Incredible Day. Today I got to witness first hand a new democracy take its first steps. My day started early. Actually, my day started about 4 days ago because we have been going non-stop since then,hence no updates lately.
I was up at 5 am. And my head was pounding and my sinuses were killing me. I was up and out with my team by 5:30am. I had to get at least one cup of coffee in me before I left.
The day started slow and we had some small arms fire, 8
rockets shot at us, and we found one IED. The small arms fire and the rockets missed us. The IED was another matter, but we called our bomb guys and they book care of it with their bomb robot. Which, by the way, is their third robot. The first two died in the line of duty.
The polls opened at 7am and that's when things got
interesting. The press showed up in droves. It would have been impossible to swing a dead cat and not hit a reporter in our area of the operation today. I met Campbell Brown from NBC. She was likable, but you could tell she did not want to be in Baghdad. She was very jumpy. I guess we were that way when we first got here, too, but you get used to the shooting.
We had a very tight security on the polling sites and
all around our area of operation. Iraqi police and Iraqi Army soldiers were at every polling site defending them. I have been planning for about 8 days for this mission and it was the largest we have done to date. Infantry, armor, attack helicopters, engineers . . . you name it, we had it.
The Iraqi government shut down all traffic in the country
so the streets were deserted. At about 10am the streets were packed with large crowds of people walking to the polls. We were on edge waiting for more attacks that never came. By about 3pm we could start to let our hair down and talk to the people. The sight was amazing.
We dismounted from our vehicles and were instantly mobbed
by about 200 kids. The kids were all over the place playing in the streets while their parents voted. The kids walked with us for about 2 miles while we were talking to the adults. I have never seen anything like it.
People everywhere wanted to talk to us and thank us. This is what it must have been like when the Allies liberated Paris. Iraqis of all ages wanted to shake our hands and thank us for allowing them to vote. The kids were proud to tell us that their parents voted. Adult after adult wanted to thank us for making this day happen.
When the Iraqis voted they dipped their fingers in the
indelible purple ink so that polling officials could tell who had already voted. When we walked the streets, the Iraqis would hold their purple finger up in the air as a mark of pride. They were very proud of their purple finger.
The Iraqis' statements to us were all the same: "Thank
you for your sacrifices for the Iraqi people . . . . Thank you for making this day possible . . . The United States is the true democracy in the world and is the country that makes freedom possible . . . God blessed the Iraqi people and the United States this day . . . We have never known a day like this under Saddam . . . This day is like a great feast, a wonderful holiday. . ."
I shook more hands today than I have ever in my life. If
you missed a hand they would follow for a mile to get a chance to shake and say thanks. It was nothing like we expected or have ever seen.
The Iraqi people were strong and brave today. The Iraqis, stoic to danger, faced fear, and went out and voted. Then
after they voted the Iraqis stayed on the streets to celebrate by singing, dancing and trying to shake the hand of any American that they could find.
Even though today was a great day for Iraq, the Iraqis
took their lumps. There were 6 car bombs in Iraq today, 2 of them in Baghdad. One I believe did more for Iraqi morale than any other event that I have ever witnessed here. A suicide car bomber drove up to a polling site, which was not too far from us, and blew up. The bomb did not kill anybody but the bomber himself. After the bomb
went off the Iraqi voters calmly walked out of the polling site and spit on the remains of the suicide bomber. The polling site stayed open and the voting continued. That incident ran all day long on Iraqi TV. It was a beautiful act of defiance for the Iraqi people.
The Iraqi people stood up for themselves today and stuck a purple finger in the enemy's eye. Later in the day I thought about our sacrifices that we have made. I wondered if the three men that my unit has sent home
in flag-draped coffins was worth what I saw today. I am still not sure if that is the case, but when a grown Iraqi man thanks me with tears running down his face it made me feel better about what we have accomplished . . .
Scott
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Of all the reports over the wire, we saw none that had
quite the impact of Major Stanger's. When we asked for permission to use his e-mail in today's editorial column, he said sure. ("Feel free to use the letter or any part of it as you wish. I hold no reservations because everything I wrote is true.") He did ask us to touch up any errors because his "grammar skills" might not be up to par.
We explained that wouldn't be necessary, and that his
unpolished prose said more to us about what's going on in Iraq than all the well-honed commentary we'd seen from press services, think tanks, and assorted blogs. Maybe that's because he was telling it, as we say in these parts, with the bark off.
One day, when the history of this whole miserable, noble,
imaginatively conceived, poorly thought-through, magnificently executed, squalid, altruistic, and, in short, very American endeavor is written, we doubt if there will be any truer account of what happened in Iraq Sunday than this e-mail from an American soldier.
__________________
Angela
"Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage morale and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested, exiled, or hanged."
~ President Abraham Lincoln
"People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have the things about us. "
~ Iris Murdoch
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