Saturday, August 25, 2007

The good day before the bad one


I mentioned the VBIED. These and other attacks obviously serve to make everyones life much more difficult.

However, there are some experiences that make my time here a little more rewarding. In this case it is something as simple as handing out some donated school supplies/ toys from Victory Boxes. Ironically we did this the day before the VBIED.

You can find more pictures of victory box pictures here in my flikr collection.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

a bad day

Tuesday was a pretty good day. We went to a school and talked w/ the principle, a representative from the department of education, and a local sheik. We discussed the state of the school, then increased the scope of our conversation to the state of education in Iraq. We came up with a GFI ("Great Freak'in Idea): we'll try to arrange a teachers' exchange program with some of the arab states that have a more modern education system. Qatar was mentioned, as was Bahrain and the UAE. We left thinking that we can make a difference- maybe not a great one, but an improvement for the future of the children.

Here is when everything went bad: Wednesday there was a suicide VBIED at the Educational Department, and the representative was one of the casualties. What kind of message are you trying to send when you bomb the education department? What are you trying to prove? What kind of future do you offer?

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Addition by subtraction

My sister asked me this question : "What do you crave?", and (aside from the usual sophomoric guy answers) I have this to say: "Great Subordinates." Now, it has been said that "There are no bad units, only bad officers" and I agree with that - to a certain extent. However, if you have really crappy subordinates, then no matter how good you are, your unit will still suck as you will have to constantly be going over the same material, or putting out fires that the subordinate lit, or doing the subordinates job for them, etc etc etc. Since I've gotten here I have had no end of trouble.

I'm the team lead of a Civil Affairs "CAT-A" team, which consists of four individuals, usually a CPT (moi), a SFC, and a couple of SGT's or SPC's. I had two SPC's, one of which had a couple of problems. In general, his professionalism and attitude were so poor as to dangerous. What I mean is this: usually the biggest killers over here are laziness and complacency. This usually sets in about 10 months in to the tour here. The Soldiers might start to take shortcuts, or stop doing the basics that have kept them alive. This guy was lazy, careless, and apathetic from the get-go. Even worse, he had this attitude that "I've been here so I know what I'm doing" which basically meant that he could not be taught. At any rate not 10 days in to our tour here, he gets banned from the maintenance bay and so irritates an NCO that the NCO wanted to press charges. So "addition by subtraction" #1: we sent him off to our headquarters' headquarters, where I hear he has continued his pathetic ways.

My second addition by subtraction actually concerns my team chief, who is supposed to be my right hand man. Before I say anything else, let me say this: This SFC is a decent, honorable man whom I would be happy to call a friend. Having said that, I basically carried this guy through the brief time that he was here. Allow me to elaborate: One of the areas Civil Affairs is involved with is overseeing contracts for local projects, such as the repair of schools, health clinics, roads, etc, anything the local commander deems necessary to improve the local economy and /or living conditions. This requires the CA guys to be somewhat computer literate. We have to do assessments, write contracts, SOW's, etc. Scan the copies, send them to higher, etc. This guy could barely scan- and when he did, he picked a formate that was unreadable and unusable. In addition, my former SFC had incredibly poor judgment and timing. One time he almost went for his knife when we got swarmed by kids! Another time he leaves the CMOC to go do sandbags (in the hottest part of the day) then "rests his back" in his bed. In the meantime, the battalion leadership is trying to find him as was needed for a task- which he knew about. The worst part of all this: he gets sent home early because he didn't sign his voluntary extension papers...and wonders why he didn't get awarded a Bronze Star! I suppose you just can't fix stupid. I wonder if this is endemic to all cross-leveled units...

Fortunately, I have got a terrific new SFC and he has done more in the past week than my prior SFC did during his time here. And I am not kidding. The details surrounding his trip here are pretty amusing and, oddly enough, revolve around yet another incompetent. Well, their loss is my gain.

The saga continues...

Monday, August 13, 2007

Best purchase for a deployment

There is practically an infinite amount of stuff that you can buy when you are deployed. Ballistic glasses, arm/knee pads, pouches for your body armor, neat little tools, etc etc. But the best purchase I made BY FAR was lasik surgery.

During my first deployment I had to juggle ballistic glasses with indoor glasses. Occasionally I put in contacts, but those aren't exactly compatible with a desert environment. Now I can see clearly w/o having to worry about going blind if my glasses get knocked off. Best of all, this is a permanent improvement!

I got my LASIK done at the Cedars-Sinai eye center by Dr Rabinowitz. I paid a bit more, but I wasn't looking for bargains. (Why would anyone look to save money on an eye operation???) . So, while it wasn't inexpensive, they did give a military discount. At any rate, being able to see clearly is a fantastic boon at any time.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Ooooooo, a Heat Wave


"Hot, humid air is blanketing wide areas of the nation this week..." with a heat index of 105. Oooooo. I'm thow thorry for everyone.

This week we've been outside in 50 lbs of body armor (that don't breath) in areas of 115 degrees. I have no idea what the heat index is, but I'm sure it amounts to somewhere between really hot and damn hot.

I've experienced the heat during my first rotation out here, so it isn't exactly new to me. But I really don't think that it is something that anyone really gets used to. However, it does add to your appreciation for air conditioning and the vast network that supports such devices.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Have a nice vacation!

Ahh, the irony of it all. While we are here, putting our lives on the line for the benefit of a new, prosperous and free Iraq, we find the Iraqi parliment responding to our example by bravely stepping forward...and going on a month of vacation.

So, let me get this straight: whilst we patrol in 130 degree heat with 70+ lbs of armor on for hours on end, trying to bring security to the streets, they've decided to go on vacation while their country burns down around them. My, my, wouldn't thier fathers be proud of them. Perhaps we'll have everything fixed by the time they get back!