It was Superbowl Monday. Sunday for y'all, perhaps, but we're 9 hours ahead of Texas time. I got up a bit early and walked over for my very important assignment. The Lt. Colonel had given me a task worthy of only the best and brightest 1st Lieutennant - picking up the food for the Superbowl party at Pizza Hut.
Yes, we do have a Pizza Hut here. It's in a little 10-foot trailer with a little phone-booth sized cachier's box a few feet away. I had gone there Sunday afternoon to put in my order, and right around midnight went back over to pick up the food. It was pretty lively in our little outdoor food court - a dusty open area paved with loose gravel. The coffee shop was doing brisk business in the very cold late evening and some of the soldiers sat around giving their predictions for the game. I waited until they called our number, grabbed the six large pizzas, and made the half-mile walk to work. As I went, the inside of my hands (those parts next to the pizza boxes) were snuggly warm. The outsides of my fingers, however, were close to getting frostbite.
I got in to work and we did our shift change. The day folks grabbed a slice or two and headed off before the night folks ate our pizzas and settled in for work.
About 2:40 a.m., we were splitting our time between work and watching the pre-game show when an announcement was made by the Public Affairs Officer that there would be a taping in the studio in five minutes for the National Anthem at the Superbowl. Any live bodies who wanted to come were welcome to do so.
My commanding officer, Lt. Col. Box, took one look at me, and then without a word, stood up and quick walked out of the room. For someone who is almost inseparable from his work - he comes in 2 hours early for his 12 hour shift - this was surprising. Soon, however, there were at least a dozen folks heading out. I wasn't planning on going, but then an Army Captain said she'd cover me if I went. So I grabbed my hat and headed out.
Within a few minutes, we were outside, across the way, and into the studio, where we stood up on a platform, just like you did for your third-grade class photo. The idea, we were told, was to show footage of some soldiers standing at attention for the national anthem. We listened to the banter back and forth between the Army cameraman in front of us talking into his headset, and the speakers, which broadcast the voice of the Superbowl producer, who spoke in a thick New York Accent.
First they did a test shot. Then the producer asked if we could salute. This, however, wasn't going to happen. You don't salute indoors, and we're in a studio. So the best we could do is stand upright at attention. Then we had to give him our location and unit for the graphics.
"Multi-National Corps - Iraq" the Army cameraman said into the mic.
"Multi-National C-o-r-e Iraq, right?"
"No. Corps. Spelled C-o-r-p-s."
Finally they got it right and set up the shot. It was a simple pan from left to right. For any reader who may have taped the game, I'm in the picture at the very beginning, and it quickly pans away from me (email me a screen shot if you can...Edit: someone did. It's below).

That's me on the second level, on the end.
(centered under the word "National")
I'm in a lighter-colored uniform
(known as the DCU, as opposed to the greenish ACUs of the Army
and the other light uniforms of the Marines (below and to my right).
Of course, it wasn't exactly live. It was about 10 minutes prior to the actual national anthem, so as we stood there at attention as the camera made two passes across our formation, I sung the song in my head. The camera, however, was taking time and getting lots of footage, and I was singing a little fast. The cameraman was still filming when my imaginary "Star Spangled Banner" ended. So I did the only thing a true God-Fearing Texan could do. I immediately struck up the band for a rousing mental rendition of "Texas, Our Texas." It was this second pass, I'm convinced, that they ultimately used. So if you see one Navy guy in a sea of Army uniforms standing even more proud and respectful than the rest, you know why.
That being done, we got back to work, and for the next four hours, caught the game as we worked our way through our morning tasks. Eventually, we all stopped working for the last couple of minutes to catch the exciting end to the game. Having no team of my own to root for, I did what I always do in that case: root for the underdog. Hence I was excited to see the end of the game and the upset win.
It being a Monday, I had half a day off. It's about the only time off I ever get. So as I stepped out of the palace to head for breakfast, I walked excitedly towards my rendezvous with scrambled eggs - as opposed to the exhausted, downcast trudging that I normally do.
About halfway towards the dining hall, I heard a loud boom off in the distance. I turned and instantly knew where it was. At the same moment, I heard the sirens go off, again, in the distance. It was another base, about a mile away. I listened patiently, but there were no more explosions. A rocket, most likely, I figured. Fortunately, my fellow soldiers at that base didn't have their post-game celebrations disrupted to badly, for as I later learned, no one was injured.
Later that day, of course, I was walking over to that very base. I needed to pick up some supplies at the post exchange, which is larger at that base than at ours. Normally, there's a bus that takes you there, but I had time and needed to actually get outside and see the sun. As it neared noon, it had warmed up to a very pleasant low 60s day.
Arriving at their food court, I got in line and ordered from Taco Bell. Taken along with the pizza in the morning, this is the first time I had eaten junk food twice in the same day since I've been here. On the plexiglass window at the cachier's box was a note:
Due to convoy problems, we are currently out of hot sauce, cheese sauce and beans. Taco Bell appologizes for the inconvenience.
"Great," I thought. "The taco bell supply truck hit an IED."
After eating, I went to the Bazaar. This is a medium-sized metal building where Iraqi merchants sell gifts, supplies and trinkets to the soldiers. It's meant to supplement the exchange, and you can buy all sorts of things there, from Iraqi flags, to old currency with Saddam on it, to power tools and Hookah pipes.
I had bought my guitar here a few months back, and now I picked up some new strings. I also bought a gift for a friend of mine. As I was waiting to check out, I noticed a small clear plastic box with money in it. At the top was a slit to drop your donation in, and a sign saying the donation was for the Bazaar workers who had been killed. Not just 'killed' as in random violence, but murdered in retalliation for working here...On our base...Because some screwed-up person thinks that the guy selling me guitar strings is an infidel and apostate who has insulted all of Islam.
There were photos too. One of the vendors who had been killed looks like he was about 19. The poor kid was just trying to help his family. He could have taken money from an insurgent group to shoot RPGs at a rival group's mosque. He could have built an IED into a soccer ball to target children. He could have been a suicide bomber. Instead, he chose an honorable profession. And for that, he was killed.
This kind of stuff angers me to no end, and it motivates me every day. The stories I could tell are without end. Misery, to be sure, but also courage. And it is the courage that motivates me most, because it's the courage that gives me hope. The young girl who escaped from Al Qaeda thugs and leaped from a three-story building, breaking her legs rather than be raped and held hostage for ransom - a ransom that funds the insurgency. The young son of a shiek, who saw a suicide bomber targeting his father and the American troops he had grown to love. The boy tackled the bomber and held him down until everyone could get behind cover. When the bomber blew his suicide vest, the only other victim was that young hero.
When you put it all in perspective, then, you realize how special a place like America is. Our greatest contest is played out not on the bloody battlefied of sectarian war, but on the gridiron, amongst passionate men who struggle, compete - but ultimately shake hands at the end of the game, regardless of the outcome. We have superbowls not suicide bombers. We have political primaries, not political assassinations. Ultimately, you can't help but stand proud when the national anthem plays. Because you realize that the "bombs bursting in air" were endured, overcome, and transcended, and are nothing but a memory in our own nation's history. We should wish only the same for the Iraqis, and hope for a day when the things that unite them overcome those which divide them. All countries, all people deserve it. Certainly, they do most of all.
7 comments:
Jim,
It's up on YouTube, but I can't make you out in there.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyaaTiU2C3c
There's several on YouTube
http://youtube.com/watch?v=FHliDtPKyVc
is that you in the back quarter in the chocolate chip camo rather than the acu digital ?
http://bpolk.com/files/NatAnthem.JPG
The Thunder Run has linked to this post in the - Web Reconnaissance for 02/05/2008 A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention, updated throughout the day...so check back often.
That's a great post. Your final paragraph is a fantastic reminder why we (you) are there.
When you come home to Austin, once you get settled in and feeling back into your groove, I'd love to buy you a beer, maybe grab some BBQ, and just say thanks.
No hot sauce!!! AAAAGH! Talk about tragedy overseas. At least you scored pizza.
Corps...c-o-r-e....that's just sad.
Proud of you, brother. Been lurking your blog for a while and enjoying the reports. Come home safe.
-JP, former roommate and fellow potentate
Like you can't tell that he's on the left side of the screen in the back?
Yes, christine, but he's only 5'7" so I figured they put him in the front.
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