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US hostage Tommy Hamill: from farm debt to Iraq
csmonitor.com ^ | April 12, 2004 | Steve Rogers

Posted on 04/14/2004 5:56:58 PM PDT by Destro

from the April 12, 2004 edition

CAMP ANACONDA: Thomas Hamill attended a morning drivers' meeting late last month at Camp Anaconda. Weeks later, he was taken hostage by gunmen. ANDREW INNERARITY/HOUSTON CHRONICLE/AP

US hostage: from farm debt to Iraq

Adventure and work sent Tommy Hamill to Iraq. Now a town prays for him.

By Steve Rogers | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

MACON, MISS. – After years of trying to make it as a dairy farmer in rural Mississippi, Tommy Hamill finally decided last summer to do what virtually no one in agriculture ever wants to: sell the family farm. He needed to pay off a mounting debt. Yet the sale didn't cover all the family's obligations. So Mr. Hamill, concerned about meeting his family's needs, and inspired by a sense of adventure and patriotism, took a job with a US contractor in Iraq that provided food, fuel, and clothing for US troops.

Now his well-intentioned decision has landed him in the middle of an international crisis with wrenching repercussions for his family and friends and posing new political challenges for the US occupation of Iraq.

As the lone American in a new wave of hostage-taking in Iraq, Hamill has overnight become a symbol of the dangers and deteriorating circumstances on the ground.

To his family and friends in this rural town in north central Mississippi, though, the crisis a half a world away is singularly personal. "Prayers are all we need right now," Hamill's wife, Kellie, said in an interview. "I'm doing about as good as can be expected under the circumstances."

"I got God, and I just trust in God," Vera Hamill, Tommy Hamill's grandmother, said.

For now, that's mainly all the family and those who know him in this impoverished stretch of Mississippi can do - pray and watch television for some glimmer of good news, and hope the next phone call does not bring the news they fear most.

Hamill was taken hostage Friday in the war-torn country by gunmen who rocketed a fuel convoy on the road between Baghdad and Fallujah. Saturday, in a video, the abductors threatened to kill and mutilate him if American troops did not pull out of Fallujah.

In the clip given to the Al-Jazeera, Hamill was shown in front of an Iraqi flag emblazoned with the words "Allahu Akbar," or God is great. Hamill gives his name and says he is 43 and from Mississippi. In part of the video, an announcer quotes Hamill as saying his captors were not mistreating him.

"I am in good shape. I work for a private company that supports the military action," the voice-over says. "I want my family to know that these people are taking care of me, and provide me with food, water, and a place to sleep."

The 43-year-old former dairy farmer and truck driver went from the security of his close-knit community to having his face shown over and over by television networks around the globe.

As the news spread through Noxubee County, where Tommy Hamill also was a volunteer firefighter and his wife is an 911 emergency dispatcher, friends called or visited the couple's neat brick ranch-style home.

A trampoline and a miniature football goal post sat unused in the yard. There's no fun for the couple's two children right now.

By Sunday, yellow ribbons were springing up like Easter flowers on utility poles, mailboxes, and car antennas across Noxubee County.

Easter services included special prayers for the Hamill family.

"We just hope and pray that he's going to be released and get to come home," says Dorothy Baker Hines, the mayor of Macon, the county seat of Noxubee County with a population of 12,500. "Folks here know each other, try to take care of each other. There are a lot of tears right now."

Petey Freshour, Macon's assistant police chief, echoes similar sentiments. "We came from the same community," he says. "It hits close to home when you really know somebody like that."

For many here, the incident has brought the US occupation into their living rooms in a way they don't want.

"It's pretty much a shock when it's this close to home," adds Jim Robbins, another family friend. "We just hope and pray for his safe return."

Hamill went to Iraq last September after taking a job as a fuel tanker driver with Kellogg, Brown, and Root, a subsidiary of Halliburton, the company which has a $4.5 billion contract to provide fuel, food, and clothing for US forces.

He is among about 25,000 employees the company has in Iraq and Kuwait, many of whom, like Hamill, were attracted to the jobs by adventure, love of country, and high pay when good jobs in their own communities were few and far between.

Indeed, friends describe Hamill as driven by hard work and love of family.

"That's what he thought he needed to do to help his family," Mr. Freshour said of Hamill's decision late last summer to take a job that would send him to Iraq. "Tommy's a hard worker, that's what he knows."

Hamill sold his dairy farm after fighting a losing battle to survive in the industry. With more than 11 percent of Noxubee County's workers unemployed and the median household income just over $22,000 - $9,000 less than the state median - he saw financial hope in the Halliburton job.

"With this job, he saw a way to help get us back on track," Kellie Hamill said in an interview prior to her husband's abduction.

Hamill signed on for a one-year hitch in Iraq, but was considering extending it on a month-to-month basis after that, his wife said.

Hamill and other truck drivers travel in convoys with security guards. They drive only during the day and often steer their convoys down the middle of the road to avoid ambushes by passing vehicles. Drivers are told by Halliburton to run passing cars off the road if they feel threatened.

The Hamills did know the dangers, especially since at least 12 employees of the Houston-based Halliburton and its subcontractors have been killed and another 40 wounded in Iraq. The worst came March 31 when four workers were killed, burned to death, mutilated, and hanged from the Euphrates River bridge in Fallujah.

"I think everyone knew the risks. He saw things, faced danger, saw it everyday," Freshour said. "You just never think it's going to happen. Now it's not that far away, it's not just on television. It's right here, it's home."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Mississippi; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: americanhostage; campanaconda; iraq; thomashamill
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I ask this question with all due respect....but why are we importing expensive American truck drivers to Iraq when local Iraqis can be found to be more than qualified to drive trucks? Especially with the high unemployment found in Iraq. Maybe giving some Iraq's jobs with the occupation might make some loyal to us? Or even less resentful of us? I know these men are supplying American troops and that is why Iraqis ar eprobably nit trusted but if the dangers are this high then we need to rethink the use of civilians for this logistics task. Or am I the only one under 40 that remembers the Red Ball Express from WW2? War should not be about an American jobs program.

Something is wrong here and we best start asking questions and stop being cheering robots.

PS: I feel great anger that this emerging America can no longer provide meaningful work for patriots like Mr. Hamill but that is a topic for another thread.

1 posted on 04/14/2004 5:56:59 PM PDT by Destro
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To: Destro
It's Bush's fault.
2 posted on 04/14/2004 6:00:52 PM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
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To: MEG33
It is everyone's fault. This our govt. after all.
3 posted on 04/14/2004 6:02:47 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Destro
You seem to have a real problem with civilians working in Iraq.

Why don't you give it a rest?

4 posted on 04/14/2004 6:03:31 PM PDT by TomB (I voted for Kerry before I voted against him.)
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To: TomB
You mean this has become the USSR where discussion of events should not happen and we need to give it a rest? I guess you are in the "robot" section.
5 posted on 04/14/2004 6:08:52 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Destro
Maybe because we don't want a bunch of the locals on local military posts?
6 posted on 04/14/2004 6:08:54 PM PDT by jospehm20
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To: jospehm20
No problem in places where no hostile activity is to be found like say in Europe. But American civilian truck drivers in a hostile/war zone instead of troops doind the task?
7 posted on 04/14/2004 6:10:33 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Destro
Something is wrong here and we best start asking questions and stop being cheering robots.

If I had a skill to offer and if I didn't have a job at the moment, I would apply for employment in a second.

Just like you and all the other people in this world, I feel I am indestructible and that my time will come but only a long way from now......

Of course, If I am wrong then the only thing I'll have to say is Oh Sh*t! I did it again! again.....

Anybody applying for employment in Iraq knows damn well what is involved and what the salary is. Obviously the salary offered outweighs the risks............at least in their minds.

8 posted on 04/14/2004 6:17:03 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (I'm with the Federal Bureau of Mattresses and Pillows and I'm here to check your tags!)
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To: Destro
Do you think Bush,our government and therefore all of us are responsible when any American is kidnapped anywhere in the world or only in Iraq?

Are we responsible for all of those who work overseas because the pay is higher or because they have lost a job or have debt?I am not speaking of sorrow,regret,anxiety over the kidnapping or death...I am talking about responsiblity.
9 posted on 04/14/2004 6:18:34 PM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
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To: Destro
You mean this has become the USSR where discussion of events should not happen and we need to give it a rest?

No, I mean calling dead civilian security guards "mercenaries", er, excuse me, "professional soldiers for hire" and dissing men like this one as on a "jobs program" is beneath contempt. Although you've demonstrated a wonderful capacity to limbo.

10 posted on 04/14/2004 6:20:19 PM PDT by TomB (I voted for Kerry before I voted against him.)
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To: Destro
Because it's a civilian contract.

I turned down an Iraq gig myself, but it would have been nestled in the midst of a armed military base. Not out there on the road every day in a Mad Max replay.

Decided the one-year family separation was too much, and there's no way I'd want to be unarmed in a live shooting zone, having been there once before in an overseas position.

11 posted on 04/14/2004 6:23:30 PM PDT by angkor
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To: Destro
We don't have enough transportation units in the Army anymore. The trans units we do have are working non stop hauling stuff, but it is not enough to supply everything needed. They have to contract civilians to haul a lot of the Army's stuff. Even during Desert Storm we used a lot of civilian trucking to support the Army. We have always been short on trans units. I am on Camp Anaconda right now and the idea of having locals drive big trucks onto post is out. I do not want to see a big rig packed with explosives set off on post anytime soon. I think that is probably why we use US citizens instead of locals.
12 posted on 04/14/2004 6:24:32 PM PDT by jospehm20
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To: MEG33
You are arguing the wrong argument. Why are we importing Americans to Iraq? at such great expense and risk? Nothing to do with it being Bush's fault. That is my tax money (and yours) paying for this so it is my right and responsibility to question the appropriateness of how it is being spent. Have we become so servile a people that we can't even dare contemplate alternative policies to those policies implemented by our elected officials? Was I transported to bizarro world where being a conservative has another meaning and we dare not question the polcies of our rulers?
13 posted on 04/14/2004 6:24:37 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Destro; TomB
You mean this has become the USSR where discussion of events should not happen and we need to give it a rest? I guess you are in the "robot" section.

The USSR is back together again? When did that happen? I really must pay more attention. They they dig up Nikita and put him back in charge?

14 posted on 04/14/2004 6:26:29 PM PDT by isthisnickcool (I'm isthisnickcool, and I approved this post!)
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To: TomB
I never called those security contractors "mercenaries" - you did that Tomwad. And my full statement was They knew who they were hitting. These men were body guards of some sort - ex special forces. They were guarding the people in the other vehicle which was allowed to escape. The Arabs went for the "contractors" not the other civilians. The troubling thing about this is that this indicates that our foes have better intel then we do. PS: Why call them contractor? Makes them sound like they were there to put up drywall or something. The men who died were professional soldiers for hire serving as legit body guards.

My statement had to do with wondering of the Iraqis had insider intel on those men and if they preplanned that attack to kill those men specifically. Nothing to do with their employment status per say.

Taking my statement out of context is real Clintonian of you.

15 posted on 04/14/2004 6:33:10 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Hot Tabasco
Anybody applying for employment in Iraq knows damn well what is involved and what the salary is. Obviously the salary offered outweighs the risks............at least in their minds.

I'm not sure that's true. Some would be looking at the money, period. Some would think they have the moxie to stand up to the stress, but they've not been in a shooting zone and don't really know what its about.

People have very odd and unexpected reactions in these environments. Some rise to the occasion, some divert their minds with inconsequential trivia, some are crushed by it. I watched a retired military officer (non-US) become obsessively dependent on BBC newscasts, when the reality of the situation was happening right outside his front door.

Personally I'd not want to do it again unless armed, and that's usually prohibited for civilian contractors (Blackwater et al excepted).

16 posted on 04/14/2004 6:36:15 PM PDT by angkor
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To: Destro
Get a sign and picket the Pentagon.
17 posted on 04/14/2004 6:38:19 PM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
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To: Destro
Mr. Dan Rather started this, "...out of work, no government support, family to feed; this brave American had no choice but to go to work in Iraq because of this terrible Bush economy!"
18 posted on 04/14/2004 6:43:37 PM PDT by TexasCajun
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To: Destro
Umm hum...??? bump
19 posted on 04/14/2004 6:48:57 PM PDT by Chief_Joe (From where the sun now sits, I will fight on -FOREVER!)
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To: TomB; Destro
No, I mean calling dead civilian security guards "mercenaries"...

That was Ol' Dan Tucker, not Destro.

20 posted on 04/14/2004 6:51:16 PM PDT by okie01 (www.ArmorforCongress.com...because Congress isn't for the morally halt and the mentally lame.)
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