Posted on 02/09/2008 9:48:13 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
I have just had the privilege of returning to Iraq and more specifically to Al Anbar Province for my third tour. I say privilege for a number of different reasons, not the least of which is the opportunity to again serve with young Americans ---- the best of their generation ---- in combat.
A second reason is there is no greater honor for any man or woman than to protect one's country in time of grave danger while wearing the nation's cloth. Finally, I do not think there can be anything more gratifying on this earth for an American than to participate in the freeing of a people from the grip of a tyrant, then helping those same people realize the benefits of democracy, to actually exercise the God-given rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
I have been away from Iraq for three years. What I have found in the week I have been back can only be described as shocking. When I was here last, dozens of improvised explosive devices detonated every day in Al Anbar. Firefights were as common as IEDs, and mortar and rocket attacks a nightly routine. The emirs of al-Qaida and other equally murderous groups predicted our imminent defeat as they pursued a sick form of extremism no rational man or woman here, or anyplace else, could fathom.
Many in our own country for any number of reasons began to lose faith, but the soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines who fought our enemy to a standstill never doubted or wavered in their determination to win.
Several days ago I walked through the market section of Fallujah. It was bustling with Iraqis of all ages buying and selling products of every description. Adults waved, pressed forward to shake hands and many, like good businessmen everywhere, tried to make a sale. Kids swarmed around the Marines trying out the few English words they have learned in schools that are all now open. Parents no longer fear to send their boys and girls to learn, a practice that under the extremists was often a death sentence.
When I last visited that city, it was the most dangerous place on earth. It was a gunfight going in and a gunfight coming out every day. The majority of the city's population lived in stark terror from the most evil men on the planet. It was the same then in Ramadi, Haditha and all the way along the Euphrates River Valley to the Syrian border ---- but no longer.
Like Fallujah, the schools are open, markets thrive and post-war recovery gains momentum across Al Anbar. This war is not won but is being won, and today primarily by the Iraqis themselves. Al-Qaida is not defeated, but it is on the ropes. Its membership knows that if they are foolish enough to come out of the holes they hide in, they will not only meet tough young Americans standing firm and unafraid, but also Iraqi police and soldiers in vastly increased numbers and effectiveness.
Iraq is still a dangerous place, but nothing like it was only a short time ago. We should see this thing through because it's the right thing to do, the American thing to do, and we have the new "Greatest Generation" in just enough numbers willing to give up the comfort of their homes and defend us all while spreading freedom to a people who have never known it.
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Maj. Gen. John Kelly is the on-ground commander of Camp Pendleton and Miramar Marine Corps Airbase I Marine Expeditionary forces now serving in Iraq's Anbar province.
It looks good.
Thanks 2DV, for getting out good news. Bump!
Regards
There is a special place in my heart for The United States Marine Corps.
Gen. Kelly has two Marine sons who served in Iraq also.
I love hearing good news coming from Iraqi, Semper fi!
Iraq ping.
Iraq ping.
Thanks. I gotta hit the rack. My brain is in drain mode.
Victory.
Yes.
Also read this speech that Gen. Kelly gave last year (at BlackFive). http://www.blackfive.net/main/2007/09/marine-general-.html
This part of the speech struck home with me. I guess I am showing my age as well.
“The reality was that when many in this room grew up, and I know I am showing my age here, we were surrounded by men, real men, who had gladly worn the country’s cloth in wars against fascism and communism. The earliest memories we had as kids back then were of comic books and paper backs that honored the sacrifices of the super heroes of those conflicts. It was a time when little boys could play guns, and weren’t considered at risk to be psychopaths. To stand up when the national anthem was played or say the pledge of allegiance and a prayer to any God you worshiped before school, wasn’t considered offensive to the sensitivities of the nation’s selfproclaimed intellectual elite. Places like Guadalcanal, Coral Sea, Normandy, Iwo Jima, the Chosin Reservoir, and Hue City, were real to us then, and we knew without thinking that we owed the nation a debt.”
Bump for our brave young men and women who carry out their assigned missions in the finest traditions of the USMC.
Ping.
Salute to Maj. Gen. John Kelly, USMC and our fighting forces from an old Squid.
Meanwhile X-Marine Murtha continues undermine Real Marines.
No matter what has been accomplished in the WOT, most of the American MSM watchers will never know about it. It sickens me.
GOD BLESS our wonderful, awesome troops!
Good idea! Most of them will ignore it, however.
Ditto here! I love the Marines, but they didn't pull this off without the help of the Army,
The Air Force
Or any of the rest of our brave troops!
We need to keep each and every one of them in our hearts and in our prayers every single day, because
These awesome men and women are just that.....AWESOME!
We owe our most heart-felt thanks to them all!
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