Team update - 3 Jan 06
Belated Merry Christmas, everyone, from Team Drifter to all our friends and family out there. Christmas has come and gone, fairly quietly for this dump. About half the team made a midnight run with some Iraqis to Fallujah and back last night, so everyone slept late this morning. Plus, it was Christmas. We all did go to lunch together, where you the American taxpayer (via KBR) really put on quite a meal. Thanks, guys. These people on the base even had a Santa on the back of a fire truck. Gee, Toto, we aren’t in East Ramadi anymore. Anyway, we sincerely hope you had a great holiday.
In all honesty, things here have frankly gotten a little... BORING. We have shifted a lot of responsibility on to the shoulders of the Iraqis, and they have responded well. The good news: there are not two if us out on every like we had been doing since we got here in July until this month. The bad news: most of us haven’t left Camp Ramadi in a couple of weeks, and it feels just weird. This little trip isn’t over by a longshot, and bad things are still happening out in town daily. But we are gradually shifting some attention to getting ready to leave this lovely, lovely place. The team relieving us has been identified and will be in-country for training prior to meeting up with us in late January; after two to three weeks of training in Kuwait and Baghdad, they will meet up with us in February to begin about a 10-day turnover period. Then we will start the slow, painful “exfil” out of this place. It feels strange even talking about all this, but it is coming.
Hey, guess what? A week has now gone by, and I haven’t gotten this thing done or posted. It is now 2344, 01 January, 2006, and the holidays are officially over. Amongst some other simple New Year’s resolutions, one is to update the blog more. I know that there are only two more months to go on the blog and we are home, but I am really going to try to do better.
As I was saying, things have slowed down for us MTTs with 3-2-1, further “complicated” by leaning into setting the stage (or “prepping the zone”) for the guys coming in to relieve us. An average day here now is as follow:
0830: Team meeting
0900: Joint Iraqi / MTT meeting
1000: Post-meeting phone calls, deconfliction, planning, etc.
1200: lunch with the team
1300: check e-mail
1400: back to the “house” / get with IA counterpart to ensure they aren’t in the rack
1700: PT
1900: Secure
It has gotten almost routine which, compared to how our lives were even a month ago in Camp Tiger, is a little weird. Ramadi is still a damn dangerous place, but we are not out in it like we used to be. Still need to keep our guard up, though. Two of us are out at OP Hurriya in downtown Ramadi tonight, so keep them in your prayers along with the Marines and Iraqis with them.
I need to get this thing posted tonight before friends and family kill me, so I will end this up. In short, quality of life is up, IA performance improving, and we are within 60 days of getting home. Our replacements – God bless them – are getting things in order before reporting to training in the States (CONUS) as we speak. I will try to put some more stuff up later (in-sh’allah). If you have any specific requests or questions, pictures you want, ASK NOW.
And Top says to “stop sending us stuff”. We have been overwhelmed with your kindness over the holidays, and we are still fighting out from the avalanche of chow and stuff all you guys have sent. At this point, it will probably be the next guys to benefit from your kindness.
P.S. Quick story about our new camp. It is about 150 m from the “pond” where Camp Ramadi dumps the “blackwater” sewage, about 500m from the Camp dump (I owe you some pictures on THAT place before we leave), about 300m from a platoon of artillery. The “pool” is another story to tell you later. Specifically, about the day last week when the berm surrounding the pond BROKE in the back and… you get the picture. In fact, I’ll post a picture for you. Also, when the wind shifts… wow. Being artillery guys, though, the live fire from across the street sounds pretty good. Rattles the plywood covering the holes where the windows were once.
In all honesty, things here have frankly gotten a little... BORING. We have shifted a lot of responsibility on to the shoulders of the Iraqis, and they have responded well. The good news: there are not two if us out on every like we had been doing since we got here in July until this month. The bad news: most of us haven’t left Camp Ramadi in a couple of weeks, and it feels just weird. This little trip isn’t over by a longshot, and bad things are still happening out in town daily. But we are gradually shifting some attention to getting ready to leave this lovely, lovely place. The team relieving us has been identified and will be in-country for training prior to meeting up with us in late January; after two to three weeks of training in Kuwait and Baghdad, they will meet up with us in February to begin about a 10-day turnover period. Then we will start the slow, painful “exfil” out of this place. It feels strange even talking about all this, but it is coming.
Hey, guess what? A week has now gone by, and I haven’t gotten this thing done or posted. It is now 2344, 01 January, 2006, and the holidays are officially over. Amongst some other simple New Year’s resolutions, one is to update the blog more. I know that there are only two more months to go on the blog and we are home, but I am really going to try to do better.
As I was saying, things have slowed down for us MTTs with 3-2-1, further “complicated” by leaning into setting the stage (or “prepping the zone”) for the guys coming in to relieve us. An average day here now is as follow:
0830: Team meeting
0900: Joint Iraqi / MTT meeting
1000: Post-meeting phone calls, deconfliction, planning, etc.
1200: lunch with the team
1300: check e-mail
1400: back to the “house” / get with IA counterpart to ensure they aren’t in the rack
1700: PT
1900: Secure
It has gotten almost routine which, compared to how our lives were even a month ago in Camp Tiger, is a little weird. Ramadi is still a damn dangerous place, but we are not out in it like we used to be. Still need to keep our guard up, though. Two of us are out at OP Hurriya in downtown Ramadi tonight, so keep them in your prayers along with the Marines and Iraqis with them.
I need to get this thing posted tonight before friends and family kill me, so I will end this up. In short, quality of life is up, IA performance improving, and we are within 60 days of getting home. Our replacements – God bless them – are getting things in order before reporting to training in the States (CONUS) as we speak. I will try to put some more stuff up later (in-sh’allah). If you have any specific requests or questions, pictures you want, ASK NOW.
And Top says to “stop sending us stuff”. We have been overwhelmed with your kindness over the holidays, and we are still fighting out from the avalanche of chow and stuff all you guys have sent. At this point, it will probably be the next guys to benefit from your kindness.
P.S. Quick story about our new camp. It is about 150 m from the “pond” where Camp Ramadi dumps the “blackwater” sewage, about 500m from the Camp dump (I owe you some pictures on THAT place before we leave), about 300m from a platoon of artillery. The “pool” is another story to tell you later. Specifically, about the day last week when the berm surrounding the pond BROKE in the back and… you get the picture. In fact, I’ll post a picture for you. Also, when the wind shifts… wow. Being artillery guys, though, the live fire from across the street sounds pretty good. Rattles the plywood covering the holes where the windows were once.
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