The only helicopter tour I'll ever get.
It would be great if the recent ebb in violence in Iraq meant you could fly into Baghdad International Airport and hail a cab to go downtown. But despite attacks having slowed in the last month with fewer Americans being killed in May than in any month since the war began, Iraq is still a very dangerous place.
Coming to Iraq for an embedded reporter involves an elaborate choreography of transportation, planes, helicopters or Rhinos, a sort of monster truck armored plated kind of bus. For photographer James Lee and myself it amounted to three days of slight discomfort, boredom and no sleep. For someone like me who can't sit still for very long, it sometimes felt tortuous.
Our time here will be dictated by the courtesy of the military. We are their guests and as such that limits the kinds of stories we can do. The war itself, where everybody is a potential target is most limiting of all, making it very difficult to talk to talk to Iraqis who don't have a connection with the military. Beyond that it also changes what you see.
Like most Americans I am woefully uneducated about the rich history that traces itself to the beginning of civilization. This is where the Biblical tree of life grew, where the first prophet Abraham was born and Noah buried. It is where the tower of Babel stood
It is where Alexander the Great died. Once referred to as Mesopotamia, or the land between the two rivers (the Tigris and Euphrates).
I'm not going to even attempt to do a thumbnail history of the country and it's unlikely I'll take any sort of historical tour. The best I got so far was a view of Baghdad from rooftop level aboard a fast moving Blackhawk helicopter swooping over the squat brown outlying towns, an orchard of date palms and then the rows and rows of brown block buildings and apartment complex that make up the grid of neighborhoods around the Green Zone.
I couldn't see and wouldn't have been able to identify it if I could, the Khulafa Mosque or Tahrir Place or make out ramshackle shops of Rashid Street.
But as a chopper skirted over the city, occasionally dropping decoy flares, I got my first and only view of an ancient once great city.
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Ventura County Star Staff Writer Scott Hadly and freelance photographer James Lee Jeffreys will spend the month of July embedded with US troops in Iraq’s Anbar province. Hadly and Jeffreys will spend much of their time with Seabees from Port Hueneme’s Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 3, who are stationed at Camp Ramadi but working throughout the province. Scott will use this blog to discuss his personal experiences as an embedded reporter.
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My collegues and I are teaching classes which require a community service project.
After class discussion, we all agree that we love our country and our troops. What can our kids do to make a difference? We have approximately 150 students who are 10-11 years old and we only have 2 1/2 weeks to complete this summer project.
We would like to begin with writing letters to the troops and we have the ability to do a fund-raiser.
We welcome any suggestions you may have as time is of the essence.
Laura,
I work with Scott at the Star and wanted to give you the heads up that we will try and let him know about your comment but he is limited in his access online while in Iraq while embedded with the troops in case he isn't able to get back to you in time.
laura,
my husband is a seabee in 3...in afghanistan...i would be happy to help you with your students is scott is unable to...im sure theyd be more than happy to get letters and such and pass the around to the troops!! let me know if you are interested...thanks, christa
I am looking for Christa Miller on the Seebee base, the email I have for her is no longer current. This is White Dove Farm and we have a load of squash for the base, a small load. we were suppose to contact her to get over there. Any help would be appreicated