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The Band of Brothers (and Their Mothers)

In Ramadi, a part of Iraq the journalistic community prefers to avoid.

Since returning from my embed in the wild west Iraqi city of Ramadi at the end of April, I’ve gotten some wonderful e-mails from relatives of the troops, some of which I’d like to share.

First some background. Despite the constant flow of news out of Baghdad, which to many reporters is where Iraq begins and ends, terrorist-infested Ramadi is probably block-for-block the meanest place in country. Asked where in the city I wanted to be embedded I told the military “The redder, the better” (“Red” means hostile). So they packed me off to Camp Corregidor with the 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division — the “Band of Brothers” made famous by author Stephen Ambrose and HBO.

Four minarets stand within sniping distance of the camp and the gentlemen in these erstwhile places of worship regularly shoot at the observation posts and often into the camp itself. Huge 122-millimeter mortars explode in Corregidor on average every other day. I photographed a crater where two men were blown up just before reaching shelter.

Because of the constant attacks, body armor is required whenever outside a protected building — something I’ve seen nowhere else in Iraq. I went on two-day patrols and we were attacked in force both times. Improvised explosive devices (IEDs) pop up like mushrooms.

One chilling statistic: Charlie Company arrived in January with 132 men. By late April it was down to about 100 from deaths, wounds, and injuries.

p>These horrors I described and photographed for my blogs from the camp, which many family members read. I discovered from their letters that ignorance is not always bliss. Here are excerpts from two: br> /p>
Thank you so much for the excellent pictures of Ramadi. My son is in Camp Corregidor and these are the first really decent pictures of the area I have seen. It at least gives me an idea of what it is like. He doesn’t say much about the conditions so I have to prowl the internet to find what I can. He doesn’t want his mom and dad to worry more than we have to.

* * *

My son is there at Camp Corregidor — an Army sniper with HHC 1/506th — and although he doesn’t tell the stories as well as you did, the firefight you experienced is a daily event for them. I appreciate the fact that you are not spinning the story to fit a personal agenda. We need more articles like yours. Enjoy your time in Ramadi.

br> Enjoy, huh? p>Another told me: br>
Page: 1 2  

topics:
Military, Iraq

About the Author

Michael Fumento is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C. and a nationally syndicated columnist for Scripps Howard News Service.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (1) |

Barry Miller| 9.8.10 @ 8:21PM

Mike
You were with my son, Matt Miller, at Camp Corregador, Ramadi, 2006. Thank you
I hope all is well with you.

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