Moving through the desert
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Sgt. Charles “Cass” A. Spence
* EDITOR’S NOTE: This is an update on the tour of duty by Costa Mesa
resident Charles “Cass” A. Spence. The Daily Pilot profiled Spence
and his family when he was shipped out to serve during the war in
Iraq. The Daily Pilot will continue to update readers with reports
from Spence as they arrive.
Finally got a little downtime. ... You are gonna have to forgive
my spelling, punctuation and run-on sentences. I’m just too damned
tired to proofread this. Where do I start?
We closed the line of departure on none other than my wedding
anniversary, March 20. What are the odds? I did win the pool though,
$200. Everything went smooth. A little opposition initially. As we
passed through Al Nazaryah, that’s when things got intense.
It was a full-blown gunfight, and my fellow Marines performed as I
thought they would -- outstanding! Our job during this time was to
provide safe passage for a log train (convoy) of supplies. Fuel, ammo
etc. We are also taken to clear the “Baath Party Resistance” along
the way. This part of the job was, and still is, a little tough.
These guys are cowards. They wear civilian clothing over their
uniforms, terrorize the local population with acts of murder and
torture. There is no age limit to their victims.
This I have seen first hand. During an operation against the enemy
ambush (the locals informed us) these fighters were beginning to
surrender. At the last second, they ran into a building and began to
throw children -- yes children -- out in front of them while they
grabbed their weapons and began firing again using the kids as human
shields. If you have heard how the USMC trains us to be expert shots,
that day was proof! The hectic rate of fire slowed as the Marines
took careful aim and eliminated the enemy -- one well-placed shot at
a time.
I am proud to say that only the enemies were lost by our hand that
day.
I must admit, I was very, very angry at what had happened and had
to control myself when dealing with the prisoners of war that were
caught. From here, we cleared a couple more towns, all with the same
results. We saw the enemy and destroyed them.
I don’t like to make it so routine, but after the first three
firefights, things just kind of meld together. We had a bad truck
accident on our way to our current location. One of our trucks went
crashing off a medium-sized bridge. Out of 20 Marines, 18 were
injured. No deaths, thank God. The wounded were Medevac-ed out by
helicopter to a trauma center nearby.
Word got out among them that they would be flown to Kuwait for the
remainder of the war. They would have none of that. Those that could
walk got up and rejoined the company. Two of my Marines, who didn’t
catch wind that they’d be held in Kuwait, managed to slip out of the
hospital and hitchhiked all 200 miles back to the front. “Only in the
Marine Corps!”
That is a tale all by itself!! I think the guy from Stars and
Stripes already interviewed them.
Lately, we have been conducting raids and destroying weapons’
caches. We are truly making life miserable for the enemy.
Our company’s 1st sergeant speaks Arabic fluently, and so we get a
chance to experience the local culture. The locals tend to be very
standoffish at first, but once hands are shaken and blessings given
and received, they are some of the warmest and most polite people
I’ve met. They continuously talk of the atrocities committed by
Saddam Hussein and his operatives. They call us angels and kiss us on
our cheeks while reciting prayers to Allah.
The poverty here is unbelievable. No amenities that we are all so
accustomed to. No amount of peace talks would have changed Saddam
Hussein’s behavior toward his own people. So let’s think about it.
Not only do I get a chance to make the world a safer place against
terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, but I also get to help an
entire country out of a hell they have been forced to live in since
[Saddam] has been in power.
I know, watch the language. ... Man, a cold beer would go good
right about now. Man, do I miss my wife and kids.
There isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t think about them. You
know what really caught my eye about Carrie? She has the most
beautiful set of eyes I have ever seen. Now here’s the thing. It’s
not that they are just pretty to look at, it is what you see deep
inside them that matters. And she has the most honest and loving eyes
that I’ve ever seen. I truly am lucky.
I kind of had to take a break with this letter, otherwise I’ll get
all wound up.
I caught 18 deserters the other night. That was pretty funny. I’ll
tell you about that when I get back or in another letter. We’re
listening to the BBC right now. I guess some idiots in Washington are
complaining on how the war is taking too long. “Not like the Gulf
War.” Kuwait was the size of Riverside county, while Iraq is the size
of California. If these freaks could actually see what kind of impact
we were making here, they’d shut their mouths. When I say impacts, I
mean humanitarian-wise.
I forgot to mention that these kids love Skittles and M&Ms;!! I was
at the trauma center checking on my Marines, and there was a little
boy. His mother had been wounded by enemy fire (she’s OK). He was all
sullen, so I approached him with a bag of M&Ms; after an approving nod
from his mother. One minute, he was crying and stuffing his mouth
with M&Ms;, and the next ting you know, I am playing peek-a-boo and
chasing him around.
After talking to the Navy corpsman on hand, I found out that this
little boy’s father had been shot by the Baath Party earlier that
day, now get this, because he complained that they were taking too
much food from him and how could he feed his family. I found out this
kind of trash happened a lot, even before the war.
Oh, some good news! The papers we recovered after the other
night’s ambush provided us with some very useful information. We
knocked out four Iraqi tanks the other night. They tried to be
sneaky, but they weren’t sneaky enough.
Well, my hand hurts and I need some sleep. We are moving out soon,
to Baghdad hopefully.
Cass
Semper Fi!
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