Operation Iraqi Freedom Troops Return for R&R
| Friday
September 26, 2003
By Donna Miles
WASHINGTON, Sept. 26, 2003 -- Some came wanting little more than those
creature comforts they said they took for granted before deploying to
Iraq: long, hot baths, fast food restaurants and shopping malls.
For Pfc. Lindsay Clark it boiled down to basics like "flushing
toilets, taking a shower every day, and knowing that you're not going to
have sand pelting your face." From the Dexheim, Germany-based 123rd
Main Support Battalion, she's one of the first 270 U.S. service members
to receive 15 days of rest and recuperation leave under a U.S. Central
Command program that began this week.
But for many of the Operation Iraqi Freedom troops who arrived this
morning in Frankfurt, Germany, and Baltimore to begin 15 days of
R&R, the return home had a deeper significance.
For Army Spc. Jim Short from the 4th Infantry Division's 3rd Brigade,
based at Fort Carson, Colo., it was the first opportunity to hold his
8-week-old daughter, Rachael. Short's wife, parents, and 2-year-old
daughter had left Mechanicsburg, Pa., at 3:30 a.m. to greet him at
Baltimore-Washington International Airport.
Short wasn't the only returning service member to meet a new son or
daughter. Army Staff Sgt. Larry Benedict from Headquarters and
Headquarters Company, 1st Brigade, 327th Infantry Regiment, based at
Fort Campbell, Ky., was looking forward to his connecting flight to
Kentucky so he could meet his 12-day-old daughter and to spend quality
time with his wife and 8-year-old son.
Similarly, Spc. Jason Tipton, an Alabama National Guardsman with the
1165th Military Police Company, planned to surprise his wife, who gave
birth to the couple's first child, Matthew, Aug. 13. Spc. Michael
Richards from 2nd Brigade, 327th Infantry, was hoping beyond hope that
he would get home to Michigan before his wife went into labor to deliver
their first child, due four days ago.
Spc. Adrian Dupre looked forward to the opportunity to solidify his
relationship with long-term girlfriend Mieasha Pompey. The two, who got
engaged over the telephone after Dupre deployed to Iraq in March with
the Army Reserve's 352nd Civil Affairs Command, Riverdale, Md.,
originally had planned to marry when he returned home in January. Those
plans got scrapped when Dupre learned his deployment was being extended
to March.
So when Dupre called his fiancée two days ago to tell her he was
coming home for R&R, the couple decided to tie the knot Oct. 3.
That, they figured, will give them nine days as husband and wife before
Dupre and his fellow troops return to Southwest Asia Oct. 11.
But for now, Pompey said she's too happy to think about Dupre's
return to Iraq. "I'm so excited," she said, admitting that she
awoke at 3:40 in the morning, unable to sleep, knowing that Dupre was on
his way home.
"This R&R program is excellent!" she said. "All I
can say to the Army is 'Thank you, thank you, thank you.'"
As Dupre and almost 200 other service members, all in desert
camouflage uniforms and carrying huge rucksacks, filed into the airport
to greet family members or catch connecting flights, many said they're
proud of the work they're doing in Iraq.
"We're doing a really great job over there," said Spc.
Michael Osterman from the123rd Main Support Battalion, whose job is to
sweep roads for mines in advance of convoys. The work can be scary at
times, he acknowledged, but he said he feels good knowing he's
protecting his fellow soldiers -- and that they, in turn, are helping
the Iraqis.
"It's an amazing feeling to see what a difference we're making
in (the Iraqi) people's lives," said Spc. Carlos Vidas from the 2nd
Brigade, 327th Infantry, as he awaited a connecting flight to take him
home to Daytona Beach, Fla.
SSgt. Larry Benedict from the 327th Infantry's Headquarters and
Headquarters Company, 1st Brigade, said he gets a lot of gratification
seeing the enormous changes already taking place in Iraq. "It feels
really good knowing that I helped restore a country," he said.
"And the Iraqi people are really grateful for what we're
doing."
Benedict said he's seen a big difference in his troops since they
deployed for Operation Iraqi Freedom. "It's given them a better
appreciation of their jobs and the value of what they do," he said.
As they make sweeping changes in Iraq, many of the soldiers who
returned home for R&R said their experience in Iraq has made a big
difference in them, too.
"It's been a life-changing experience," said Richards.
"I don't think you can go off to war and come back the same. I
think the situation (in Iraq) has made us all better people."
Clark said her deployment has helped her "appreciate the small
things you take for granted in normal American life." It's also
increased her pride in America and matured her personally, she noted.
"I've changed and grown so much. The Army has really done
something good for me, and I'm thankful for the experience," she
said.
"It's made a huge difference in me," agreed Vidas.
"I've grown and I've matured. I left as a boy. I'm coming home a
man."
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