I Miss Iraq. I Miss My Gun. I Miss My War.

Status
Not open for further replies.

CountGlockula

Member
Joined
Oct 1, 2006
Messages
3,527
Location
In a Los Angeles coffin.
Very long article, but a MUST read for every patriot. What do you guys think?

http://men.msn.com/articlees.aspx?cp-documentid=3042293&page=1

I Miss Iraq. I Miss My Gun. I Miss My War.
By Brian Mockenhaupt


A few months ago, I found a Web site loaded with pictures and videos from Iraq, the sort that usually aren't seen on the news. I watched insurgent snipers shoot American soldiers and car bombs disintegrate markets, accompanied by tinny music and loud, rhythmic chanting, the soundtrack of the propaganda campaigns. Video cameras focused on empty stretches of road, building anticipation. Humvees rolled into view and the explosions brought mushroom clouds of dirt and smoke and chunks of metal spinning through the air. Other videos and pictures showed insurgents shot dead while planting roadside bombs or killed in firefights and the remains of suicide bombers, people how they're not meant to be seen, no longer whole. The images sickened me, but their familiarity pulled me in, giving comfort, and I couldn't stop. I clicked through more frames, hungry for it. This must be what a shot of dope feels like after a long stretch of sobriety. Soothing and nauseating and colored by everything that has come before. My body tingled and my stomach ached, hollow. I stood on weak legs and walked into the kitchen to make dinner. I sliced half an onion before putting the knife down and watching slight tremors run through my hand. The shakiness lingered. I drank a beer. And as I leaned against this kitchen counter, in this house, in America, my life felt very foreign.

I've been home from Iraq for more than a year, long enough for my time there to become a memory best forgotten for those who worried every day that I was gone. I could see their relief when I returned. Life could continue, with futures not so uncertain. But in quiet moments, their relief brought me guilt. Maybe they assume I was as overjoyed to be home as they were to have me home. Maybe they assume if I could do it over, I never would have gone. And maybe I wouldn't have. But I miss Iraq. I miss the war. I miss war. And I have a very hard time understanding why.

I'm glad to be home, to have put away my uniforms, to wake up next to my wife each morning. I worry about my friends who are in Iraq now, and I wish they weren't. Often I hated being there, when the frustrations and lack of control over my life were complete and mind-bending. I questioned my role in the occupation and whether good could come of it. I wondered if it was worth dying or killing for. The suffering and ugliness I saw disgusted me. But war twists and shifts the landmarks by which we navigate our lives, casting light on darkened areas that for many people remain forever unexplored. And once those darkened spaces are lit, they become part of us. At a party several years ago, long before the Army, I listened to a friend who had served several years in the Marines tell a woman that if she carried a pistol for a day, just tucked in her waistband and out of sight, she would feel different. She would see the world differently, for better or worse. Guns empower. She disagreed and he shrugged. No use arguing the point; he was just offering a little piece of truth. He was right, of course. And that's just the beginning.

I've spent hours taking in the world through a rifle scope, watching life unfold. Women hanging laundry on a rooftop. Men haggling over a hindquarter of lamb in the market. Children walking to school. I've watched this and hoped that someday I would see that my presence had made their lives better, a redemption of sorts. But I also peered through the scope waiting for someone to do something wrong, so I could shoot him. When you pick up a weapon with the intent of killing, you step onto a very strange and serious playing field. Every morning someone wakes wanting to kill you. When you walk down the street, they are waiting, and you want to kill them, too. That's not bloodthirsty; that's just the trade you've learned. And as an American soldier, you have a very impressive toolbox. You can fire your rifle or lob a grenade, and if that's not enough, call in the tanks, or helicopters, or jets. The insurgents have their skill sets, too, turning mornings at the market into chaos, crowds into scattered flesh, Humvees into charred scrap. You're all part of the terrible magic show, both powerful and helpless.

That men are drawn to war is no surprise. How old are boys before they turn a finger and thumb into a pistol? Long before they love girls, they love war, at least everything they imagine war to be: guns and explosions and manliness and courage. When my neighbors and I played war as kids, there was no fear or sorrow or cowardice. Death was temporary, usually as fast as you could count to sixty and jump back into the game. We didn't know yet about the darkness. And young men are just slightly older versions of those boys, still loving the unknown, perhaps pumped up on dreams of duty and heroism and the intoxicating power of weapons. In time, war dispels many such notions, and more than a few men find that being freed from society's professed revulsion to killing is really no freedom at all, but a lonely burden. Yet even at its lowest points, war is like nothing else. Our culture craves experience, and that is war's strong suit. War peels back the skin, and you live with a layer of nerves exposed, overdosing on your surroundings, when everything seems all wrong and just right, in a way that makes perfect sense. And then you almost die but don't, and are born again, stoned on life and mocking death. The explosions and gunfire fry your nerves, but you want to hear them all the same. Something's going down.

For those who know, this is the open secret: War is exciting. Sometimes I was in awe of this, and sometimes I felt low and mean for loving it, but I loved it still. Even in its quiet moments, war is brighter, louder, brasher, more fun, more tragic, more wasteful. More. More of everything. And even then I knew I would someday miss it, this life so strange. Today the war has distilled to moments and feelings, and somewhere in these memories is the reason for the wistfulness.

On one mission we slip away from our trucks and into the night. I lead the patrol through the darkness, along canals and fields and into the town, down narrow, hard-packed dirt streets. Everyone has gone to bed, or is at least inside. We peer through gates and over walls into courtyards and into homes. In a few rooms TVs flicker. A woman washes dishes in a tub. Dogs bark several streets away. No one knows we are in the street, creeping. We stop at intersections, peek around corners, training guns on parked cars, balconies, and storefronts. All empty. We move on. From a small shop up ahead, we hear men's voices and laughter. Maybe they used to sit outside at night, but now they are indoors, where it's safe. Safer. The sheet-metal door opens and a man steps out, cigarette and lighter in hand. He still wears a smile, takes in the cool night air, and then nearly falls backward through the doorway in a panic. I'm a few feet from him now and his eyes are wide. I mutter a greeting and we walk on, back into the darkness.

Another night we're lost in a dust storm. I'm in the passenger seat, trying to guide my driver and the three trucks behind us through this brown maelstrom. The headlights show nothing but swirling dirt. We've driven these roads for months, we know them well, but we see nothing. So we drive slow, trying to stay out of canals and people's kitchens. We curse and we laugh. This is bizarre but a great deal of fun.

Another night my platoon sergeant's truck is swallowed in flames, a terrible, beautiful, boiling bloom of red and orange and yellow, lighting the darkness for a moment. Somehow we don't die, one more time.

We pack into the trucks after midnight, and the convoy snakes out of camp and speeds toward the target house. I sit in a backseat and the fear settles in, a sharp burning in my stomach, same as the knot from hard liquor gulped too fast. I think about the knot. I'll be the first through the door. What if he starts shooting, hits me right in the face before I'm even through the doorway? What if there's two, or three? What if he pitches a grenade at us? And I think about it more and run through the scenarios, planning my movements, imagining myself clearing through the rooms, firing two rounds into the chest, and the knot fades.

The trucks drop us off several blocks from the target house and we slip into the night. As always, the dogs bark. We gather against the high wall outside the house and call in the trucks to block the streets. The action will pass in a flash. But here, before the chaos starts, when we're stacked against the wall, my friends' bodies pressed against me, hearing their quick breaths and my own, there's a moment to appreciate the gravity, the absurdity, the novelty, the joy of the moment. Is this real? Hearts beat strong. Hands grip tight on weapons. Reassurance. The rest of the world falls away. Who knows what's on the other side?

One, two, three, go. We push past the gate and across the courtyard and toward the house, barrels locked on the windows and roof. Wells runs up with the battering ram, a short, heavy pipe with handles, and launches it toward the massive wood door. The lock explodes, the splintered door flies open, and we rush through, just the way we've practiced hundreds of times. No one shoots me in the face. No grenades roll to my feet. I kick open doors. We scan darkened bedrooms with the flashlights on our rifles and move on to the next and the next.

He's gone, of course. We ransack his house, dumping drawers, flipping mattresses, punching holes in the ceiling. We find rifles and grenades and hundreds of pounds of gunpowder. And then, near dawn, we lie down on the thick carpets in his living room and sleep, exhausted and untroubled.

Many, many raids followed. We often raided houses late at night, so people awakened to soldiers bursting through their bedroom doors. Women and children wailed, terrified. Taking this in, I imagined what it would feel like if soldiers kicked down my door at midnight, if I could do nothing to protect my family. I would hate those soldiers. Yet I still reveled in the raids, their intensity and uncertainty. The emotions collided, without resolution.

My wife moved to Iraq partway through my second deployment to live in the north and train Iraqi journalists. She spent her evenings at restaurants and tea shops with her Iraqi friends. We spoke by cell phone, when the spotty network allowed, and she told me about this life I couldn't imagine, celebrating holidays with her colleagues and being invited into their homes. I didn't have any Iraqi friends, save for our few translators, and I'd rarely been invited into anyone's home. I told her of my life, the tedious days and frightful seconds, and she worried that in all of this I would lose my thoughtfulness and might stop questioning and just accept. But she didn't judge the work that I did, and I didn't tell her that I sometimes enjoyed it, that for stretches of time I didn't think about the greater implications, that it sometimes seemed like a game. I didn't tell her that death felt ever present and far away, and that either way, it didn't really seem to matter.

We both came back from Iraq, luckier than many. Two of my wife's students have been killed, among the scores of journalists to die in Iraq, and guys I served with are still dying, too. One came home from the war and shot himself on Thanksgiving. Another was blown up on Christmas in Baghdad.

Thinking of them, I felt disgusted with myself for missing the war and wondered if I was alone in this.

I don't think I am.

After watching the Internet videos, I called some of my friends who are out of the Army now, and they miss the war, too. Wells very nearly died in Iraq. A sniper shot him in the head, surgeons cut out half of his skull -- a story told in last April's Esquire magazine -- and he spent months in therapy, working back to his old self. Now he misses the high. "I don't want to sound like a psychopath, but you're like a god over there," he says. "It might not be the best kind of adrenaline for you, but it's a rush." Before Iraq, he didn't care for horror movies, and now he's drawn to them. He watches them for the little thrill, the rush of being startled, if just for a moment.

McCarthy misses the war just the same. He saved Wells's life, pressing a bandage over the hole in his head. Now he's delivering construction materials to big hotel projects along the beach in South Carolina, waiting for a police department to process his application. "The monotony is killing me," he told me, en route to deliver some rebar. "I want to go on a raid. I want something to blow up. I want something to change today." He wants the unknown. "Anything can happen, and it does happen. And all of the sudden your world is shattered, and everything has changed. It's living dangerously. You're living on the edge. And you're the baddest motherf**ker around."

Mortal danger heightens the senses. That is simple animal instinct. We're more aware of how our world smells and sounds and tastes. This distorts and enriches experiences. Now I can have everything, but it's not as good as when I could have none of it. McCarthy and I stood on a rooftop one afternoon in Iraq running through a long list of the food we wanted. We made it to homemade pizza and icy beer when someone loosed a long burst of gunfire that cracked over our heads. We ran to the other side of the rooftop, but the gunman had disappeared down a long alleyway. Today my memory of that pizza and beer is stronger than if McCarthy and I had sat down together with the real thing before us.

And today we even speak with affection of wrestling a dead man into a body bag, because that was then. The bullet had laid his thigh wide open, shattered the femur, and shredded the artery, so he'd bled out fast, pumping much of his blood onto the sidewalk. We unfolded and unzipped the nylon sack and laid it alongside him. And then we stared for a moment, none of us ready to close that distance. I grabbed his forearm and dropped it, maybe instinct, maybe revulsion. He hovered so near this world, having just passed over, that he seemed to be sucking life from me, pulling himself back or taking me with him. He peeked at us through a half-opened eye. I stared down on him, his massive dead body, and again wrapped a hand around his wrist, thick and warm. The man was huge, taller than six feet and close to 250 pounds. We strained with the awkward weight, rolled him into the bag, and zipped him out of sight. My platoon sergeant gave two neighborhood kids five dollars to wash away the congealing puddle of blood. But the red handprint stayed on the wall, where the man had tried to brace himself before he fell. I think about him sometimes, splayed out on the sidewalk, and I think of how lucky I was never to have put a friend in one of those bags. Or be put in one myself.

But the memories, good and bad, are only part of the reason war holds its grip long after soldiers have come home. The war was urgent and intense and the biggest story going, always on the news stations and magazine covers. At home, though, relearning everyday life, the sense of mission can be hard to find. And this is not just about dim prospects and low-paying jobs in small towns. Leaving the war behind can be a letdown, regardless of opportunity or education or the luxuries waiting at home. People I'd never met sent me boxes of cookies and candy throughout my tours. When I left for two weeks of leave, I was cheered at airports and hugged by strangers. At dinner with my family one night, a man from the next table bought me a $400 bottle of wine. I was never quite comfortable with any of this, but they were heady moments nonetheless.

For my friends who are going back to Iraq or are there already, there is little enthusiasm. Any fondness for war is tainted by the practicalities of operating and surviving in combat. Wells and McCarthy and I can speak of the war with nostalgia because we belong to a different world now. And yet there is little to say, because we are scattered, far from those who understand.

When I came home, people often asked me about Iraq, and mostly I told them it wasn't so bad. The first few times, my wife asked me why I had been so blithe. Why didn't I tell them what Iraq was really like? I didn't know how to explain myself to them. The war really wasn't so bad. Yes, there were bombs and shootings and nervous times, but that was just the job. In fact, going to war is rather easy. You react to situations around you and try not to die. There are no electric bills or car payments or chores around the house. Just go to work, come home alive, and do it again tomorrow. McCarthy calls it pure and serene. Indeed. Life at home can be much more trying. But I didn't imagine the people asking would understand that. I didn't care much if they did, and often it seemed they just wanted a war story, a bit of grit and gore. If they really want to know, they can always find out for themselves. But they don't, they just want a taste of the thrill. We all do. We covet life outside our bubble. That's why we love tragedy, why we love hearing about war and death on the television, drawn to it in spite of ourselves. We gawk at accident scenes and watch people humiliate themselves on reality shows and can't wait to replay the events for friends, as though in retelling the story we make it our own, if just for a moment.

We live easy third-person lives but want a bit of the darkness. War fascinates because we live so far from its realities. Maybe we'd feel differently about watching bombs blow up on TV if we saw them up close, if we knew how explosions rip the air, throttle your brain, and make your ears ring, if we knew the strain of wondering whether the car next to you at a traffic light would explode or a bomb would land on your house as you sleep. I don't expect Iraqi soldiers would ever miss war. I have that luxury. I came home to peace, to a country that hasn't seen war within its borders for nearly 150 years. Yes, some boys come home dead. But we live here without the other terrors and tragedies of war -- cities flattened and riven with chaos and fear, neighbors killing one another, a people made forever weary by the violence.

And so I miss it.

Every day in Iraq, if you have a job that takes you outside the wire, you stop just before the gate and make your final preparation for war. You pull out a magazine stacked with thirty rounds of ammunition, weighing just over a pound. You slide it into the magazine well of your rifle and smack it with the heel of your hand, driving it up. You pull the rifle's charging handle, draw the bolt back, and release. The bolt slides forward with a metallic snap, catching the top round and shoving it into the barrel. Chak-chuk. If I hear that a half century from now, I will know it in an instant. Unmistakable, and pregnant with possibility. On top of a diving board, as the grade-school-science explanation goes, you are potential energy. On the way down, you are kinetic energy. So I leave the gate and step off the diving board, my energy transformed.
 
I find these types of stories interesting but I can not stand them being used for anti-war propaganda. Alot of things in life change your life entirely and you can never go back to the exact same place you were before. How you handle these things is individual. War is no different. Some it mentally breaks. Some it mentally makes stronger. Some people a divorce breaks them. The death of a parent or spouse or child breaks them. Heck some are just broke by life. See I kinda understand these things. I remember how I had a strong strange feeling in Medical School just hit me one night. I realized I had seen things and done things my friends and espically my family would never understand. Gross anatomy( how many people cut a whole human body up down to the bone) how about seeing death and being as non-detached or learing that seeing it did not bother you as it should. I cried for my supposed seperation and change from my previous life. I knew I would never be the same. What if I had not ever gone to Medical School life would have been totally different in many ways. It changed almost everything. A lot of the ugliness of human behavior would have been unknown to me. So War does the same thing. But I hate when people use these things for propaganda. Some people are better suited for certain things. But to change is not bad. To see evil, to see death, to see the ugliness of human nature is wisdom and knowledge learned. YOU WILL NEVER BE THE SAME. But that does not mean that is a BAD thing.
 
War is serious business.

We should never enter it lightly or without just cause.

Thank God for our troops and thanks to our troops with all of my heart.
 
Thanks Brian

I hope he can find a way to shove "it" aside, and live his life. Give it time.
Don't ever feel guilty about having your "me" time. You've earned it son.
 
I NEVER want to "shove it aside."

I hope he can find a way to shove "it" aside, and live his life.

[RANT]
Sure, just "get over it".

BTDT. 3rd Bn, 5th Mar, RVN 70-71. Attended all the Vet Center and PTSD sessions needed to get the teeshirt.

I NEVER want to "shove it aside." I have, in spite of that, learned to live my life, accepting that what I saw and felt is a part of that life. I've enen learned how to "feel" some of the stuff that nobody should ever have to "feel."
[/RANT]

Once something happens to you, you are never the same, and you woill never go back to how it was before. That can be good or it can be bad.

Sexual orgasm is often described as the most hightened emotional state a human can experience - yet it lasts but a brief moment. Combat seems to go on forever - whether it is war, a mugging, a home invasion, etc. And it can be more powerful and profound than orgasm. If you ever experience it, you will never forget it.

And then you go home, to a nice, comfortable life where nothing seems quite as full. And you live with people you are not sure you can trust - trust with your life and your emotions - like you could trust your brothers in combat.

It's 36 years ago, and if I was still physically able to I'd go back to 1970 and RVN right now. I miss it. But I'm managing to live in the here-and-now with few regrets and many good times and good friends I can trust.

stay safe.

skidmark
 
The first thing that popped into my mind was
"If you stare long enough into the abyss the abyss will stare into you"
-F. Nietzsche

Having been an LEO who spent two years engaged in cleaning up a, shall we say less than ideal, neighborhood I can understand at least some of what the author is trying to convey. Now, years later, "do you miss it" (referring to LEO work) is still a tough question to answer because I'm familiar with "the beast" and how good it can feel to take it out for a hard ride and how difficult it can be to pen it back up later.

There are also very strong elements of PTSD in his writing. The fact that he IS writing is extremely encouraging though because a lot of those coming to grips with PTSD tend to feel that no civilian could possibly understand and they clam up.
 
ZeSpectre, you took the quote that immediately came to mind for me, also.

Good essay - I hope he finds some durable balance. And at least one person to trust.
 
When I was a police officer and was involved in a shooting, I talked alot to my father, who was a Vietnam Vet and a former LEO. My conversations with him help me through a lot of tough issues, more than anyone else. Funny thing is he was in Law Enforcement for 28 years, and he still goes back to stories about Vietnam.
 
I Hope He Finds The Peace He Deserves

But, is it just me?(could be)or have we turned into a nation of crybabies?
While I only had the luxury of serving during the "Cold War", my grandfather, served in the USN in the south pacific, from 1942 until 1945 and saw more than his share of combat action. I was very close to him, but he shared very little with me, from that awful war.
He wired the communications on the USS Missouri, for the Japanese surrender, in Tokyo harbor, in Sept of 1945.(he noted that McArthur was a pompous ass):)

My grandfather's wife, my nana, had one brother. He served in the Army, and fought at the Battle of the Bulge. I was close to him as well. I never heard a detailed description, of what he had to endure. He kept it to himself, and moved on. Same thing for my grandfather.

Both my grandfather and great uncle have been dead for more than 10 years, but i wonder what they would think of our country, the politically correct BS, and how our soldiers are "hamstrung" by our socialist congress and senate, and a president, that has no spine(i voted for him twice..i appologize).

Both went on to have successful careers, raise children and stayed married to their wives for 50+ years
Let's quit the boo hooing and revive this once great nation

God Bless Our Troops.
May they all find peace.
May our Country Rise to Greatness Once Again!
2A is not dead yet!
 
But, is it just me?(could be)or have we turned into a nation of crybabies?

It’s not a new phenomenon. Some guys came back with shell shock during WWI, there is documented cases of mental health issues with Civil War vets. Let’s face war and being in combat is a strange and unique experience. The older generations were more reserved in saying what they felt, but they know who was in the meat grinder and those who saw no action. Most guys who have been to war come home and go about their lives, but most are changed. You can't expected to have most of your life be normal, then have a year (maybe more) in a foreign land, worrying about dying on a daily basis, taking human life, seeing friends get hurt or die, seeing some sad and nasty things, then suddenly turn it off and return to normal. With my LE experience I sort of understand it, but not really. Its like Coffee vs Cocaine, front line combat is short but very intense.

If you have not been in combat , then you will never understand.
 
Was it Abraham Lincoln that said "It is good that war is so terrible or men would grow too fond of it."? War can be exciting because real issues are settled in a real way. A good read in this regard is "Soul of Battle" by Victor David Hanson. Makes you want to grab a gun, find some tyrants and blow them to Hades.
 
Maybe this describes the rush that he felt and misses

There is no hunting like the hunting of a man.... and those of us who have hunted armed men long enough ....and liked it.....never cared for anything else thereafter.
Ernest Hemingway
 
If I may interject something:

The WW2... vets did NOT 'just move on' walling it up was just their generations way of 'dealing with it'
It DID hurt them greatly.

I know this because: MY Grandfather NEVER talked to ANYONE about his experences (Normandy... Battle of the Bulge...) He talked to me after I came back from Iraq.
 
.

I'm not sure what the article has to do with patriotism or being a patriot.
I think it was about trying to make sense of being put in a bizarre situation.
It was also about war-mongering and excitement and a little bloodlust.
The whole thing is disgusting and tragic. War changes men in ways that
are not pleasing or beneficial, and to say otherwise is utter delusion.
 
When I left for two weeks of leave, I was cheered at airports and hugged by strangers. At dinner with my family one night, a man from the next table bought me a $400 bottle of wine. I was never quite comfortable with any of this...

LOL, there's not even a restaurant near me that has a $400 bottle of wine.
However, I doubt showing up at LaHiere's in Princeton in uniform would have
gotten me anything more than annoyed stares.

http://www.lahieres.com/wineList.html


There are also very strong elements of PTSD in his writing.

ZeSpectre nailed this on the head for most people expressing these kinds of feelings.
But sometimes there are people who are adrenaline junkies --please take this
in a positive sense in that they fit in perfectly with this kind of work. And there
are times when this kind of work is a necessary thing. I ran into some people
in Iraq who I would still assess as very well-balanced who said "I really love this
sh*t!" :D I know, I know...the antiwar ppl, most ppl in general have no idea
why I could say this was still somehow well-balanced. I would waste my time
trying to explain it to them.

buy a motorcycle. learn to stalk well. hunt.

I bought a Cannondale --does that count? I could stalk well and liked to
hunt before I went to Iraq. When I came back I would just watch
deer walk by and pass up easy shots I would have taken in the past.
There was always an art to it --the setting up of the picture perfect
framing of the deer with the environment as some sort of haiku around it
prior to pulling the trigger. The poetry was still there this last season,
just not the shot. I didn't need the meat to eat, but if I did I know I
would have taken the shot. It was not a necessary thing, though.
Therefore, the entire poem would not have ended well.

BTW, I don't miss Iraq (never want to go back), I still have a gun (lots of
them), and I'm tired of War (but know people are far from giving it up).
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top