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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: Lazarus_Long who wrote (533665)2/1/2004 1:49:33 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) of 769667
 
BUSH"S SICK JOKE ON OUR TROOPS DYING FOR HIS VENDETTA WAR.....YOU HAVE TO GO BACK AND DIE FOR ME.......
U.S. Military Families Dread Possible Repeat of Iraq Duty
In visit to Germany, the Pentagon's No. 2 official seeks to allay concerns voiced by relatives of troops just
deployed to the Persian Gulf nation.

By John Hendren, Times Staff Writer

WUERZBURG, Germany — As the first soldiers with the U.S. Army's 1st
Infantry Division arrive in the Persian Gulf to patrol some of the most
dangerous turf in Iraq, the families they left behind here are already asking the
Pentagon's No. 2 official about the next possible tour of duty.

"My husband's going to go down [to Iraq] for a year," Bonnie McCarty told
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz, who was here for a one-day
visit Saturday before flying to Baghdad, where he arrived today. "But when he
comes back, is he going to go back again for a year because of the size of the
Army?

"We don't want to have
to keep going through
this," added McCarty,
whose husband is a
command sergeant
major with the 1st
Infantry, "or you're going
to have a hard time
getting people in the
Army. We need to share
the 'wealth.' "

Such concerns underscore the plight of a U.S.
military that is stretched thin and increasingly
demanding more of its troops. The McCartys and
other military families have learned from the
experiences of others, such as the members of the 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, who are
preparing for a second yearlong tour after helping capture Baghdad in April. They also have learned
from the Ft. Stewart, Ga.-based 3rd Infantry Division, which marched toward Baghdad with the
Marines. The infantry members had been told more than once that they would be going home, only to
have their stint extended.

Those concerns are among the reasons Wolfowitz stopped to thank the families of troops and to
reassure them that senior Pentagon strategists were aware that military families feel more stressed by
duty abroad than at any time in recent memory.

"The goal is to get deployment levels down to something more sustainable than what you've just
described," he told McCarty. He added, "Now, there is a great deal of uncertainty."

Many of these 1st Infantry families first learned through television reports in the fall that their spouses
and children would be sent to Iraq. Now they speak of a "trust gap."

"We need to build back the trust so families believe what is said in the Pentagon and elsewhere,"
McCarty said.

Ginger Chun, whose husband will leave for Iraq soon, was blunter. "I don't think people believe our
soldiers will be back in 365 days," she said.

Even Michelle Batiste, wife of the division commander, expressed concern.

"We just want some predictability, some stability. It's very stressful on families constantly saying
goodbye," she said. "We don't want to go there, but we know our world is going to be a better place
for our sacrifice."

Arriving just weeks before the first anniversary of the war, the first 15,000 incoming troops, the
vanguard of a replacement force of about 120,000, are part of one of the most massive military
turnover operations in U.S. history. The changeover is occurring even faster than the prewar buildup of
last winter.

The 1st Infantry has undergone urban training and has packed its last ship for travel. Many Humvees
and other vehicles have been armored to withstand roadside bombs, and hundreds more are to be
fitted as the troops undergo further preparation in Kuwait.

The division will be deployed in and around Tikrit, in the heart of the Sunni Triangle in central Iraq,
home to thousands of Sunni Muslim loyalists of Saddam Hussein. The deposed president was captured
near Tikrit, his hometown, in December.

The 1st Division's commanding general, Maj. Gen. John Batiste, said that peacekeeping and rebuilding
would have to be done at the same time.

"On the one hand, we will be killing and capturing terrorists and foreign fighters, those kinds of people,"
he said. "Simultaneously, we've got our work cut out with respect to stability and support operations, to
set conditions for Iraqi civilian and military self-reliance."

The 1st Division, dubbed the Big Red One, had a storied role in World War I, World War II, Vietnam
and the 1991 Persian Gulf War. It remains both the most heavily deployed Army unit in recent years —
with stints in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and now Iraq — and the unit with the highest retention rate,
officials at its base in Germany said.

As the 1st Infantry arrives, it will overlap with the outgoing 4th Infantry, resulting in a temporary
doubling of U.S. forces in the region. That will enable the two divisions to strike simultaneously if
guerrillas seek to take advantage of any confusion during the troop transfer.

The security situation remains tense.

"We understand how difficult it is, but it's an enormous service to your country," Wolfowitz told military
family members. "It is unavoidable."

On a grim note, he told of wounded soldiers he has visited at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington. "We hope that doesn't happen to anybody you know," he said. "But of course, it's a real
possibility."

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