I've finally arrived at my new home, Combat Outpost Reilly, which is located in the outskirts of Marjeh at a place call "5 points" (because of the 5 road intersection which meets there). The name came to honor Lance Cpl. Thomas J. Reilly, Jr., a fallen Marine of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines who was killed in Karmah, Iraq the year prior. The world begins to shrink when I realized where he was killed and look back to my time when I operated in the same village in 2005 during my first deployment to Fallujah, Iraq. The unit that we are relieving, Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, has built the place up from a mound of dirt fighting position. But, we still live in what some may see as relatively rugged conditions.
Showers, when you have time to take them, are taken using a solar shower bag which is hung overhead and a hose that lets out a spray of water over you. Temps have been in the 117's in July will be down to 19 degrees by December, so we'll get to see the best of both worlds. Meals are the standard Meal, Ready to Eat, or the group version which are heated, sealed trays of basically the same thing. Electricity on the camp is by generator and we keep hydrated by drinking thousands of 16 oz water bottles which are delivered by the pallet. Marines normally go through about standard case (24 bottles) to 1.5 cases of water a day. Times that by a couple of hundred people and it adds up. All of us here currently live in tents and the AC that is in (most of them) keep the temperatures in the bearable range.
The level of poverty for the people here is severe as a man, pushing a wheel-barrel, very well may be toting his most expensive possession. Most live in mud huts, similar to what you might imagine during the time of Jesus (seriously), and electricity is an exception, not the norm. The majority of them are farmers or have some trade that they attempt to survive by.
Our mission here is to conduct full-spectrum (from setting up preventative medicine stations for locals to handing out candy to the kids to conducting combined arms assaults on the enemy) counter-insurgency operations in order to protect the local populace, reinforce the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan's legitimacy, support economic development, and defeat destabilizing influences. This comes as no small task when one must take into account the constraints of understanding the complex tribal affiliations, political considerations, prevention of both friendly and civilian casualties, economic concerns, and overall security impact on everything we do. All while an savvy, dangerous, and resourceful enemy is trying to undo all of this and actively kill you at the same time. Our Marines have come well trained and prepared to take on this demanding task and make other peoples' lives better than they currently are, as we so easily enjoy back home in the US. Spirits are high and they are ready to get to work, get into the fight, and be successful.
We have been fortunate to relieve a unit who had made progress, to include (but not limited to): local projects like starting a school and getting the village elders to get their children to go to it, build several mosques and wells for clean water, improve the major thorough-fare which connects Marjeh to the District Capital in Lashkar Gah, restart and bazaar (that the Taliban shut down) to generate jobs and economic development, work with farmers to plant viable crops instead of opium and marijuana, help to treat the medical needs of the people in the area and generally keep the Taliban on the run from trying to undo all of this through their murder and intimidation campaign on the locals. The people are receptive to this even as the insurgency, frankly, tries to keep them out of school and ignorant, fearful to accept help or improve their lives through education or technology, and against anything newer than 1000 years ago (or so). So, we've got our work cut out for us, but it should provide for a few leadership and job skills should one look for a new line of work.
As I found out today that our company call sign of "Gladiator" was approved, it fit well with the "Spartan" conditions that surround us and mentality that we must keep to stay disciplined, fit, and successful. I asked the Marines who we are replacing what they would have us get if they were staying for an additional 8 months (I saw a noticeable cringe at that idea). I got suggestions which ranged from a young, 19 year-old Private First Class to my fellow Captain Company Commander. I pretty much sat down and started typing as they started talking . This is what they came up with: do have some things that would come in very helpful.
-Bug Spray/Avon SSS (keeps Bugs away),
-Unscented Sun Screen
-Tuna/Chicken in a can,
-Ramen noodles, Knorr Rice Packets (or really any Non-perishable, pre-packaged meals/dry good that you can microwave or drop in boiling water, cook, and eat (Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) can get a little old eating them 3x a day every day).
-Slim Jims/Beef Jerky
-Cans of Spam/Vienna Sausages, Smoked Oysters/Sardines
-Multi-spices, (pepper, salt, seasonings to flavor food with)
-Power bars,
-Baby wipes,
-5 hour energy drink (little single use bottles),
-Socks (white crew socks, or any kind of calf high boot sock that can be worn with combat boots, they go through sewage canals and the socks basically get trashed/need to be burned after a couple of times use)
-Razors/Shaving Cream
-Tooth Brushes/Toothpaste
-Deodorant
-AA and AAA batteries (AAA especially hard to get),
-Field mirrors or women's Compact Mirrors (without makeup), for shaving,
-Small candies (jolly rangers) that we can hand out to the local kids,
-Cigarettes and Smokeless tobacco: Stateside tobacco prevent the Marines from turning to smoking middle-eastern cigarettes after they run out of whatever they carried over [lord only knows what they put in them]. It's also a good ice breaker for meeting the locals and has been a proven way to get them to talk to you/give you information, i.e., tell you not to go down a road because an IED is waiting for you! Marines use smokeless tobacco to stay away on post and use this since they can’t smoke on post or the cigarette glow may give away their position (Marines prefer Marlboro Lights and Reds & Copenhagen). Note: Due a snafu in legislative wording with a new Postal regulation signed into law 25 days ago (just my luck), You can’t send tobacco to troops in a combat zone with an APO/FPO using USPS EXPRESS MAIL. If you use Express Mail, they won’t send if you list tobacco on the Customs form. Otherwise, send it regular mail (not express). Jobs, Economy---Gotta love what the government is focused on.
-Eye drops (for sand storms),
-Single Drink Powder packets (like Crystal Lights, Gatorade mixes, etc). Each Marines goes through about 13 quarts of water a day (depending on how hot it is and if they are get into firefights that day) and water gets a little old by itself.
-Duct/Electrical Tape
-Pens/Pencils (Clickable),Markers/Spiral Notebooks (also good to give cheap pens to local kids who always ask for something)
-Cheaper digital watches. Marines are always breaking their watches.
-Wash Clothes
-Laundry Soap, small packets
-Zip Lock bags, heavy duty, sandwich to gallon size
-Not expensive headphones for music players
-Black Sharpie Magic Makers ( to color metal rank with when the black wears off)
-1" Round or 2-3 inch paint brushes (to clean off weapons)
-Desenex Foot Spray/Gold Bond Powder (any kind of anti-bacterial foot spray/powder)
-Nail clippers -Extension Cords (3-5')
-Shower Shoes (7-13 sizes)
-Shower Towels -Patience (just kidding)
-Superfeet Boot Inserts (http://www.superfeet.com/activity/hiking/Green.aspx)
Entertainment/Morale Items
-Any Notes or Letters (a picture so they can connect to who's writing to them is always meaningful, too)
-ANY kind of Magazines/Word puzzles (Marines have every kind of taste from Readers digest to Architecture magazines)
-DVD movies
-Decks of playing cards
-One Eye Projector and speakers (To put up a Morale/Recreation Tent for the Marines when they back from their 10+ days of patrolling)
-Clean White Sheet to project onto -Board Games
Semper Fidelis,
Dan


