Monday, April 20, 2009

Operation Iraqi Freedom

On March 19th 2003, two F-117 Nighthawks from the 8th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron dropped four enhanced, satellite-guided 2,000-pound Bunker Busters GBU-27 on a community called al-Dora, on the outskirts of Baghdad. It was a preemptive strike in an attempt to kill Saddam Hussein. This was the opening blow in what would become known as Operation Iraqi Freedom. They ended up missing their target, and in the end it wasn’t a 2000 pound bomb that killed Saddam, it was a 6 foot rope that did him in. An $858,000,000,000 dollar 6 foot rope. (Wikipedia)


As a soldier and active participant in Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) I saw the insides of war in a place few can imagine. The media does little to describe or accurately inspire the laymen on the condition of the average Iraqi. A question brought to me countless times by civilians was: are Iraqis better off? Do they appreciate their freedom that we paid for with our blood? It is a fair question that can be difficult to answer.


First, Saddam needed to be stopped. He was a psychopathic terrorist that spread destruction and bullied the region for decades. Terrorism is the word that would describe his reign of terror as President of Iraq. He stayed in power by killing and deposing any who stood as a threat to him. The average Iraqi is like you and me. They want to be able to work provide for their family, and live in peace.


Are Iraqi’s happy he’s gone? Yes, the average Iraqi I spoke to was happier to have rights. They were happier to be able to vote. There turn out at elections was around 76 percent! Can you imagine that?? With the threat of attacks, snipers, bombings, land mines, and more, that 76 percent of Iraqi’s who could vote did. It makes you wonder about us. When people ask me do they appreciate their freedom, I would be quick to ask do we?? When we live in a day when fewer than one out of two shows up to the polls to vote, do we appreciate our Freedom?


I would propose that the average Iraqi probably understands the concept of freedom better than many Americans. How can we know freedom if we’ve never experienced repression? Americans have become so gorged on the concept of freedom that they forget that freedom needs to be won constantly. The generation that takes freedoms for granted will find it slipping away from them. We are quick to assume that we will always have freedom and it is a right. Rights are only gained and maintained by sacrifice. We need to be willing to sacrifice to provide this for others and keep it for ourselves. As a soldier I am willing to sacrifice for another person to live in freedom . Iraqi or American. Iraqi Freedom was paid for by American blood, the same blood that put a down payment on our freedom.


But we in it shall be remember'd;

We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;

For he to-day that sheds his blood with me

Shall be my brother;


[Dedicated to my brothers in arms, who gave their all.

Cpl Steven Shannon, SFC 'Tony' Wasielewski]

5 comments:

  1. Wow. Thank you for the boost of pride in our country and our troops! American soldiers are one of a kind! My first question is why did the six foot rope cost SO much? I’m also wondering if you, a person who fought for the freedom of Iraqis and Americans, think the war is/was just about oil? As a military brat and now sister, I have enormous amounts of pride for our soldiers, but highly agree with you, our freedom is taken for granted by too many! I pray another September 11th does not have to happen in order for us to wake up and band together as a country again. Thank you for all you’ve done and seen to protect our country!

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  2. Your pride is definitely expressed in the words you chose.
    President George Bush said that we should take the fight to them so that we don’t have to fight them here. This policy has been working. The objectives of this conflict are clear: fight the war on terrorism and al-Qa'ida is behind the terrorism. It is not against Islam. The Iraqi war will be long. The crusades went on for centuries. Terrorist attacks have been going on since the 1960’s. It will probably take a generation for Iraq to feel the full extent of freedom. The generation that delivers this freedom is going to be the generation that remembers what happened on September 11, 2001.
    Is it not the American way to wait until everything is so bad that “we have to do something about it”. This the way our nation began. England had decided to implement taxes onto the colonists. So much taxes that “we had to do something about it”. And our founding fathers did do something. They started a revolution. Even after 233 years of freedom, I sometimes wonder if even we have it down yet. It will always be work in progress.
    Thomas Jefferson said “Where the people fear the government, you have tyranny. Where the government fears the people, you have liberty”. I guess if a citizen does not care to vote, they are expressing their right for freedom of speech by not saying anything.

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  3. I agree with everything you said, because it's true. What you say about the populace is true; Iraqis are happier to have this freedom. They have been stomped into the ground for so long and are happy to have the chance to live their lives and not be in complete fear.

    American people are spoiled and take everything that they have for granted. You are absolutely right in saying that we can never fully appreciate our freedom without repression. We can get up and say whatever we want to about our president. Iraqis couldn't do that. We don't have to worry about being killed for what we say - they did.

    "Freedom isn't free at all, it comes at the highest of costs, the cost of blood." - 300

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  4. This was my impression of why we needed to be in Iraq. On one deployment the Navy ship I was on spent its time running air traffic control ops in the northern Persian Gulf. This was in enforcement of the NATO backed no fly zone. This no fly zone was set up to protect the Kurdish populations in the north from being attacked by Iraqi bombers. Saddam Hussein was a stop at nothing leader that promoted ethnic cleansing and genocide. The odds are good that the reasons for going to war was embellished, fabricated or however else a reason to invade was made up. We needed international support and that was how we got it. We can debate the ethics of using a back door method to get the job started, but it was clear that something needed to be done. The no fly zone had been in effect from 1991 till the Iraq conflict started in 2003. If we had not gone in, we would still be enforcing this for an unknown amount of time. Yes there was a benefit, and likely others that I am not aware of. It appears the news media rarely bothers with reporting what we actually fix with a conflict like this. Instead they focus on the damage and casualties it causes.

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  5. In response to Sarah's comment about Americans and Freedom. I appreciate your support for the troops. Iraq was a difficult place and the people are better off. One guy I ran into had been tortured by Saddam and now was working for us as a translator. Try and tell him that Americans are 'brutal and inhumane' in how we treat prisoners. This was a guy that was tortured, and beat because he said something about Saddam while he was in college back in 1981. He went to jail for 2 years, and was abused for 2 years. It is sad that people could treat others like that, and I believe that many Americans don't appreciate what the average Iraqi had to endure under Saddam. Now Iraqi’s have more freedom, and the opportunity to object to our presence. That is something they didn't have under Saddam. You couldn't oppose him without the threat of death.

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