For Memorial Day I have a reading recommendation for you: Operation
Homecoming: Iraq, Afghanistan, & the Home Front, in the Words of US Troops and their Families. It’s not an easy read, which is why I commend it to you.
Operation Homecoming was an NEA project sending writers (including
Tom Clancy, Stephen Lang, Jeff Shaara and Tobias Wolff) to teach writing
workshops to serving troops and their families. The sessions were held in
country, on Navy vessels and at various locations around the US. The result
was thousands of pages of essays, short stories, poems, letters, journal
entries and emails. Editor Andrew Carroll distilled these down to this book.
If you ever want to explore the nature of war from the most
granular human level, this is your introduction. You get everything, from the
banality and stultifying boredom to “pink mist” (someone who steps on a land
mine and explodes in a shower of flesh and blood); the sand, snakes and
spiders in your tents; and having to walk a thousand yards out to the latrine
in the middle of the night over rocks and stuff you don’t want to think
about. And, of course, there’s the fighting and the destruction. You won’t
get closer to it—without being in it—than reading these pieces.
The book starts with an account by a Navy captain at the Pentagon
on 9/11 and moves on from there. It’s not precisely chronological, because Carroll
didn’t want to imply that the wars went to a certain point and stopped. As we
know, mission is not accomplished.
One of the last was an essay by a Marine colonel who accompanied
the body of a 21-year-old Marine killed in Iraq home to his funeral in Wyoming.
(It’s since been made into an HBO film, Taking
Chance, starring Kevin Bacon.) From the staff at the mortuary at Dover AFB,
Del., who prepare the body (including X-raying the coffin before opening—they
found a live grenade in one) to the people at the various airports who treated
the coffin with such respect to the funeral held in the gym of the local high
school…well if you can read it without crying then you’re way tougher than I.
One of the early entries is from a doctor on a Navy hospital ship,
27 March 2003, waiting for casualties. I loved this comment: “Mike from Massachusetts
thinks an attack on our ship is a near given, with a 50 percent chance of
success. However, he is a proctologist and Red Sox fan and naturally
pessimistic.”
There was another account by a Guardsman returning on a charter
flight after his tour in Iraq. Their plane developed mechanical problems in Germany and they had to wait for the next flight, which wasn’t until the next day.
Here’s what he relates:
“Thirty-six hours after our scheduled arrival, we landed in Bangor,
Maine. It was 3 a.m. We were tired, hungry, and as desperate as were to get to Colorado,
our excitement was tainted with bitterness. While we were originally told our
National Guard deployment would be mere months, here we were—369 days
later—frustrated and angry.
“As I walked off the plane, I was taken aback; in the small, dimly
lit airport, a group of elder veterans were there waiting for us, lined up one
by one to shake our hands. Some were standing, others were confined to wheelchairs,
and all of them wore their uniform hats. Their now-feeble right hands stiffened
in salutes, their left hands holding coffee, snacks, and cell phones for us.
“As I made my way through the line, each man thanking me for my
service, I choked back tears. Here we were, returning from one year in Iraq where
we had portable DVD players, three square meals, and phones, being honored by
men who had crawled through mud for years with little more than the occasional
letter from home. A few of them appeared to be veterans of the war in Vietnam,
and I couldn’t help but think of how they were treated when they came back to
the U.S., and yet here they were to support us.
“These soldiers—many of whom had lost limbs and comrades—shook our
hands proudly, as if our service could somehow rival their own.
“We later learned that this VFW group had waited for more than a
day in the airport for our arrival.
“…Looking back on my year in Iraq, I can honestly say that my
perception of the experience was changed; not so much by the soldiers with whom
I served—though I consider them my saving grace—but by the soldiers who
welcomed us home. For it is those men who reminded me what serving my country
is truly about.”
We’re winding down the war in Afghanistan, and they tell us that
Iraq is…a success? Over? Whatever.
But you should read Operation
Homecoming. Really.