U. S. Troops In Iraq Give Thanks

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Updated 10:11 AM ET November 27, 2003


By Luke Baker

BAGHDAD, Iraq (Reuters) - There was turkey and stuffing, and American football on television, but in almost all other respects it was a far from ordinary Thanksgiving for tens of thousands of U.S. troops serving in Iraq Thursday.

With family and friends thousands of miles away, soldiers of the 1st Brigade, 1st Armored Division gathered in a prefabricated dining hall in eastern Baghdad to munch on traditional fare and reflect on the annual holiday.

Rather than bitterness at being stuck so far from home, it was with introspection and soul-searching that most chewed over their sweet potatoes, ham, corn and cranberry sauce.

"It's actually pretty interesting to have Thanksgiving here in Baghdad -- I mean it's not every day that you can say that," said Private Jeffrey Riebe, 20, from Minneapolis, Minnesota.

"I'm certainly thankful that we still have everyone in our unit, which isn't the case for many others."

In Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown 110 miles north of Baghdad, 4th Infantry Division soldiers went on a five-kilometer turkey trot at dawn before sitting down to feast.

"It's good and bad," Sergeant Mike Kuchinski, 29, from Blaine, Minnesota, said of Thanksgiving in Iraq.

"I get to spend it with all my comrades in arms here. But it's bad because I miss my family."

The U.S. military will spend about $4.5 million this year providing troops from Iraq to Afghanistan and Uzbekistan with a special meal on Thanksgiving.

By far the biggest deployment overseas is in Iraq, where more than 130,000 troops face daily engagement with Iraqi insurgents as they try to bring security to the country.

The holiday dates from 1621 when early settlers celebrated a successful harvest giving them enough food to last the winter. They shared the feast with neighboring Native Americans.

DAY OF REFLECTION

More than 430 U.S. soldiers have died in Iraq since the war to overthrow Saddam was launched in March and it was the memory of those men and women that was most on people's minds Thursday.

"A lot more people went to church last night and there's a different feeling among the soldiers today," said Captain Jean-Pierre Brown, a fire support officer whose unit was eating Thanksgiving lunch under Iraq's national Martyrs' Monument.

Commanders have encouraged soldiers to rest as much as possible during the day, to watch movies, play sports, send email and contemplate what it means to serve the country abroad.

At their base inside Iraq's former Olympic sports complex, members of the 1st Brigade's battalion support group played horseshoes and chatted before lunch -- M16s slung over their shoulders -- then toasted with non-alcoholic sparkling juice.

"It's probably strange to say, but I'm enjoying myself," said private Claudia Kannel, 24, from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

"I thought I was going to be really depressed waking up this morning, but actually I'm just glad to be alive."

Kannel works as a medic, going out with patrols at night in an ambulance and giving emergency treatment to any soldiers shot or hit in frequent roadside explosions detonated by guerrillas. A close friend was recently killed in a blast.

"At home, Thanksgiving is all about football, here it's about being alive," she said. "I've thought a lot more about the meaning of Thanksgiving since being here." (With additional reporting by Dean Yates in Tikrit and Khaled Oweis in Baghdad)
 

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It's good to hear that our troops are able to enjoy a warm thanksgiving meal indoors, however many are also without that luxury, regardless, they are probably on guard every second that goes by.

As the uncertainty of the war continues, we remain grateful and are truly indebted to our soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines for their service.
 
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