In this article, marking the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq, George Friedman presents the recollections of 7 veterans and 1 Iraqi citizen who participated in it. He offers no comments on their pieces, nor shall I.
As for the article's Hot Stratfor Babe, since they are tales of veterans I was reminded of the Russian woman Nadezhda Durova, who posed as a young man to join the a Polish Lancer unit so she could fight during the Napoleonic Wars. 
She started as a 'gentleman-ranker' and ended her military career as a Captain, thus becoming the first woman officer in the Russian army. She eventually told her story her biography The Calvary Maiden. 
She was the daughter of a cavalryman and had a difficult childhood. Her mother had wanted a son and was distraught to give birth to a daughter instead. One day while her father's unit was marching, her mother became exasperated with Nadezhda's crying and threw her out of the carriage they were riding in. From that point forward, for obvious reasons, her mother had no further involvement raising her, and she was mentored by a trooper instead.
Needless to say, because of her mother's hostility, her family life was difficult. So, when she was 18, she took the first opportunity to leave home and get married. She had a baby boy from the marriage. However, she soon left her husband and son. Not long after that is when she posed as a young man and joined the Polish Lancers.
She was a brave soldier and fought in a number of battles during the Napoleonic Wars. She received medals, commendations and promotions. 
Although her own unit never penetrated her disguise, rumors began to circulate in Russia about a woman cavalryman. These rumors grew until she became of folk heroine. Eventually Tsar Alexsandr managed to track her down. After an audience with him, he awarded her the Cross of St. George for bravery, the rank of Coronet (2nd Lt), bought her a flashy uniform and allowed her to continue her career disguised as a man -- this time using the name Aleksandrov which her bestowed upon her.
When she finally retired she took up writing and produced 4 novels along with her autobiography. She's a popular figure in Russia to this day, and plays, ballets and movies have been made about her. As a bonus, after the jump I've included a clip of the song A Lullaby for Svetlana from the movie Hussar's Ballad which was based on her life. There were several versions of the song to choose from, I like this one because it is wonderfully operatic and sad in the way only Slavs can do.
The Iraq War: Recollections 
By George Friedman, December 20,2011
The war in Iraq is officially over. Whether it is actually over  remains to be seen. All that we know is that U.S. forces have been  withdrawn. There is much to be said about the future of Iraq, but it is  hard to think of anything that has been left unsaid about the past years  of war in Iraq, and true perspective requires the passage of time. It  seemed appropriate, therefore, to hear from those at STRATFOR who fought  in the war and survived. STRATFOR is graced with seven veterans of the  war and one Iraqi who lived through it. It is interesting to me that all  of our Iraq veterans were enlisted personnel. I don’t know what that  means, but it pleases me for some reason. Their short recollections are  what STRATFOR has to contribute to the end of the war. It is, I think,  far more valuable than anything I could possibly say.
Staff Sgt. Kendra Vessels, U.S. Air Force
Iraq 2003, 2005
STRATFOR Vice President of International Projects
Six words capture my experience during the invasion of Iraq: Russian  linguist turned security forces “augmentee.” I initially volunteered for  a 45-day tour of the theater — one of those unique opportunities for  those in the intelligence field who don’t see much beyond their building  with no windows. My field trip of the “operational Air Force” turned  into a seven-month stint far beyond my original job description. But in  the end I wouldn’t trade anything for that experience.
I will always remember March 19, 2003 — not only because it was my  22nd birthday but also because it was the day that brought an end to the  hurry-up-and-wait that I had experienced for the four months since I’d  arrived in Kuwait. During that time it was a slow transition from the  world I knew so well, which was confined to a sensitive compartmented  information facility (SCIF) and computer screens to practically living  in mission oriented protective posture (MOPP) 4 gear, working with a  joint-service security team and carrying a weapon. The day I was pulled  from my normal duties to take a two-hour refresher on how to use an M-16  was a wake-up call. I had shot an M-16 once before, in basic training.  Carrying a weapon every day from then on was new to me. While my Army  and Marine counterparts knew their weapons intimately, I was still at  that awkward first-date stage.
This anecdote represented a broader issue. As much as we might have  known ahead of time that we would eventually invade Iraq, I don’t think  we ever could have really been prepared. There were definitely creative  solutions, like issuing an Air Force intelligence Barbie an assault  rifle.
The invasion of Iraq that I describe is narrowly focused, but that’s  what I knew at the time. As far as seeing a bigger picture, I was  subject to the opinions on CNN and Fox just as everyone was back home.  The only morsel that stands out is a “need to know” briefing we had on  weapons of mass destruction a month before things kicked off. Slide  after slide of imagery “proved” we needed to go into Iraq. Those giving  the presentation seemed unconvinced, but at our level, we didn’t  question those presentations. We always assumed someone much higher up  knew much more than we would ever have access to. So we drove on, kept  our mouths shut and did our jobs as we were told.
As an airman, the most memorable part of the experience for me was  the shock and awe of the initial bombing attack. All the days before and  after are blurred in my memory — either because they all seemed the  same or because I’ve buried them somewhere. There were so many mixed  emotions — pride in the U.S. Air Force as we watched the initial attack  live on the news, fear of what would follow and sadness in saying  goodbye to my friends who would leave to cross into Iraq in the  following days. Among those friends were our British counterparts who  did not feel they had a stake in the fight but were there because they  took pride in their jobs and wanted to do well.
Indeed, I always took notice of the many nationalities that were  there to fight beside us. They were less than enthusiastic about being  in Iraq and, of course, blamed the Americans for causing them to be  there. This is when I first began to feel the “uncoolness” of being  American overseas because of the war. I did not foresee how bad it would  get and would eventually experience outright hostility in Asia, Europe  and other countries in the Middle East.
Two years later, I was “deployed in-garrison.” This concept captures  not only what I love about the Air Force but also why my friends in  every other service always had ample material for teasing me. If we  can’t take all the luxuries of home to the war (and believe me, we  tried: surf and turf and endless ice cream in the chow halls,  televisions in every living space and air-conditioning or heating as  needed), we will bring the war to us. It seemed like a great idea at the  time. I spent a year driving less than 10 miles from my duty station in  the United States to carry out a mission in Iraq through radio, chat  and live feed on television screens. We experienced the same crew day,  tempo and real-world mission requirements but worked in  over-air-conditioned vans parked inside giant hangars.
Anyone who has ever done this can relate to how bizarre it is to work  inside one of these vans in full winter gear during the peak of summer.  But in comparison to my first experience on the ground in Iraq, I felt I  contributed far more the second time around. Our unit was able to see  results daily and know that we were directly contributing to units in  contact with the enemy. I could finally begin to see the forest for the  trees, but by that time, I could also see that the situation on the  ground was far worse than before.
My take-away from the latter experience was the perception that the  rest of the United States was detached from what was happening in Iraq  and Afghanistan. I would spend 12 hours engaged with the reality on the  ground, full of adrenaline and exhausted by the end of the day, only to  wake up and do it all over again the next day. But between the missions  at work I would interact with those not directly involved, and it was  endlessly frustrating. My civilian friends were more concerned about  what happened on “Lost” the night before or where they were planning to  vacation during the upcoming holiday. This sentiment continues even  today, as those of us who were directly impacted by the war reflect on  how it changed our lives while others hardly notice that the war is  coming to an end. I gently remind them that this is, in many ways, a  victory for us all.
Basima
Iraq 2003
STRATFOR Middle East and Arabic Monitor
In 2003, when the news in Iraq began to report that U.S. President  George W. Bush would invade Iraq, Iraqis began to wonder if this would  really happen — and if it would be the solution to and the end of the  tyrant era in Iraq. I was sitting with my father, an old man addicted to  listening to the radio instead of watching the two boring Iraqi  television channels that mostly broadcast Saddam’s interviews, speeches  and songs about him. I asked my father, “Dad, do you think the Americans  will really come to save us and our country from this tyrant?” He said,  “Yes they will, and there will be no other way to get rid of this  tyrant but by a strong power like America.” As all other Iraqis, I kept  watching television and listening to the radio to follow the news.
My husband, my kids and I were all staying at my parents’ house,  along with my other two sisters and their families. We bought much food  and stored water in a big container. We contacted our relatives and they  contacted us, everyone wanting to make sure that the others were ready  for the war and for the moment of salvation. If you draw an image of the  Iraqi streets at that time, you will see very close and trusted friends  secretly sharing their happiness about the idea that the Americans will  come and topple the brutal regime. No one was afraid of the war because  we are a people used to being in a war, and we were suffering enough  from the blockade.
When the war began, I would say most Iraqis, if I cannot say all,  were happy to see the end of the madman Saddam. When the statue of  Saddam was pulled down in Firdos Square, my family and I were so happy  our eyes were full of tears. They were not tears of sadness but of  happiness. It was unbelievable. It was the moment of freedom.
After that, when the people began to get out of their houses, they  could see all the military trucks and soldiers. And the people waved  their hands and nodded or made signs with their hands to show the  Americans that they were happy and thankful. For the first time in their  lives, Iraqis practiced the freedom to speak in the streets freely and  loudly without being afraid of Saddam’s loyalists.
Sgt. “Primo,” U.S. Marine Corps Task Force Tarawa
Iraq 2003
STRATFOR Tactical Analyst
As the C-130 ramp dropped at Kuwait International Airport in March  2003, I was hit in the face with a wave of heat and sand. I remember  thinking to myself that this was going to suck, a lot. But at the same  time there was a sense of relief at the finality and completion of  mobilization orders and deployment, and despite the disruption of our  civilian lives we knew that this was it, and it was all we had to  concentrate on.
An infantry unit in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, we were a motley  mix of professions and lifestyles — mechanics, school teachers,  policemen, college students (roughly half of us), boilermakers, bankers,  bartenders, small-business owners and kids straight out of high school.  And we respected our leaders. Our commanding officer was a successful  corporate executive, our company first sergeant and company gunnery  sergeant had living-legend status in their respective law enforcement  agencies, and all of our staff non-commissioned officers — most of whom  were veterans of the first Gulf War and/or employed in law enforcement  in their civilian lives — had served active-duty tours in their younger  days, as did the NCOs that just got out of the Fleet and volunteered to  deploy with us.
My squad (in which I had been unceremoniously promoted, as a lance  corporal, to fire team leader) was pulling security for the command tent  in the staging area in northern Kuwait when all members of the company  staff gathered for a meeting with the battalion staff. The purpose of  the meeting was for the battalion gunny to list all the ammunition that  we would be allotted, and it did not include 5.56mm link or 7.62mm link  and only a shockingly small amount of non-linked 5.56mm. We knew we were  leaving soon, and we exchanged bug-eyed glances when we overheard the  gunny listing the allotment. Fire suppression capability had been a  central tenet of our training, and it would not be possible with the  ammo we were getting. And there was only about one grenade per squad. If  we hit action, our survival could depend on the pitiful first-aid kits  we had been issued. Then “Doc” Chris showed up with a ton of “acquired”  gauze, medical tape, iodine and morphine from battalion headquarters,  which earned him a godlike status despite his many personal  shortcomings.
When we received the warning order in our platoon hooch later in the  evening we were told we were going to Nasiriya, where a battle was still  raging. In the morning, we threw on our over-loaded packs and said our  goodbyes. With the sound of helicopters in the air, the company gunny  rolled up in a Humvee overflowing with 5.56mm link, 7.62mm link, more  grenades and much-needed bandoleers. Every rifleman had the equivalent  of about 12 magazines and the squad automatic weapon (SAW) gunners had  about four or five 5.56mm link boxes.
Fortunately, the landing zone (LZ) we were flown into in Nasriya was  not hot. We spent two days in Camp White Horse and then moved on into  the city and took up positions, which we fortified when we were not  patrolling or running raids. After a week, we were moved to the Saddam  Canal, the site of a fierce battle just days earlier, where we set up  checkpoints to control anyone going to or from the city over our bridge.  After about a month of bridge security, patrols and raids in the nearby  neighborhood, we were moved to Qulat Sikkar, south of Al Kut.
While the Shiite Muslims in our area of operation may not have wanted  us there, the United States took out Saddam and we were there to help  them, so there was a tentative peace. While the locals outnumbered us,  they did not want to rock the boat, nor did we. For all intents and  purposes, we served as the local government, court and police of Qulat  Sikkar. For the first few weeks, we raided residences of suspected Baath  Party members, Fedayeen and criminals. You never knew what was behind  the door, which was quite stressful, but you got used it. However, it  didn’t take too long to realize that despite the weapons caches we would  occasionally find, a good portion of the information we were receiving  to conduct these raids may have had more to do with personal revenge  than actual threats. [continued after the jump]
What we were trying to do was maximize our strength at the street  level by interacting with the locals as much as possible during foot and  mounted patrols, which we ran 24 hours a day. We wanted the locals to  know that we were ready for anything while our medical corpsmen were  helping injured civilians and kids who were brought to our position for  care. Locals would come to us to report criminals and other threats,  which we would respond to. The professional policemen in our reserve  unit trained local police. Because of this, and the fact that the local  Shia were happy to see Saddam ousted and were not politically organized,  we experienced no serious attacks, nothing more than the occasional  spray-and-pray or potshot. The people, all of whom were destitute, just  tried to keep on living and begin building an uncertain future as we  continued our patrols, dreaming of home in our spare time.
The uncertain future became most evident when local Iraq army  veterans began asking for their pay or pensions and we told them to go  away. And while the Bush administration’s decision to remove all Baath  Party members rather than just the unsavory elements from official life  was not such a factor for us in the Shiite south, the move was something  that we debated endlessly. The majority of the Marines in my platoon —  college students and working men alike — saw it as a very bad idea and  something that would almost guarantee a resistance movement.
We stayed just under six months and did a lot of good for people who  have not faced much good in their history. The reality of war is that  sometimes you are lucky and sometimes you are unlucky. During that  deployment, we were very lucky. No Marines in our unit were killed in  action, and no Marines were seriously wounded. The Italians who replaced  us were not so lucky. A few months after our departure and after  becoming fully immersed in civilian life again (except for drill  weekends), I turned on the television to see that Nasiriya had been hit  by a major suicide bombing and that 19 Italian soldiers — some of whom  we had undoubtedly dined with at Camp White Horse just weeks earlier —  were killed along with 11 civilians. I remember thinking that this was  just the beginning of a different type of war that would last a long  time.
Cpl. Nathan Hughes, U.S. Marine Corps Regimental Combat Team 1
Iraq 2003
STRATFOR Deputy Director, Tactical Intelligence
Looking back, the paradigm that pulls it all together for me is one  of a military that has spent too many years in garrison going off to  war. By March 2003, 9/11 had dominated everyone’s thinking for a year  and a half, but only a tiny fraction of the military had actually been  to Afghanistan. And there had been no time for operational lessons that  might have been learned to percolate through the system.
None of that was apparent then. When we first came ashore in  February, the negligent discharge of a SAW at the port in Kuwait and  seeing servicemen from other units carrying their rifles slung muzzle  down stuck out to us after six months with a Marine Expeditionary Unit  (pretty much the height of readiness and cohesion for a Marine infantry  battalion at that point). The truth was that even six months at sea in  2002, aside from the loss of Marines in a shooting in Kuwait, did little  to prepare us for the post-9/11 realities that would become so apparent  in subsequent years.
After weeks of waiting in Kuwait (to the point where unfounded rumors  of the death of Jennifer Lopez were beginning to get too much traction)  and after we had resigned ourselves to never leaving that miserable  place, we suddenly received orders to immediately mount up. We were a  U.S. Marine regiment on amphibious tractors, unarmored Humvees and  seven-ton trucks. I remember feeling bad for anyone who got in our way,  and how that illusion crumbled over and over again in the subsequent  weeks.
I remember exactly how shallow the first fighting positions we dug  had been at our staging area south of the Iraqi border. The ground had  been ridiculously tough, and we knew we were moving in as little as a  few hours. That expediency was fine until the first “Lightning,  lightning, lightning” came across the net, signaling that an Iraqi  “Scud” missile had been fired. We were already in our MOPP 1 attire,  which we would wear during most of the invasion, but despite endless  drills (and laps around the flight deck on the way over in MOPP 4), it  had taken us distressingly long to suit up. And lying in a  far-too-shallow fighting position recalling how useless I had been — how  useless we all had been — learning how to fire a rifle while wearing a  gas mask in 1998, I mulled over everything I knew about fighting in a  chemical or biological environment. The only thing I knew for sure was  that doing so was a terrible, terrible idea.
On the outskirts of Nasiriya, we saw the first burned-out hulks of  American vehicles and the first section of our platoon was moved,  briefly, from our unarmored Humvees to the “protection” of the  welded-aluminum hulls of amphibious tractors. Before someone somewhere  canceled the whole maneuver, we were on the verge of following an  artillery barrage through a city where the entire urban expanse had been  declared hostile. One surreal experience flowed into the next.
Between spending a night where no one slept because we had erected  our 81mm mortar gun line in an exposed position in the middle of an  Iraqi village and reconnoitering for positions in a pair of Humvees with  our heaviest weapon, a SAW, it became clear how desperately thin we  were spread. The civilian looting of Baghdad was comprehensive and  immediate. As we moved to our initial objective, there were already  stolen construction vehicles with air-conditioning units chained to the  shovels moving down the shoulders of the city’s roads. The magnitude of  pacifying an urban population — and our complete inability to do so —  was blatantly apparent.
By the time we fell back to Kuwait that summer (even the senior-most  Marine commanders were assuring us in good faith that the objective was  kicking in the door and seizing Baghdad and that the Army would take it  from there), it was already a different world. Children that had once  been restrained by their parents or their own uncertainty would now  stand inches from moving tracked vehicles and demand candy. What we had  achieved, in other words, was done in the space created by “shock and  awe.” But the shock and awe had already worn off and the Iraqis were  adapting and settling into the new reality with a frightening speed.
Staff Sgt. Paul Floyd, U.S. Army Special Operations Command
Iraq 2005-2008
STRATFOR Tactical Intern
My unit worked under Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), and our  primary role was high-value target (HVT) kill or capture missions.  These missions were meant to apply pressure to or destroy enemy  networks, not to win over popular support. I served eight tours  overseas, half in Iraq. Our deployments lasted anywhere from 90 to 140  days. During these deployments, my platoon conducted hundreds of  missions and killed or captured many HVTs. Most missions were successful  in the sense that we got who we were after. Some missions were not  successful. The following are the missions that stick out.
My first deployment was in 2005 to Baghdad. I was scared and didn’t  know a damn thing about where I was going, and my team leaders and squad  leaders were not about to enlighten me. After a short layover in  Germany, we flew directly into Baghdad instead of Kuwait, where most  units staged. The lights in the cargo bay went red, the crew donned body  armor and they dropped the plane onto the runway like it was crashing  to avoid being shot down. We had arrived in the middle of the night and  were still recovering from the sleeping pills they had provided for the  flight. We had to unpack all of our mission-essential gear from our  cargo pallets and prep our gear for a helicopter flight into our  operating base. Our leaders still didn’t divulge many details about  where we were going even as we loaded magazines and donned body armor.
We loaded a CH-47 with half of our platoon and our personal bags and  lifted off to what I had been told was the most dangerous city in the  world at that time. When we landed, I was a little beside myself as we  rushed off the helicopter to establish security, sweeping our sectors of  fire and waiting for our first firefight while others frantically threw  bags off the bird. It took a few minutes, but the helicopter finally  took off to pick up the rest of our platoon and then we were able to  hear the laughter. “Hey dumbasses, we are in the Green Zone and you are  pointing your weapons at the guys who guard our compound,” our team  leaders said between guffaws. “Welcome home.”
This was not what I was expecting. My first mission was the next  night. I was a top gunner on an up-armored Humvee manning a medium  machine gun. We worked at night, and all I knew was that we were going  to get some guy in some place in Baghdad. In other words, I could barely  understand what I was seeing, didn’t know where I was and had no idea  who we were after. The last thing my team leader had told me before we  rolled out was to shoot back if we were shot at and if the vehicle  rolled, try and get clear because the night before a Humvee had been hit  by an improvised explosive device (IED) and rolled and everyone inside  had burned alive. He might have been lying, but it stuck. We rolled  through Baghdad for about 15 minutes and finally stopped 200 meters past  an intersection. To help with radio communication, we turned off our  jammers, per standard operating procedure, and an IED detonated at the  intersection we had just passed. We went on two more missions that night  and, over the course of 90 days, conducted around 120 missions.
My second deployment was to Ramadi in summer 2006. At that time,  Ramadi was falling apart. The entire city was hostile, every single  place we went. One mission during this deployment sticks our more than  any other. We received intelligence on the whereabouts of a target high  enough on the food chain that the strike force commander launched us  during the day. The coordinates we had been given led us to what was  essentially a strip mall on the side of the road. Since it was daytime,  we found it to be more successful to move hard and fast, so we “landed  on the X.” As we were leaping out of our vehicles, we realized there  were more than 100 people running in all directions. We detained every  single military-aged male. It took hours and we had to call in the  regular army to help us move them all, but we got the al Qaeda cell  leader we were after and his lieutenants. We didn’t make any friends  that day, but we accomplished the mission and then some.
On a similar mission, we found ourselves being launched during the  middle of the day to capture a man who we thought was a major piece of  the Ramadi insurgency. This time we drove to a house, contained it, blew  down the door and seized it. All we found inside was a woman and 13  teenage girls. We started to search the house, and I was tasked with  searching the room where the girls were being kept while a younger guy  watched them. Searching a room in the desert while wearing body armor is  miserable work. About halfway through I heard some light giggling and  looked up to find that two of the girls had taken a fancy to their  overseer and were trying to flirt. There he was smiling from ear to ear  while they both were moving their veils and hijab’s just enough to show a  little hair and some of their faces. I started to laugh when the radio  explodes with chatter about a car returning to the house. We quickly  rearranged ourselves and detained the men as they pulled into the  driveway. It was their uncle who had to pick up an associate and who  also happened to be our target. We detained him and left.
My third deployment in Iraq was back to Ramadi in 2007. This was  after the local tribal leaders had banded together and begun working  with the United States to push al Qaeda out of the city. This meant that  the enemy had moved to the countryside, and we were going to air  assault instead of drive. Every night, we flew to the countryside and  walked to our targets. This deployment was different. I experienced more  firefights in those first seven missions than I ever had before.
On my eighth mission, the intelligence that drove us to a target was  literally “there is a suspicious blue truck there.” We ridiculed that  assessment as we boarded the helicopters. I was point man for my platoon  and led it up to the house. As I cleared the initial courtyard I saw a  man open a door, stick his head out and, clearly frightened, duck back  inside, leaving the door partially open. Following my training and not  wanting him to have any more time to prepare for a fight I followed him  through the door with my fire team. I kicked the door fully open and two  men armed with what I later learned was an AK-47 and an M-16 fired on  us as we came through the door. I cleared my corner and returned fire  while my teammates did the same. Suddenly my firing hand was thrown off  of my weapon. I placed it back but found that I could not pull the  trigger. It seemed like time just stopped. I looked down to find that my  finger was flapping wildly against my weapon and realized that I could  not shoot. I took a knee and yelled “down” to let my team know I was out  of the fight and they adjusted their sectors of fire. There was a brief  pause before another armed man opened fire from behind the door. I  thought I was dead. The fire team behind us entered the room immediately  and eliminated the threat.
I had been shot in the hand while one of my team members had been  shot through the arm and the other had had a bullet graze the side of  his head. We all walked out of that room in time to see the rest of the  house erupt with gunfire. My platoon moved us back under fire and  returned fire. A man then ran out of the house and our rounds detonated  his suicide vest. His head and leg landed in the road in front of us.  The fight ended with two 500-pound bombs and a medevac helicopter to  Balad. I went home early that deployment.
My last deployment to Iraq was in 2008, back in Baghdad. One again we  were driving, part of a task force assigned to counter Iranian  influence. The new threat was the explosively formed projectiles being  imported by the Iranians. These next-generation IEDs could punch through  any standard armor we had. U.S. troops adapted with solid metal plates  bolted to the sides of vehicles with an 18-inch standoff. The enemy  adapted by aiming the IEDs slightly higher so the force of the blast  would miss the metal plates and take heads off in the passenger  compartments.
This react and counteract game never stopped. We were there during  the winter, which meant it actually rained a fair amount for a brief  period. I was a convoy commander on this deployment. On one particular  mission, we had stopped to let the assault force off more than a  kilometer away so as not to spook the target at night with our engine  noise. After they assaulted the house, they called to us to pull the  vehicles forward. During the height of the sectarian violence of 2007,  Baghdad neighborhoods had trenches and earthworks to protect them. On  this wet winter night, we were forced to drive through one of these  trenches to get to our platoon, and it took about three seconds to get  my vehicle stuck.
Since we were running skeleton crews at this point and it was my  fault, I decided to jump out by myself to perform the vehicle recovery.  This is a pretty simple process of just having the nearest vehicle pull  up, attaching a tow cable between the two and pulling the stuck vehicle  out. As we started the pulling part, I stepped back to make room only to  plunge into a hole filled with water well over my head. I was  submerged, wearing about 60 pounds of armor and equipment and barely  hanging onto a ledge. I thought about the irony of dying in Iraq not  because of enemy fire or an IED but by drowning. I managed to extract  myself, and since no one could hear or see me, I calmly walked back to  my extracted vehicle. If my gunner wondered why I was soaking wet and  freezing, he didn’t ask.
Staff Sgt. Benjamin Sledge, U.S. Army Special Operations Command
Iraq 2006-2007
STRATFOR Senior Graphic Designer
I had done a lot in eleven years in the military: Afghanistan,  language training, John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School,  and Iraq. But Iraq would be the nail in the coffin of my military  career.
In Iraq I kicked in doors, took shotgun pellets to the face (courtesy  of a trigger happy Marine), watched IEDs explode in front of my  vehicle, watched people shoot at my vehicle, made friends with the  locals, rebuilt infrastructure, had the locals tell me they loved me and  had the locals shoot at me. I also watched people shoot my friends,  attended memorial services, cried, laughed, got depressed, ranted,  fought, got dirty, got dirtier, cried some more and then went home.
The twin bloody battles of Fallujah in 2004 would move the insurgents  to a city 20 miles west named Ramadi, which we would lovingly nickname  the “Meat Grinder.” The rules of engagement were so lenient that if  someone popped their head around the corner twice you could shoot a  warning shot. The third peek was considered hostile and you could engage  the person with lethal force. Every morning the roads were declared  clear for about 30 minutes after an explosive ordnance disposal (EOD)  team had spent the night clearing them. Thirty minutes later, every road  had multiple IEDs on them. By noon, you were guaranteed to get shot at.
The turning point in my deployment came when a former Special Forces  captain named Travis Patriquin came up with a simple — and hilarious —  PowerPoint slide mocking how complex the American war machine had made  the war in Iraq. My team began to work with him and other teams trying  to win over the tribal sheiks and empower the people in the area. In  accordance with a plan devised by Col. Sean McFarland, commander of the  1st Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Armored Division, U.S. troops also  began to occupy all points of Ramadi in small combat outposts. In time,  the tide began to shift and we began to see a significant, perceptible  change. For once, my spirits were lifted and I thought we would achieve  some success in the war. Capt. Patriquin would not live to see it. He  was killed by an IED, leaving behind his wife and three small children.
When the war shifted in Ramadi, my team began to work hard rebuilding  infrastructure instead of slinging lead, but complications soon arose.  After the fighting died down, staff officers found new ways to look like  rock stars in order to advance their careers. This was when my faith in  the U.S. military began to crumble. Instead of working on the power  grid or sewage system — basic life necessities that the people  desperately needed — I was ordered to win hearts and minds by building  soccer fields and other “Iraqi entertainment” venues. (Aid money was  poured into a multimillion-dollar soccer stadium that only collected  trash.)
After asking instead to work on the power grid, I was threatened with  administrative punishment by a colonel in the 3rd Infantry Division. I  acquiesced, then filed a report about waste and abuse of taxpayer  dollars. More threats, more soccer fields demanded, but my unit never  backed down. We eventually got electricity running in the city 18 hours a  day. This was a big deal, though the cost was high: Purple Hearts,  Bronze Stars with valor and marital problems. (A third of our 30-man  team left Iraq divorced, including me.) Coming home should have been a  joyous occasion, but after 15 months, we were all very different and the  world was not the same.
Though the Iraq war is ending, it will never be over for those who  went. Anytime someone finds out you’re a veteran and a little about what  you did, the question comes up: “Did you kill anyone?” And with that  inevitable question comes an inevitable floodgate of memories, good and  bad.
Anonymous, U.S. Army Human Intelligence Collector
Iraq 2007-2008
STRATFOR Tactical Intern
I remember following the U.S. invasions in Afghanistan and Iraq from  the comfort of my living room with no idea what a war zone was really  like. Little did I know that one day I would have my own experiences in  the Iraqi and Afghan cities I was watching on television.
A couple years after the fall of Saddam Hussein I was running human  intelligence (HUMINT) operations in Baghdad, having one-on-one  conversations with U.S. adversaries. I was elated by the opportunity to  hear the perspective of the enemy. In the interrogations, our  conversations varied. We would discuss anything from a planned attack on  a convoy to the art of raising homing pigeons. While the typical image  in Iraq was one of U.S. soldiers in fierce battles with insurgents, I  would find myself smoking from a hookah with someone who had killed  dozens. The polite nature of Iraqis carried over to the individuals with  whom I would have conversations. A man who had just detonated an IED  against an American convoy would offer me his prison-issued jacket if  the weather was cold. I was shocked to see how cordial a detained  insurgent could be, even if uncooperative.
There was a steep cultural learning curve for me, beginning with my  mission in Iraq. Having never left the Western Hemisphere and having  focused on Latin America with my previous unit, I was amazed to see what  a different world the Middle East was. Language barriers were  surprisingly easy to work around with interpreters, although my ability  to gather intelligence depended on my cultural understanding. Picking  and choosing which interpreter to use in communicating with a source was  the first step. (An outspoken Lebanese Christian would not be very  effective with a Sunni extremist.) It was also important to consider the  gender, age and Islamic sect of interpreter and source. Putting aside  intelligence gathering and turning instead to light-hearted  conversations revolving around the source’s life not only improved my  cultural understanding but also helped elicit critical information and  actionable intelligence.
My time in Iraq was quite different from that of a soldier patrolling  the streets of Baghdad. While I left my friends and family behind and  worked long hours, sometimes exceeding 48-hour shifts, I still enjoyed  most of the comforts of home that many soldiers in Iraq could not enjoy.  The dangers were minimal compared to those faced by soldiers who kicked  open doors and endured regular ambushes and IEDs. I often felt that I  was not really doing my part compared to others who were risking their  life in combat. However, I cherish the knowledge I gained from the Iraqi  people and hope my contribution in Iraq was to save both U.S. and Iraqi  lives.
Sgt. Frank B., U.S. Marine Corps
Iraq 2008
STRATFOR Junior Tactical Analyst
During our operations in northern Anbar province, I was continuously  struck by the unintended consequences of our actions. As a platoon size,  eight-vehicle element, we conducted patrols around the region checking  in on disparate parts of the population. However, due to a lack of good  road maps we relied on aviation charts that made it hard to identify  good or established ground routes.
In our effort to survey our area of operations for security threats  (in addition to other taskings), we found that our two mine-resistant,  ambush-protected (MRAP) trucks, weighing more than 10 tons apiece, would  easily crush the simple, mud-packed irrigation networks in the area.  This would result in the limited water supply being quickly absorbed by  the vast expanse of baked earth. And our communication and electronic  countermeasures antennae, some 15 feet tall, would routinely pull down  or short out the low-hanging, rudimentary power lines that tenuously fed  electricity over long distances to isolated populations.
All of this was impossible to avoid while executing our tasking  orders and providing mandated levels of protection to our unit, yet it  hampered our ability to build any kind of rapport with people in areas  that had had limited contact with the ousted Baathist regime in the  first place. I remember realizing at the time that many of our interests  and actions negated one another, and I often wondered how much more of  that was happening with the many different units across the country.
I would later realize this example would prove to be one of many  examples where our best operational intentions were obfuscated by the  complexity of procedures, precautions and logistics necessary for our  activity within the country. I’ll never forget walking away from my time  in Iraq realizing the one-step-forward-two-step-backward reality of my  unit’s time in Iraq, and how it forever changed how I understand the net  costs of military and foreign interventions everywhere.
Conclusion
I know each of the authors well enough to have been startled by their  recollections of the war. The humor, dedication and bitterness  expressed in these pieces show me dimensions of each of them that I had  not known were there. War reshapes the soul and makes people we think we  know into mysteries. Life goes on, but not as it once was. No  geopolitical meaning can be extracted from these memories, but human  meanings can be. Suffice it to say that I am proud to be associated with  these men and women.
The Iraq War: Recollections is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

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