Read Kaboom Online

Authors: Matthew Gallagher

Kaboom (34 page)

(Forgot what?)
I forgot nothing. Like this: Jambo! It's Swahili. The Ugandans, who worked as contracted security guards on the FOB, said it. They were the only happy people on all of Camp Taji, so they said, “Jambo!” It wasn't like hello. Or hola. Or salaam aleichem. It was jambo! Always with an exclamation point. I tried saying jambo! sometimes, but I wasn't very good at it. A person can't mimic joy.
(Hi, Matt.)
I saw fliers telling me to join the biweekly Camp Taji softball league or the flag-football league. The PX sold ninety-some monthly magazines, hot off the presses. The lines for the fast-food restaurants—Burger King and Pizza Hut and Taco Bell—never ended. Musicians routinely held concerts, thinking they had come to the real Iraq. They would have had better luck finding it in downtown Detroit.
(And?)
Where was I? I didn't know. I still don't know. Little America, Bizarro Iraq. That's all I knew.
(Tell us more. That's why we're here.)
This is such bullshit. Leave me alone. That's all I ever wanted anyway. To be left alone.
(Tell us more. That's why we're here.)
No.
(Yes.)
Why?
(Because we will listen.)
What?
(Yes.)
Fine. But you promise I can leave after this?
(Yes.)
Fine. After that, after those ten days I mean, Lieutenant Colonel Larry called me into his office and told me that they were trading an officer to 1- 27 Infantry, also of the Second Brigade of the Twenty-fifth Infantry Division, for another officer. The original officer they wanted to trade wasn't mentally sound anymore because of the deployment, and so they were now trading me so 1-27 Infantry didn't think we traded crazy people. I didn't want to go, even after all of the drama. I had grown up in 2-14 Cavalry. Everything I knew about the army happened in that organization, and everyone I knew in the army served there. But I had no say in the matter and didn't want to give Lieutenant Colonel Larry the satisfaction of knowing I felt nervous. “Now,” he said with a thin, leering smile, “don't think this has anything to do with the blog.” I nodded, saluted, and left the office. I saved my smirk for later.
(And?)
Crashed through facade.
(And?)
They thought they had fucked me, sticking a too-skinny, crazy-eyed mustang into a foreign environment full of infantry grunts. But they hadn't. I found redemption. I got back to a combat outpost. I got back to the line. I got back to soldiers.
(Yes.)
It wasn't my combat outpost. It wasn't my line. They weren't my soldiers. But it would be. They would be. And I escaped Camp Taji. A right escape. A true one. A legitimate one.
(Yes.)
The fires of the FOB almost broke me. Almost. But almost only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
(And?)
And in atomic bombs.
(Hi, Matt.)
Can I go now?
(Yes.)
Thanks.
(See, that wasn't so hard, was it?)
I forgot.
WELCOME TO THE WOLFHOUNDS
If one pulled out a map
of Iraq again—after ensuring that it dated from the post-Baathist Party era—a thick black dot with a jagged scar down its center would be found just northwest of the slums of Saddam (now known as Sadr) City in Baghdad, next to the Tigris River's eastern banks. Across the river and far away from the crossroads of Saba al-Bor in the remote west, this dot found attention in the same manner that monsters do in a child's closet. Locals didn't so much say its name as they spat it out: Hussaniyah, a city originally built as Republican Guard housing for the large military base to the west in Taji. Roughly 600,000 Iraqis called this place home in late 2008, a place so densely Shia in nature and population that Sunnis dared not venture across the highway that served as its western border. Due to the transient nature of much of the population, a blood-red-sea past didn't soak this dot, but the spewing sewer water of the present did. There was no point in reflecting back on better times when none existed.
The expansive badlands of north-central Iraq lay above Hussaniyah, while Diyala Province and the former terrorist capital of Baqubah were a short drive due east. West of the highway—known to Coalition forces as Route Dover—rich Sunni manors basked along the Tigris's shore all the way south to Baghdad, artifacts of Saddam Hussein's old power base and the privileges he bestowed upon his tribesmen.
While Sadr City served as Jaish al-Mahdi's foundation and Najaf remained its spiritual home, Hussaniyah represented the paramilitary group's strongest and proudest outpost; it was akin to a baseball organization's highest minor-league level, the last obstacle in the way of the big show. JAM insurgents came to H-Town to prove themselves to the Sadr City brain trust, and
if they did so and survived, they sometimes punched their ticket to that citadel. This usually meant our enemies had everything to gain and nothing to lose—a dangerous set of circumstances for counterinsurgents intent on separating the paramilitants from the populace. The jagged scar found on the map divided Hussaniyah in two, leaving a barren one-mile stretch of no-man's-land in the center. The west side, former Republican Guard officer and NCO housing, contained neighborhoods of relative comfort, but the east side, former Republican Guard enlisted housing, held ghettoes as vile and Third World as anything else found in Iraq. Usually, JAM's financiers and cell leaders lived on the west side. Its trigger pullers and IED emplacers lived on the east side.
My new unit—the 1-27 Infantry Battalion, better known by the moniker the Wolfhounds—was headquartered at a large joint-security station (JSS) just south of Hussaniyah. One of its companies (the infantry equivalent of a cavalry troop) patrolled everything west of Route Dover; another company, the one I'd soon join, patrolled everything east of Route Dover. This neatly divided the problem sets the various companies faced into Sunni and Shia. We shared JSS Istalquaal with a battalion of Iraqi National Police (NP) commandos, who served in this area instead of the Iraqi army. The local Iraqi police were also found in H-Town and the smaller population centers of Boob al-Sham and Sabah Qasar (both located south of JSS Istalquaal), and they were just as shady and of questionable intent as they had been in Saba al-Bor.
On the day I reported to the Wolfhounds, my new battalion commander told me he didn't care about what had occurred in 2-14 Cavalry, he just expected me to perform as an army officer to the standards demanded and needed by American soldiers. He then asked if I preferred to stay at Taji as a staff officer or to be sent out to the JSS. There were no platoon leader slots available—not that a young captain with nearly two years of platoon leader time needed any more—but a slot for a lethal targeting officer in Alpha Company remained open. I tried not to sound too eager when I responded, “The JSS would be awesome, sir,” and then thanked him profusely for the opportunity.
Although their problems were minor when compared to what I experienced with 2-14 Cavalry, the Wolfhounds organization certainly had its own internal issues and its own flaws, just like any other unit. Consequently, when I talked to the platoon leaders deep into the night, trying to calm them down about the failures of a bureaucracy designed to make their men carry the greatest
burden, I referenced my own days as a know-it-all lieutenant. But these failures weren't really mine to critique or carp about. 1-27 Infantry and its leaders—the field grades and otherwise—gave me a second chance to fight the war on the ground level when, quite frankly, I wasn't owed one, and pettier leaders would have kept me from it simply out of spite for being in the newspapers. Initially, I was nothing more than “the blog guy,” but with time, and after proving myself capable, I regained my identity and my swagger. The blog guy became Captain G, and Captain G contributed to the war effort, which is why I went over there in the first place. Subsequently, I settled into more of an observer role, rather than playing an active character myself, with regard to the unit's structural dynamics.
If JSS Istalquaal were a solar system, it would have orbited around The Hammer. It seemed as if all operations revolved around his actions and goals for the area, whether they actually did on a particular day or not. As the battalion's senior company commander, The Hammer led with a prototypical blend of strength, smarts, power, humor, and grace. He led men in the most intense of environments as naturally as most of us walked. His soldiers worshipped him while concurrently fearing his every step; this led them to push themselves to new limits of competency no one else believed possible. His superiors' respect for his leadership was based more on awe than remembrance. Just as we junior officers who served under him secretly hoped to be more like him, The Hammer's superiors secretly hoped they had been more like him when they were company commanders. Our fantasy was just as impossible as theirs. Men like this were revered for a reason, and that reason was grounded in their scarcity. As an armor officer in an infantry battalion, The Hammer quickly took me under his very large and broad wing—in addition to all his other gifts, he was also built like a brick house, something that certainly didn't hinder his status as a local legend, especially in the hypermacho world of combat arms—and schooled me in the ways of the grunt and how they differed from the ways of the scout.
A self-described bull in a china shop, Captain Frowny-Face commanded the other rifle company stationed at JSS Istalquaal. Sporting an old-school flattop and an equally old-school mentality, Captain Frowny-Face earned his nickname for going straight through obstacles rather than around them, the personal feelings of others be damned. A yellow smiley face, with a flattop and a straight line in lieu of the actual smile, soon became his visual emblem and could be found all across JSS Istalquaal, from Porta-John walls to the sides of storage units to the computer lab. Due to his traditional approach
to commanding a company, Captain Frowny-Face never let his soldiers know what they meant to him and instead preferred to have them believe that they were responsible for his perpetual frown. During a few revealing talks in the company TOC though—usually late at night, waiting for a long mission to end—he occasionally revealed to us junior officers milling around just how much he cherished commanding Alpha Company. I worked for both The Hammer and Captain Frowny-Face at JSS Istalquaal, and despite my very pronounced and very public decision to leave the army at the end of our tour, both men took me in as one of their own and continued to develop me professionally.
Both companies burst with talent at the platoon and squad levels. In Alpha Company, both Lieutenant Mongo and Lieutenant Dirty Jerz proved a new theory of mine correct: The more passionate a platoon leader got after a mission, the more proficient he was during said mission. Lieutenant Mongo, who played defensive tackle for West Point before he got commissioned into the infantry, liked to come off as a meathead football player, but I quickly learned there was much more to him than that. He led from the front, both literally and figuratively, and with his tireless emotional strength, he seemed intent on breaking the army before it broke him. He, like many of us junior officers, believed the army needed to be the learning organization it professed to be rather than the zero-defect institution it really was. While most of us, myself included, eventually shrugged our shoulders in apathetic acceptance of this reality, Lieutenant Mongo never could bring himself to do that. I didn't just respect his unwillingness to compromise, I envied it. Outside of the wire though, he carried himself as a sort of beardless Caucasian Santa Claus with the local-nationals, delighting children and adults alike with a deep, jolly belly laugh.
Lieutenant Dirty Jerz tended to favor a far more silent approach to the platoon leader's eternal bout with bureaucracy. Just as competent as his larger and louder peer, he had learned as a prior-service enlisted soldier to pick and choose his battles with Higher. He also happened to be the only person I'd ever met from the state of New Jersey who wasn't a scumbag, something he knew and laughed about, hence his nickname. His soldiers liked to gibe Lieutenant Dirty Jerz for going over to the “dark side” of the officer corps, but their respect for him was both transparent and unwavering. This sometimes rattled other officers in the battalion, who weren't used to seeing such open displays of loyalty from soldiers and NCOs for their lieutenant.
Lieutenant Rant served as Alpha Company's artillery officer. Like Skerk in Saba al-Bor, he handled all money issues and contracts for Hussaniyah. As a result, he quickly reached the top of the list of Iraqis' most wanted men on JSS Istalquaal, and rightfully so—his competence and drive had no equal. Another West Pointer, Lieutenant Rant could wax poetic on any subject—and often did. The role of steroids in modern baseball, the generational gap within the officer corps, the eternal benefits of pajamas, and Chihuahua ownership were just a few of the topics of Lieutenant Rant's hour-long discourses with himself and an attentive—or otherwise—audience. Our company XO, Captain Clay, and the Headquarters platoon sergeant, Sergeant First Class Hammerhead, needled Lieutenant Rant endlessly. I shared a room with these three, and the debates' intensity was usually only matched by their absurdity.
The Great White Hope, one of The Hammer's platoon leaders and one of my old housemates from Hawaii, helped ease my transition to the Wolfhounds. An armor captain from Wisconsin, The Great White Hope loved the high life as much as he hated staff officers feigning knowledge of life out of the wire, and his will seemed as tenacious as his skin was fair. Luckily for him, we wore far too much equipment and body armor for the Iraq sun to do any real damage. He certainly provided a welcoming face for me in my first days as a stranger in a strange land. The ever-poised Captain Pistol Pete served as The Hammer's recon platoon leader, while the maniacal Lieutenant Goo served as his artillery officer. As was often the case in deployed military life, after a few weeks of getting to know these men, it seemed like we had been comrades for years. It certainly felt like years.

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