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The Kurdish Detour
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Page 29

The meeting allowed members to express serious concerns regarding their future deployment. They were mostly concerned that higher authorities were disregarding the mental and physical strain of running two large camps and that the command might be planning an indefinitely long deployment of the 432nd without considering rotating the unit with other civil affairs companies which had not been used during the Gulf crisis. The commander attempted to alleviate fears of an indefinite deployment by demonstrating how much of the unit's mission was completed at that date, permitting an imminent handoff of the camp to civilian agencies and the unit's redeployment to the US. Nine days later, on Thursday, May 23rd, the unit received warning orders releasing the unit from duty in northern Iraq between June 4-6. The troops finally had their date for the beginning of redeployment. (Preston's letter home)

By May 23rd it was evident that the job of the 432nd had been well done: in the mountains, civilian deaths had dropped from about 2,000 per clay to about 100 per day, a close-to-average figure for a population of over 2 million. Down in the valley, the 432nd was now coordinating the life of two camps totalling a combined population of nearly 40,000 people. And best of all, the highways out of the valley began filling with vehicles returning refugees to their homes in the region.

The question that remained in the minds of the troops as they began to leave the valley for the US concerned the future. What will happen to these children, the wide-eyed "hello birds" who constantly swarmed around "mister" GI? What will happen to the women, most often remembered balancing water containers on their shoulders or kneeling before fires preparing meals? What will happen to the men, who will never be forgotten in a multitude of jobs they performed for the soldiers: In food distribution; supply areas; night security; and, perhaps most demanding of all, as interpreters. They will be remembered as a multitude of faces and no longer a generic name in newspapers, the Kurds. They will be remembered as people, with whom members of the 432nd have shared intense and unforgetttable memories.


McMurry's Notes


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© Copyright 1995-2008 by Preston V. McMurry III