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ALR/PG Letter from Eddie Jeffers Currently Serving in Iraq
Riders, great letter from
a soldier sent to his father. "God Bless our Military" Bronco 6
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I wanted to share an article my son
Eddie sent me from Iraq. I was not going to send it out through
the usual means; I'm looking to have this published somehow. I
just felt after reading it again this morning that I wanted people
to begin reading it and begin/continue to pray for our brave men
and women in uniform.
David Jeffers******************************************
Hope Rides Alone
By Eddie Jeffers
I stare out into the darkness from my post, and I watch the city
burn to the ground. I smell the familiar smells, I walk through
the familiar rubble, and I look at the frightened faces that watch
me pass down the streets of their neighborhoods. My nerves
hardly rest; my hands are steady on a device that has been given
to me from my government for the purpose of taking the lives of
others.
I sweat, and I am tired. My back aches from the loads I carry.
Young American boys look to me to direct them in a manner that
will someday allow them to see their families again...and yet, I
too, am just a boy...my age not but a few years more than that of
the ones I lead. I am stressed, I am scared, and I am paranoid...
because death is everywhere. It waits for me, it calls to me from
around street corners and windows, and it is always there.
There are the demons that follow me, and tempt me into thoughts
and actions that are not my own...but that are necessary for
survival. I've made compromises with my humanity. And I am not
alone in this. Miles from me are my brethren in this world, who
walk in the same streets...
who feel the same things, whether they admit to it or not.
And to think, I volunteered for this...
And I am ignorant to the rest of the world...or so I thought.
But even a thousand miles away, in Ramadi, Iraq, the cries and
screams and complaints of the ungrateful reach me. In a year, I
will be thrust back into society from a life and mentality that
doesn't fit your average man. And then, I will be alone. And
then, I will walk down the streets of America, and see the yellow
ribbon stickers on the cars of the same people who compare our
President to Hitler.
I will watch the television and watch the Cindy Sheehans, and the
Al Frankens, and the rest of the ignorant sheep of America spout
off their mouths about a subject they know nothing about. It is
their right, however, and it is a right that is defended by
hundreds of thousands of boys and girls scattered across the
world, far from home. I use the word boys and girls, because
that's what they are. In the Army, the average age of the
infantryman is nineteen years old. The average rank of soldiers
killed in action is Private First Class
People like Cindy Sheehan are ignorant. Not just to this war, but
to the results of their idiotic ramblings, or at least I hope they
are. They don't realize its effects on this war. In this war,
there are no Geneva Conventions, no cease fires. Medics and
Chaplains are not spared from the enemy's brutality because it's
against the rules. I can only imagine the horrors a military
Chaplain would experience at the hands of the enemy. The enemy
slinks in the shadows and fights a coward's war against us. It is
effective though, as many men and women have died since the start
of this war. And the memory of their service to America is
tainted by the inconsiderate remarks on our nation's news outlets.
And every day, the enemy changes...only now, the enemy is becoming
something new. The enemy is transitioning from the Muslim
extremists to Americans. The enemy is becoming the very people
whom we defend with our lives. And they do not realize it. But
in denouncing our actions, denouncing our leaders, denouncing the
war we live and fight, they are isolating the military from
society...and they are becoming our enemy.
Democrats and peace activists like to toss the word "quagmire"
around and compare this war to Vietnam. In a way they are right,
this war is becoming like Vietnam. Not the actual war, but in the
isolation of country and military. America is not a nation at
war; they are a nation with its military at war. Like it or n ot,
we are here, some of us for our second, or third times; some even
for their fourth and so on. Americans are so concerned now with
politics, that it is interfering with our war.
Terrorists cut the heads off of American citizens on the
internet...and there is no outrage, but an American soldier kills
an Iraqi in the midst of battle, and there are investigations, and
sometimes soldiers are even jailed...for doing their job.
It is absolutely sickening to me to think our country has come to
this. Why are we so obsessed with the bad news? Why will people
stop at nothing to be against this war, no matter how much
evidence of the good we've done is thrown in their face? When is
the last time CNN or MSNBC or CBS reported the opening of schools
and hospitals in Iraq? Or the leaders of terror cells being
detained or killed? It's all happening, but people will not let
up their hatred of Bush. They will ignore the good news, because
it just might show people that Bush was right.
America has lost its will to fight. It has lost its will to
defend what is right and just in the world. The crazy thing of it
all is that the American people have not even been asked to
sacrifice a single thing. It's not like World War Two, where
people rationed food, and turned in cars to be made into metal for
tanks. The American people have not been asked to sacrifice
anything. Unless you are in the military or the family member of
a service member, its life as usual..the war doesn't affect you.
But it affects us. And when it is over, and the troops come home,
and they try to piece together what's left of them after their
service...where will the detractors be then? Where will the
Cindy Sheehans be to comfort and talk to soldiers and help them
sort out the last couple years of their lives, most of which have
been spent dodging death and wading through the deaths of their
friends? They will be where they always are, somewhere far away,
where the horrors of the world can't touch them. Somewhere where
they can complain about things they will never experience in their
lifetime; things that the young men and women of America have
willingly taken upon their shoulders.
We are the hope of the Iraqi people. They want what everyone else
wants in life: safety, security, somewhere to call home. They
want a country that is safe to raise their children in. Not a
place where their children will be abducted, raped, and murdered
if they do not comply with the terrorists demands. They want to
live on, rebuild and prosper. And America has given them the
opportunity, but only if we stay tr ue to the cause, and see it to
its end. But the country must unite in this endeavor...we cannot
place the burden on our military alone. We must all stand up and
fight, whether in uniform or not. And supporting us is more than
sticking yellow ribbon stickers on your cars. It's supporting our
President, our troops and our cause.
Right now, the burden is all on the American soldiers. Right now,
hope rides alone. But it can change, it must change. Because
there is only failure and darkness ahead for us as a country, as a
people, if it doesn't.
Let's stop all the political nonsense, let's stop all the
bickering, let's stop all the bad news, and let's stand and fight!
Isn't that what America is all about anyway?
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