Uncle Cobs joins the Narmy

LtJG Jacoby's 13 month deployment to Iraq
dave.jacoby@gmail.com

Jun 21, 2009 10:01pm

Jacoby Update #12 - Day #8, 342 to go

June 15, 2008

These past couple of days have been all about transit, and for OPSEC (Operational Security) reasons, I can’t tell her or you where I am, where I’m going, or when I’ll get there. But as soon as I do get there, I’ll be more periodic with updates and return letters. This Army “hurry up and wait” thing has hit all time highs, and Navy mentality is to buck it a bit, but we’re not really winning. I’m now in a USO enjoying some mediocre air conditioning, but that beats the rocks I slept on last night while awaiting details. I think I want a ship. 

Please write to me about your lives. Any details, funny, sucky, boring - all of them are exciting for me to hear, so please to NOT hesitate to write to me and tell me your trip to Uncle Goober’s house for dinner as well as how amazing Prague is in June.

Thanks for keeping me in your thoughts and all the wonderful kind wishes.

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Jun 13, 2009 8:30am

Happy Birthday Dave!

Even though we are far apart you are in my thoughts always.  I know this is going to be one of the strangest Birthdays you have had hope you can make the most of it.  Love Love  Jen

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Jun 13, 2009 8:27am
It is not death that a man should fear, but he should fear never beginning to live. - Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
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Jun 12, 2009 5:02pm
Truck Crew #7 - Scott, Tiffany (Driver), Me, Judy (Truck Commander).

Truck Crew #7 - Scott, Tiffany (Driver), Me, Judy (Truck Commander).

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Jun 12, 2009 5:01pm
Dining at Udari Range

Dining at Udari Range

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Jun 12, 2009 5:00pm

Day 5: Jacoby Update #11

June 12, 2009 BOG Days # 3-5 Sandstorms, ungodly high temps, trudging to the showers a walk from your bed outside down a dusty road, toilets stinky and a walk across that same road, sand in your tent and your clothes and your food and your bed and in your eyes, a bed actually and army cot, a tent full of snoring men, living out of a sea bag for a bureau that sits on the sandy floor… all things that can be sorted out when surrounded by good [new] friends, an air-conditioned Starbucks and the knowledge that HEY, SUCK IT UP BABY, THIS IS A WAR ZONE. But damn-it, when I walk into a Starbucks I expect a Chai Latte. Is that too much to ask for? The Vivano’s are pretty good, though, and the chow is outstanding and the warm night breeze is actually pleasant. But the best part is the atmosphere; we’re here to fight and we’re here to win – to finish the job handed to us that started almost 20 years ago. After a month of training and preparing, I’m pretty ready to get started. My “clock started ticking” on Monday when we touched down in Kuwait. Everyone is given a magic number that corresponds to the number of days you are here, called BOG (Boots on the Ground). Mine is 350, which is common. Other common numbers are 270 and 180, and I’ve heard as many as 420. I think that was crap, though, since we recently learned that no one can be forced to stay in theater beyond 365 days without written approval from the deployed person and the guy who said he had those orders was relieved after 350 days. There seems to be a history of people getting relieved early, 30-40 days early seems common, so maybe I’ll be so lucky. If not, I’ll be able to leave my job by May 20, then about four days in the Returning Warrior Program here in theater, a couple days travel back to the States, a couple days in Norfolk and a day to get back, and I should be back home the end of May, 2010. Maybe earlier. Tick-tock, tick-tock. Udari Range was our home from Wed morn to this afternoon (Fri). They call it “the Camp Virginia Appreciation Program.” Now I know why. No beds, no cots, now showers, no running water, no prepared meals, no desks, no coffee, no separate quarters for male and female, no chow hall, no real teachers to teach (although we did have class) and worst of all, no Starbucks. You take class in plastic chairs that you stack up at night and push to the side and sleep on the floor, all 40 members of your new unit, men and women, snoring machines and whiners, all in one room with lights out at 8pm, back on at 4am. I think I got a total of 4 hours sleep all together for both nights there. All meals were MRE’s taken sitting on the sand under whatever shade could be found, mixed with sand blown around and into your food, your mouth, your eyes and your nose. Most of us cheated during a sand storm and ate inside and I had snuck in a supply of power bars and Wheat Thins. Class was instructed by a “non-educator,” if you catch my drift, and if you nod off, you walk to the back of the class and stand. It wasn’t long before most of the class was standing. Thursday was a full day of a morning shoot and afternoon rehearsal, interrupted by some more class time and MRE consumption. Toilets were por-a-pots around a sand berm. Water was cool when you got it, but warmed up fast. MRE’s were always warm, which was usually a good thing. I liked the Veg. manicotti, the Cheese Tortellini and the Chicken Fajita best. When I started saying “this is GOOD!” I knew my standards had officially bottomed out and they’d finally broke me of all proper sense of judgment. I’ve become indoctrinated into the Army, finally ready to be a warrior. Hua! If I seem like I’m complaining a lot, I don’t mean to. I do like what I’m doing. Don’t get me wrong, it’s hard for me, but not a BAD hard. I like hard work – it makes me more satisfied with life. And this is hard, so I’m pretty satisfied. But I feel like a better, more well- rounded person for doing it, and I feel a camaraderie with every other person that we see here. It seems that no one gets to enter the region as a fighter without this training; it’s like the pledging of a fraternity. Our final “heavy” training is Sunday, more training on emergency egress from a flipped vehicle. Udari shooting was the best yet. We got to shoot several types of scenarios: on the run, while waking toward and walking in front of a target in line – pretty dangerous for a novice, so I felt pretty special that they trusted us to not shoot each other. Udari Convoy Training was very cool – mock villages and mock insurgents with some real reinactors mixed in. Some threw rocks, some set off IED’s, most were just placed their to draw our attention from the road. And along we trudged, sometimes off roading and sometimes facing the challenge head on. Yesterday we practiced “slick” (no armor), then this morning was “heavy” with blanks in our gunner’s rifle. We learned a lot and while it’s likely we’ll seldom, if ever even be IN a convoy, if we are, we know what to look for and do. It was verified that the temp. did rise to 130 yesterday. Imagine a hair drying blowing in your face feeling cooler than the air around it. Or think of that flow of hot air that hits you in the face when you open a hot oven. It’s like that when there’s a breeze, and when there’s not, it feels like the air over a toaster. No trees can survive in this environment, at least I’m yet to see one. Not one. Not a bush, not a blade of grass. The only green is the limpy broccoli in the chow hall. Yesterday it was 120 by 8am and dropped only to around 90’s last night – not all that cool. As they say, Hell is 20 degrees cooler than Udari. Nothing lives around here. No vegitation, no animals… we see occasional birds and some flying bugs but I have no idea what they survive on. One of our guys said he saw a dung bettle scurry by at Udari, but no green, and the sky is never blue. Instead, it’s a grayish tan that seems to be the result of the blowing tan sand. This is an oppressive ecosystem that is just unforgiving. I’m glad we have it so good on our base in Kuwait, and also where I’m going.

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Jun 12, 2009 11:04am
Jen took a video snap shot while skyping Dave today.  He was hanging infront of Starbucks.

Jen took a video snap shot while skyping Dave today.  He was hanging infront of Starbucks.

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Jun 10, 2009 9:33pm
Dave in a sand storm on Camp Virginia, Kuwait

Dave in a sand storm on Camp Virginia, Kuwait

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Jun 10, 2009 9:21pm
Sand storm on Camp Virginia, Kuwait

Sand storm on Camp Virginia, Kuwait

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Jun 9, 2009 7:00pm

Day 2: Jacoby Update #10

Jun 9th, 2009 6:00am

Not a lot of sleep last night, and I pretty much just gave up by 0500, and decided to walk around and type up a new entry.

Today is Day #2 in Kuwait. Yesterday when we landed it was stupid o’clock in the morning on Monday. After what seemed like a week, it was around 30 hours of air time in three pieces, interrupted by 13 hours in Germany, about two hours in Iceland and less than an hour in Canada. That, plus the hour on the tarmac in Kuwait while they tested us all for Swine Flu before deboarding, and the several hours in the hanger in Columbia prior to taking off, plus the several hours in busses to Columbia and from Kuwait City to our next training center make the total transit time damn close to 50 hours. So, needless to say we were pretty exhausted when we arrived at Camp Virginia. With a break on the way to the base for some water and to give the smokers a chance to work on their lungs, we took the bus ride in darkness, windows with the required curtains drawn shut. When we arrived, it was clearly day time, but the sky lacked sunshine, just a dusty haze that seems to linger all day long. When they say it’s going to be “sunny” here, they don’t mean a pretty blue sky with wisps of clouds, they mean a dull, gray glary haze that refuses to be bright enough for sun glasses but so harsh on the eyes you have to put them on anyway. It’s like that drizzle in the car that you use your intermittent wipers on, but just can’t seem to find the right speed to clear the windshield while still avoiding the screech of the blades on glass. That’s the sun here, a screeching occluded windshield, a blinding haze that I doubt I’ll ever get used to.

The heat is something else all together. When we landed it was quite pleasant, but for 0400 it was clearly warm. In the upper 80s and with a breeze, it was easy to enjoy the morning, but as the day wore on, the temp climbed into the 100s, likely peaking at around 110 degrees. I’ve learned what it feels like to be a lobster slowly cooking in a pot of tepid water warmed slowly until the heat consumes it. It’s a dry heat, so you don’t really sweat, or if you do, it evaporates as you walk through the air. But the dry heat wreaks havoc on your sinuses, and the relief from the heat is air conditioning, no better on the sinuses and a recipe for a stuffed up nose and heavy, heavy snoring.

Our tent is a 25-man tent that comfortably sleeps the nine of us, leaving room for maybe one of two more people. The  number 25 must be for midgets or something, for no 25 normal sized men could possibly fit. We do have AC in the tent, but since it only cools around 20 degrees below the outside temperature, it means it’s 90 degrees during the day, not real conducive for sleeping or even just “being.” We sleep on cots, not the best for your back, but not totally devoid of comfort. Bathrooms are the latrines, two types here at Camp Virginia. Portapoties, dot the landscape, which may seem like a gross way to relieve yourself, but they are surprisingly clean and devoid of stink. In fact, I’ve never experienced such a clean portapot. (totally unlike at Ft. Jackson, where the stand-alones were so disgusting that you could smell the stench as you drove of the road toward them, and woe-betide the day you’re trying to shoot down-wind; YUK!). The other kind of latrine they call a Cadillac, with running water and porcelain sinks and toilets. They have them outside our sleeping tents. A short walk down the road and you get to the showers, also surprisingly pleasant. They are essentially containers with around a dozen individual showers with GREAT pressure, plenty of hot water (not all that desired here) and sinks for shaving. Getting around reminds me of camping, especially the showering. After getting completely clean you walk back in your sandals only to dirty your newly cleaned feet. The roads are hard, packed stone, but everywhere else is like walking on the beach. Sun and sand, but no surf.

Believe it or not, I’m typing this from a Starbucks. Yes, they have an SB with windows and cushy chairs, in eye sight of the PX, Taco Bell, a Pizza Place and several other food establishments, right down the street from other American crutches like MacDonald’s. They really do try to take good care of you here. I’m off to chow at one the nicest dining facilities I’ve ever experienced on a base.   

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