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Easter is another holiday away from home and family for Virginia Army National Guard soldiers serving in the Middle East; meanwhile the mission goes on Date published: 3/23/2008
By RUSTY DENNEN CAMP ARIFJAN, Kuwait --For the troops serving in Delta Company with the Virginia Army National Guard, Easter will be much like any other day in the desert: a numbing mixture of routine, long hours and boredom.While families back home go to church and hide decorated eggs in the backyard, soldiers here are manning guard shacks, checking IDs or patrolling in Humvees in perpetual dust and 90-degree heat. More than 300 soldiers assigned to the Fredericksburg Armory have been in Kuwait since last September. "The routine is somewhat different on holidays," said Spc. Brian Britton of Montross, who serves with Delta Company, 3rd Battalion of the 116th Infantry's Second Platoon. Those who are off duty can attend Easter services in nondescript, brown military chapels situated around the base near Kuwait City. In a land where Islam is the state-sanctioned religion and mosques dominate the skyline, Christians are corralled in the confines of military bases--out of sight of the native population. At Christmas, officers relieved some of the men at their posts, Britton says. "And at New Year's, they had a party" at the Morale, Welfare and Recreation center. "Otherwise it's pretty much normal." "Normal" is a matter of perspective for the men and women who spend their days protecting the Seaport of Debarkation and another base known as Camp Patriot on the Persian Gulf. Some are up long before the sun rises above the barren landscape. Others work though the night on lonely outposts where burn-off flares from oil refineries cast a hellish glow. A CRITICAL MISSION Their mission is critical to the coalition war effort. Nearly all of the war material going into Iraq and Afghanistan comes through checkpoints manned by Delta Company. Two other units attached to the Fredericksburg Armory, Headquarters Company and Fox Company, do logistics, security and supply work at the port and Camp Patriot. "A lot of guys look down on this mission" because it's not where the action is in Iraq or Afghanistan, said Spc. Robert Eastwood during a day shift at Delta Company's Hollywood checkpoint. "But I'm all right with it. It's safer and it's an important mission." A fair number of Guard soldiers aren't complaining because they've already done tours in combat zones. Still, they don't let their guard down in Kuwait.
Date published: 3/23/2008
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