This morning on the train and the subway to work, I did not have my own iPod, so I listened to second-hand music radiating from the ear buds of a 20-something guy on each train. The guy on the Amtrak train to Philadelphia was Hispanic. The guy on the subway was Korean. Otherwise they were identical. They both wore sideways baseball caps, the both wore t-shirts and jeans. The guy on Amtrak wore boots. The guy on the subway wore hightops.
Both had music pounding their ears at enough volume that I could hear it from five rows away. They reminded me of my bunkmate during the first week of pre-deployment training. Then Pvt. 1st Class Eric Ward was 19 and went to sleep listening to metal music loud enough that I could hear it from the top bunk. He fell asleep before me so I would shut it off when I went to sleep. He was already snoring. Eric was the first soldier to leave Iraq. He hurt his knee playing football. After that football was banned for Echo soldiers.
Usually, the Amtrak train is completely quiet, but it is a holiday weekend, so different people ride the train than the usual commuters. The subway is always noisy. I missed my iPod.
If you were wondering, I listen to "Wait Wait Don't Tell Me" and the "Political Scene" from New Yorker magazine. I also listen to "Distillations" produced by my coworkers and my current audiobook is "The Origins of Totalitarianism" by Hannah Arendt.
Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Friday, May 28, 2010
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
The Poo Pond
From today's New York Times "At War" blog, Dexter Filkins on "The Poo Pond" at Kandehar Air Base.
But avoiding the lake-sized pool of human excrement that fills a section of the sprawling American and NATO base known as Kandahar Air Field is something else. Avoid it you cannot. This I discovered recently while visiting the base itself, which occupies a chunk of chaparral just south of the city itself.
I had flown from Kabul to interview a senior officer about some things the military has in the works. Wandering through the base at sunset, I suddenly found myself enveloped by a terrible smell. What on earth? I thought. Did a sewage truck hit an I.E.D.?
Then I saw it.
“The Poo Pond,” as the servicemen affectionately call the place, is an enormous liquid pit for all the human waste at the airfield. That’s not a small amount: The airfield is a small city, with at least 20,000 men and woman at the moment, many of them having only recently just arrived as part of President Obama’s escalation. The pond is perhaps a hundred yards across. Its contents form a kind of brownish bog — a swamp, if you will. The swamp is cordoned off by a single rope and an array of warning signs: “Biohazard: Do Not Enter.” It’s not as if I was planning to!
I stared at the bog for a few moments. Not a trace of life stirred on the surface, not even a mosquito. Out there in the middle sat a decorative fountain, happily spewing and bubbling.
From this smelly sea wafts a never-ending cloud of stench, which sometimes sweeps far and wide across the base. What gives the pond its piquancy is its location. It has not been shunted to some far corner of the airfield — which is miles across, with plenty of open spaces — but rather sits squarely in the middle of the base, among the multitudes. Just across the road are several rows of barracks.
“Wow, who has to live next to that?” I said to two American service members as we drove near the pond in their S.U.V.
The two Americans — one man, one woman — smiled at each other like an old couple.
“We do,” they said in unison.
I looked out toward the pond, breathing through my mouth.
“Do you get used to it after awhile?” I continued naïvely. “Do you get used to the smell?”
“Never,” said the man, who was driving. “Not for a second.”
It should be said that the pond does, apparently, serve as some functions useful beyond the absorption of sewage. Taliban fighters often bombard the place with rockets, which sometimes explode and injure people. During one recent attack, an officer told me, a Taliban rocket struck the pond and disappeared inside.
It hasn’t been heard from since.
Christoph Bangert for The New York Times The view of Kandahar Air Field, one of the largest NATO military bases in Afghanistan. The round-shaped lake in the middle of the base is where raw sewage is treated.
Visiting a city like Kandahar in southern Afghanistan, the subject of human excrement is not something that ordinarily occupies much of your thinking. After all, unlike much of the rest of the country, Kandahar has toilets, even if most of them are just holes in the floor made of porcelain. As a pedestrian, the only issue that would probably prompt any thinking on this subject are the sewers that line Kandahar’s dusty streets; they are the open-air type. You’ve got to take care to avoid them, or you’ll fall in.But avoiding the lake-sized pool of human excrement that fills a section of the sprawling American and NATO base known as Kandahar Air Field is something else. Avoid it you cannot. This I discovered recently while visiting the base itself, which occupies a chunk of chaparral just south of the city itself.
I had flown from Kabul to interview a senior officer about some things the military has in the works. Wandering through the base at sunset, I suddenly found myself enveloped by a terrible smell. What on earth? I thought. Did a sewage truck hit an I.E.D.?
Then I saw it.
“The Poo Pond,” as the servicemen affectionately call the place, is an enormous liquid pit for all the human waste at the airfield. That’s not a small amount: The airfield is a small city, with at least 20,000 men and woman at the moment, many of them having only recently just arrived as part of President Obama’s escalation. The pond is perhaps a hundred yards across. Its contents form a kind of brownish bog — a swamp, if you will. The swamp is cordoned off by a single rope and an array of warning signs: “Biohazard: Do Not Enter.” It’s not as if I was planning to!
I stared at the bog for a few moments. Not a trace of life stirred on the surface, not even a mosquito. Out there in the middle sat a decorative fountain, happily spewing and bubbling.
From this smelly sea wafts a never-ending cloud of stench, which sometimes sweeps far and wide across the base. What gives the pond its piquancy is its location. It has not been shunted to some far corner of the airfield — which is miles across, with plenty of open spaces — but rather sits squarely in the middle of the base, among the multitudes. Just across the road are several rows of barracks.
“Wow, who has to live next to that?” I said to two American service members as we drove near the pond in their S.U.V.
The two Americans — one man, one woman — smiled at each other like an old couple.
“We do,” they said in unison.
I looked out toward the pond, breathing through my mouth.
“Do you get used to it after awhile?” I continued naïvely. “Do you get used to the smell?”
“Never,” said the man, who was driving. “Not for a second.”
It should be said that the pond does, apparently, serve as some functions useful beyond the absorption of sewage. Taliban fighters often bombard the place with rockets, which sometimes explode and injure people. During one recent attack, an officer told me, a Taliban rocket struck the pond and disappeared inside.
It hasn’t been heard from since.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
More Troops in Afghanistan Than Iraq
As of today, there are more US troops in Afghanistan Than Iraq as reported today in the NY Times At War blog. I am glad to hear it. The war is over in Iraq--unless the civil war starts and if it does, it is not our war.
Really good news. The American troops who have to be in the Middle East are moving to where they can do the most good in fighting terrorists.
Really good news. The American troops who have to be in the Middle East are moving to where they can do the most good in fighting terrorists.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
American Chemistry Magazine Published a Story I Wrote
Because it is in a PDF, I cannot post all three pages. If you want to read it, send me an email: ngussman@gmail.com
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Friday, May 21, 2010
WHYY to Teach Soldiers Video Skills
After breakfast with Carl Kassell on Tuesday, I got a tour of the new Learning Lab at WHYY in Philadelphia from Craig Santoro, the project manager. During the tour, Craig and I talked about the possibility of WHYY training soldiers in video skills. In a minute, Craig had a plan for a "Boot Camp" weekend. A full day of shooting, framing shots, and technical instruction with WHYY professional staff. The second day will be video editing and other technical considerations. Craig suggested we bring our own cameras so the training will be on the equipement we will eventually use.
I knew I was going, whether it was an official Army weekend or not. Yesterday, I called Sgt. Matt Jones at the public affairs office on Fort Indiantown Gap. He said that, depending on the schedule, we could certainly use video cameras at the PA office. I called Capt. Ed Shank of the 56th Brigade Combat Team (Stryker). Capt. Shank said he would be attending himself and bring his PA staff.
Tentative dates would be in September or October. It's a great offer. Thanks to Craig, WHYY and the Learning Lab.
I knew I was going, whether it was an official Army weekend or not. Yesterday, I called Sgt. Matt Jones at the public affairs office on Fort Indiantown Gap. He said that, depending on the schedule, we could certainly use video cameras at the PA office. I called Capt. Ed Shank of the 56th Brigade Combat Team (Stryker). Capt. Shank said he would be attending himself and bring his PA staff.
Tentative dates would be in September or October. It's a great offer. Thanks to Craig, WHYY and the Learning Lab.
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