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Edited by Noah Shachtman | Contact

Detonation

The truck exploded only a couple of hours ago. But, already, the wreckage looks ancient, like a ship dredged to the surface after a century on the ocean floor. Everything inside the cab is shredded. The dashboard has been thrown loose, and singed black. The seats are atomized. The odometer sits on the ground, not far from where the driver’s door used to be.

truck_blast1a.jpgThe orange Mercedes was part of a long line of cement trucks, waiting to deliver their goods to Camp Victory when the base opened for commercial traffic at eight. Then, a pair of the trucks exploded -- a botched attempt, apparently, to detonate suicide bombs inside of the base. Two men are dead. One of the attackers has been captured.

Military investigators are still trying to piece together exactly what happened. The bombs might have been thrown into the trucks by a car passing by; the jury-rigged weapons might have already been in hand.

I try to pay attention to the conflicting theories, to the line of men waiting to be questioned. But I keep staring at the scraps of freshly-ended lives that are quickly turning into artifacts under the blazing Mesopotamian sun. The driver must have been wearing the black sandals which now lie in front of the truck. Maybe he had some pita with his breakfast; a crust now sits near the shoes. Before he died, he might have read from the crinkled, torn Koran resting a few feet away. Or he could have listened to a cassette; strands of audio tape are strewn all over the wreckage.

truck_blast3.jpgBack on the base, I wonder how much of this to put in public, to share with my family and my fiancée. I want to record what I see; I don’t want to worry the people I love.

It’s a dilemma soldiers here cope with every day. They crave their families’ support; they’re crippled by their concern. Most of the troops I’ve spoken to choose the keep their loved ones in the dark. “I tell ‘em all that CNN is full of shit and that nothing’s going on here,” one national guardsman says. “We don’t get shot at. We haven’t seen anyone who’s unfriendly. They think that I have a desk job, that I never go outside the wire” – Camp Victory’s concrete walls.

But letting CNN write your letters home can only fuel the worry. “Every time a bomb goes off in Baghdad, I get e-mails asking, ‘Are you alright? Are you alright?’” an officer here sighs.

Because the networks aren’t very good at conveying the subtle shades of danger in a place like this. Either they lead, big, with a new act of carnage – or they bury the news from here at the end of the broadcast. That leaves the impression that all of Iraq is in flames, all of the time. Which is just plain wrong.

truck_blast5.jpgHere around Camp Victory, for example, the last week has been a relatively quiet one. Iraqi army and police patrols have grown noticeably since I’ve been here. Smiles outnumber hard stares 100 to 1. And when there has been violence, it has been relatively small-scale – like the single RPG shot fired in my general direction the other night.

So I’m going to keep writing what I see, for the few days I have left here. Painting events in muted colors, instead of TV’s garish brights. And capturing my experience in Iraq, before it becomes twisted fragments on history’s road.

Latest Comments

Good article I like the part about we're all good here nothing going on. it brings back thoughts of when the mortars were falling around 1am and the zappers were scurrying around the flight line trying to plant satchel charges in our choppers. we were writing to our loved ones saying the same thing. or when the news reported on afrts that we were going to go into cambodia and we had already been there for a week. news from the front is best sent a week late and berift of the excitement ment to titalate the ones not there doing the job. good luck brother keep it safe.

Posted by: Roger at July 31, 2005 12:12 PM


The war will be won we can see that n believe that i sometimes get so encouraged by those heros in Irag while watching them on cnn here in Kenya those guys need our prayers always i even at one point tried joining the British Army due to their good work too though was'nt successful nway we can clearly see a good job being done keep it up!! Guys!

Posted by: Michael Mureithi Nguyo at July 30, 2005 10:37 AM


All of you are in my prayers. I am grateful for the efforts you have made to keep the rest of us safe. God bless all of you and may he bring you home safely soon.

Posted by: Melinda at July 29, 2005 5:02 PM


Keep up the good work. You guys have all our support. Dont listen to the CNN and liberal bull-crap. The American Patriots..the REAL Americans...know the REAL story. Head down...keep that powder dry. Stay safe and come home to us. God Bless you all!

Posted by: Major D at July 28, 2005 11:52 PM


You always hear about all the bad things that they say we are doing to the people of Iraq, but they (the media) never really portray the evil that insurgents are inflicting on our people. Thank you for keeping it real and telling it straight. And thanks to all my fellow soldiers for all their doing.

Posted by: Kurt at July 28, 2005 7:14 PM


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