Back at the base camp, Walls became hyper-vigilant. He'd fear if he went to
sleep, he would die.
"You start realizing how vulnerable you really are all the time," Walls says.
"You're not safe anywhere in that damn place, and that's a bad feeling. Too many
guys got hurt or killed just walking to chow ... or running to the bathroom, and
they don't come back."
Walls is proud of the work he did as a sniper. He said he killed "upper-tier
insurgents" who would have likely killed or injured other American soldiers if
they had tried to capture them.
He wonders, though, about the future of the Anbar region. The people "will
not be pacified, they will not work with us. I don't ever see it happening," he
says.
Walls says insurgents wear civilian clothes and use women and children as
shields.
"If you're going to fight the enemy, there are two ways to look at it. You
either become just like them, fight them on their own terms or you take the
heavy burden like we're doing it right now and it's going to cost American
lives. It's a hell of a price to pay but if you fight them on their terms,
you're no better than them.
"That's the true dilemma of the soldier right now, to get his sanity and keep
his morals, keep his integrity. And it's hard. It's a ... minute-by-minute
struggle ... over in Iraq."
Children looking for handouts of candy would often approach 1st Lt. Anselm
T.W. Richards and the men in his platoon. The soldiers would oblige them, then
ask for information.
Sometimes, the children would tell them who made bombs and dealt in weapons.
Everybody in town seemed to know the answer.
One day, Richards says, the parents of a 12-year-old boy told him their son
had been beheaded by insurgents because he accepted a soccer ball as a gift from
soldiers.
"We said to the parents, 'You tell us who did it and we will get them.' They
said if we talk to you, they'll kill us as well,'" says Richards, a hedge fund
broker from Philadelphia.
"That's the fear in which these people live. That's probably the biggest
hindrance to them moving forward."
Like Walls, Richards believes no one should be too quick to judge the small
group of Marines being investigated in the Nov. 19 deaths of 24 Iraqi civilians,
including unarmed women and children, following a roadside bomb that killed a
fellow Marine.
"My question is why are people so curious and so eager to find fault with the
Marines or soldiers whose lives are on the line," he says. "Why is it their
behavior that's being questioned, not the behavior of the guy placing the IED,
or the bomb."
He adds: "If it's because children were killed or women, it's understandable,
but you know what, those Marines who are killed are children of someone as
well."
Among the difficulties: Richards says Iraqi insurgents know the U.S. troops
wouldn't fire at a school ¡ª "so they will set up on a school or put a sniper on
the roof of a school."
Richards says the region is safer than it was a year ago, though five of his
men were injured by a roadside bomb just a few weeks before the end of their
deployment. Among other accomplishments, he says his brigade helped expand the
hours of available electricity each day and trained Iraqi police and security
officers.
"I'm optimistic in that I feel like I've done everything that I can do and we
as a group could possibly do," he says.
"Is it enough? I don't know because that area, again this is Ramadi ... it's
just such a grip, the insurgency. For them to think or to see anything else is
so foreign to them."
As much as he hates to admit it, 1st Lt. Michael Green, a Pennsylvania state
employee from Hershey, says he found it hard at times to like the Iraqis.
He was furious to learn some Iraqis blamed the Americans for a suicide bomb
attack that claimed the life of Lt. Col. Michael McLaughlin, the first
Pennsylvania Army National Guard officer to die in combat since World War II.
After a year in Iraq, "It's not that I feel so different about the war," he
says. "I feel different about the Iraqi people because I saw the bad sides along
with the good sides, and before all I saw was potential."
He was so angry that he wanted to shoot some construction workers who had
pretended, he says, not to have seen a vehicle driven by the kidnappers of a
small boy.
He says he wanted to help catch people responsible for bombings and other
violence but that townspeople often didn't want to get involved.
To be successful in Iraq, he says, Americans "need to learn the culture well
enough to get inside it" and convince the people that terrorism is dishonorable
and brings shame on their family.
"They have all the materials they need to be a strong country. What they
probably lack the most is the democratized individuals making decisions
collectively ... It's more of a 'Why should I get involved?'"
Sgt. Thomas Farley turned 58 in Iraq during what he calls his "last military
adventure." His first was in Vietnam, where he was an Army combat photographer
and reporter.
Farley, a father of four, spent 14 years in the active Army before joining
the National Guard in Philadelphia as an enlisted infantryman.
In Iraq, he spent part of his time taking photos for a newsletter.
One shows a smiling Sgt. Michael Egan, 36, with his arm around another
soldier, at Camp Shelby before the unit's deployment. Egan was killed in Iraq by
a roadside bomb.
"Some guys can't even look at the picture," Farley says.
Farley says soldiers live with the fear that if they don't stay alert at all
times, they could get hurt or killed. The Iraqi insurgents, he says, cannot be
underestimated.
"They're very patient. They watch us constantly," Farley says. "They are not
the knuckleheads that some people think they must be."
Farley says the sectarian violence must be resolved in the Sunni Triangle or
Iraq will never been a working country.
"I'm sure it can be done," he says, "but I'm not sure anybody really knows
how to do it yet."