Posted by
disguedne on Tuesday, November 04, 2008 2:25:33 PM
U.S. soldiers in Mosul awaited the outcome of Tuesday's
presidential election that will decide the future of their mission in
Iraq, but most of the dining hall TV screens were tuned to sports, not
politics, as they ate breakfast.
Those
who voted had already mailed in their absentee ballots long ago, and
soldiers at Camp Marez in the northern Iraqi city said nothing special
was planned for Election Day.
"We can't stop doing
what we have to do. We got to keep running," said Maj. Gary Dangerfield
of Chicago, spokesman for the 3rd Armored Cavalry
Regiment.
Sgt. James Fowler, 27, of Fresno, Calif.,
praised the Army for encouraging soldiers to vote and helping them with
absentee ballots. He said he voted for Obama but "I am outnumbered
10-to-one, especially among officers" and senior noncommissioned
officers who said they wanted John McCain to
win.
"Everyone is looking forward to McCain," said
Fowler, from the 94th Engineer Battalion. "But I believe it's time for
change and Obama has promised that. At least he has given us a
timeline" for withdrawing from Iraq.
Obama has called
for bringing all combat soldiers home within 16 months. McCain, a
veteran and former Vietnam War prisoner, says the current U.S. strategy
in Iraq is working and has promised to pursue the war until
victory.
For Iraqis, the stakes could not be higher,
though many of them said they did not think U.S. policy would change
dramatically no matter who wins the White House.
"We
hope that the new American president will open a new page with our
country which was suffering along 35 years under former regime and is
still suffering a lot under the occupation," said Baghdad resident
Mohammed al-Tamimi.
"We don't have freedom, we don't
have independence. Our wealth is not under our control. We are not
happy now," he said.
One Iraqi Christian woman who
refused to give her name for security reasons told Associated Press
Television in Baghdad that she was hoping McCain would win because she
fears Obama would withdraw U.S. troops quickly "and make chaos in our
country."
Back in Mosul, Sgt. Anthony Vess, of
Bethlehem, Pa., said "a lot of people are worked up" about the election
"but whoever wins I think the U.S. will be able to bounce back from all
its problems."
Vess, 27, also with the 94th
Engineers, said he thought a lot of younger soldiers supported Obama's
Iraq policy "but we all have an obligation to our Army and our
country."
"This war has taken up a chunk of my life,"
he said. "I consider myself a peacekeeper not a war
fighter."
Sgt. 1st Class Luis Rosedo, a Puerto Rican
serving with the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, said soldiers were too
busy to follow the election as closely as Americans back
home.
"I'd rather be there than here on Election
Day," he said. "It's more exciting than the last one. I haven't
followed the campaign too closely, just watched some TV when I'm here.
I've been too busy."
While Americans voted back home,
Lightning Troop, 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry went to Badoush, a
town on the northern outskirts of Mosul, to observe and help Iraqis
recruit 200 new members of the National Police.
"Some
soldiers are concerned about the election, but we really don't talk
politics very much," said platoon leader 1st Lt. Conrad Brown, a West
Point graduate from Bangor, Maine, speaking at the recruitment site
where recruits were stripped, searched, given health checks and tested
for literacy.
Troop commander Capt. Hunter Bowers of
Hendersonville, Tenn., said he never got to vote because his absentee
ballot was sent to the wrong address.
"There's some
good and bad in both candidates. It's too bad they can't team up and
work together," Bowers said. "Things won't change here between now and
the time we go home. We'll be getting back about the time the new
president is inaugurated."
Another officer, Capt.
Jared Just, said that no matter who wins, "it won't really change the
course of things in Iraq that much."
Minutes before
the unit, in a line of Humvees, reached a checkpoint on a highway en
route back to base a suicide bomber rammed his car into an Iraqi army
truck.
Flames still flared from the wrecked truck and
trails of blood were seen down its left front door. Iraqi police said
four policemen were wounded in the blast, but the bomber was the only
fatality.