James included these pictures when he sent back the interview. Included is the tent and space that he shares with 70 other soldiers. Also included pictures of remnant of the Iraqi invasion 20 years ago. James was in the service during Desert Storm in an airborne division, but popped both ankles on his last jump before the deployment and ending up supporting the troops at home. This is his first at war deployment in his career, but he served in Bosnia in 2001.
History interview with James Cambron from Kuwait.
1. How long have you been in the service? What is your rank?
a. I have been in the service a little over 14 years total; I am a Chief Warrant Officer 2
2. Walk us through the preparation you and your unit has gone through.
a. We began by going through a Soldier Readiness Process which evaluates your individual physical capability for deployment, as well as meeting military personnel documentation qualifications. After that, the unit is required to go through training that is relevant to the type of mission that they are expected to perform. Also, the unit must ensure they have the right personnel to fill the positions of the mission. Sometimes that means sending soldiers to learn new job skills at various military schools prior to the deployment. Then the unit is mobilized and goes through an evaluation process prior to actually deploying into the mission to ensure their capability to perform at an acceptable level of proficiency.
3. How long is your tour?
a. A little over a year total.
4. What was the schedule from the time you learned of the deployment until you were actually deployed?
a. Well, the unit was informed 2 years prior to mobilization. This is actually very unusual to have that much lead time. This allowed the unit to build the team they wanted without time pressure. It allowed for the first year to be spent on individual soldier schools to meet the anticipated mission requirement, and the second year to focus on the unit training requirements with maximum participation of fully qualified soldiers.
5. What is the waiting like in between places?
a. The waiting is probably worse than the actual mission. Waiting allows soldiers more time to think about other things, and time feels like it is being wasted because you are not able to affect anything during that time. The training aspect keeps your mind busy and focused for a time, but when there is a lull and you are just waiting to go do your job it becomes monotonous.
6. What is the weather like in the different cities you have been so far?
a. The weather in Camp Macgregor, Ft Bliss, El Paso, Texas was mixed. We had a rainy but not too cold period; then a sunny and moderate temperature period; then sunny and warm days with drastic 30-40 degree temperature drops toward evening. Then we came to Kuwait where the first few days were very dreary with rain and cold and fog. Today was the first time we saw the sun since arriving here. I think it lifted everyone’s spirit a little bit.
7. What is it like to be away from your family?
a. It is a challenge to be away because you know that their life is going on and you will not be a part of that time in their life. Your family will face challenges that you will know nothing about that will bring them closer together without you. I as the soldier am also challenged by the fact that I cannot possibly share with my family all the experience of that time in my own life. During deployment there are many emotional ups and downs and difficulties that arise that are shared among the deployed soldier, which creates its own sort of family. The soldiers here sleep on a cot in a tent with no heat, walk outside 50 yards away in 30 something degree weather in the rain to go take a shower that may or may not have hot water, and your only toilet for the foreseeable future is an outside port-o-can that is further away than the shower in the same weather conditions, which you hope they empty today, and yet we worry more about our families at home than we do ourselves most of the time. I was sooo happy they fixed the heater in the tent today by the way. I don’t think any soldier could begin to describe all the things they miss while being away from their families, which is why I also know how much soldiers truly love their families and their country to do what they do.
8. Do you feel nervous or anxious?
a. When I get ready to go out on a mission I do get a bit anxious about what is about to happen, and I think about how I will react in a given situation. I try to think through what I would do if a bad situation was to arise, and that helps me to feel more confident. I also pray.
9. What is the moral like in your unit
a. I think moral is still high, but I think people are really ready to get on with the mission. They have spent so long preparing for this deployment that they just want to get it started so that they can focus on that to make the time go by faster.
10. How many hours will you have to put in while you are there?
a. The thing about deployment is that your day will never truly end. There will always be meetings, there will always be a weapon attached to you, you will always be in the required uniform, and if the alarm sounds for incoming rounds well… so much for the day off. I know that they intend to have shifts, but until we get there we really don’t have a clear picture as to
what our daily routines will be.