Paul Dunn, a Soldier on Iraq's Front Lines

By mike white, published Sep 13, 2007
Published Content: 212  Total Views: 80,981  Favorited By: 16 CPs
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Just over a year ago, Paul Dunn and other members of his company left behind wives, kids, and jobs in order to do their part in defending our freedom. National Guard members who had volunteered one weekend a month in order to pay for college or to serve their country were now preparing to find themselves at war. Was there anything to prepare them when training exercises were just 24 days a year for the battles they would face when they made Iraq their temporary home?

Having recently crossed the one year threshold, Paul and his band of brothers are surviving the torrent of tribal warfare that there are facing on the ground in one of Iraq's most dangerous regions. They spent their first couple of days getting acclimated before arriving in Baghdad to help secure more of the nation's capital city. With the surge a couple of months away, Paul Dunn's unit was deployed into a fierce section of fighting. With casualties happening everyday Paul was beginning to wonder if returning home to his fiancée and daughter was a realistic option. He had heard the stories of people going home only to get redeployed within weeks of their arrival. It was not about fair it was about winning the war on terror for Paul and others like him who so believe in the mission of America that fighting blind is just a matter of circumstances.

Paul and his unit were repositioned earlier this year for the surge. They left Baghdad in order to provide ready assistance in one of the provinces in Northern Iraq. Their assignment was similar to the one they had performed in Baghdad. Their orders included securing the community and then providing safe and substance to the people of that community. What commanders learned earlier this year was that it was just as important the social mission as the military one in terms of the perception of the war on the ground with the Iraqi people. Even when talking to Paul I got the sense that the humanitarian mission was even more important than the economic and political concerns so many worry about.

Paul Dunn, a Soldier on Iraq's Front Lines
Location:
 USA

Paul Dunn before deployment

Credit: mike white

Copyright: mike white

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