If it's wrong, I've probably said it...
Operation Uphold Democracy - 95
Published on October 16, 2004 By chiprj In Blogging
Sooner or later, geocities is going to figure out I'm only storing pics on their site so I can direct link to them here... and then, I'll have to find a new place to store images... maybe by then, JU will be open for the subscription service and I'll be able to upload them here...

Well, here is a picture of me from Haiti. I spent a little over 3 months there (Jan-Apr 95). It wasn't a very productive place to send a team of Korean linguists, but neither is Iraq/Afghanistan. The Army sends you where it needs you because you're still a Soldier first, and can perform other jobs. Overall, it was a great deployment, though. I learned a lot and the team I went with was pretty cool (well, most of the guys).

These pictures are all from Feb 95. We spent the entire month at a remote site about 10 km from the nearest US camp. Was kind of tense at times. The first night we were there, we heard gunfire about 5 minutes after we turned in. Spent about 2 hours pulling 100% security. We quickly figured out it wasn't at/for us, but we remained alert just in case. That became a regular thing while we were there. But, that is all the stuff of other blog articles that will someday be posted...

This first pic was just me with my rifle. Soldiers do this sort of pic thing on deployments. It's KEWL. No really, it is...


Next are two pics of our team. We were often bored between missions, so we'd do the normal, everyday deployment things. Watch videos (we had a small TV, VCR, and generator that the unit let us use), drink near-beer, write letters, talk, look at girly mags, burn shit (no really, we didn't have a toilet, we went in plastic bags and tossed them over the side of the building to a pit we built and did a daily burn), and take Hooah! pictures.

This first one was the day before we left. We thought we'd take a tough guy Hooah! pic. Most of us were wearing the free sunglasses that came out of the old leftover Desert Shield/Storm care packs that also came with candy that tasted like the laundry soap it was packed with.



This one was another we took shortly before we left. We had a number of antennae on our rooftop. One of us got it into our mind to do a version of the Marines raising the flag on Iwo Jima. Like I said, we had a lot of time on our hands and that can be pretty dangerous for a group of MI professionals!


Next time on chiprj's Hooah! pics -- Korea!

Comments (Page 2)
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on Oct 18, 2004
Yeah, we rarely wore all of our gear. Mostly we wore it going on and off the main base camp on during the convoy to and from. Otherwise, unless we were up at night standing security up due to gunshots we heard or actively on guard duty, we didn't wear our gear. Even on guard duty, we usually just had the LBE hung over the chair inside the sandbagged area and our kevlar on the sandbags in front of us. Our team leader was a good tactical leader and recognized that we weren't in an overly dangerous area. We could see the road that approached our area for a good distance in both directions and we made friends with most of the villagers early on. We did make a point of having our rifles within arms reach at all times with a loaded magazine in the well, but that never seemed to frighten the Haitians. I think they knew we weren't allowed to shoot at them unless we were in immediate physical danger. But pepper spray was a whole different thing. They gave you a wide berth if you had even a keychain size bottle. They knew we were allowed to use that as we wanted.
on Oct 18, 2004

They knew we were allowed to use that as we wanted.


I have some soldiers who could use a dose.

on Oct 18, 2004
I have some soldiers who could use a dose.


HAHAHA! We spent the first month with a SOT-A team from some group or another... They had the big family sized cans of pepper spray with a pistol grip on them. P-Ro and Boyd (remember him from DLI?) were messing around with one and Boyd sprayed himself! Didn't realize that if he pulled the trigger the entire can would empty. He did the kickin' chicken for about 15 minutes and wasn't normal (really, was he ever normal?) for over an hour. He later likened it to swallowing a duck... whole.
on Oct 19, 2004
Hey, how come nobody smiles in these pictures???
on Oct 19, 2004

(theres just something about a man in uniform...grins)


Oooh, yeah......and I married one! Hahahahahahah!


Nice pics, Chip.  Can't wait to see the ones from Korea!


BTW, I do the same thing with MSN....hehehe.  I won't tell if you don't....

on Oct 19, 2004
Hey, how come nobody smiles in these pictures???


We're only so happy to be there...

cus they gotta look all mean and soldierly!


That's right!

Nice pics, Chip. Can't wait to see the ones from Korea!


Then check this out... )Hooah! Pics From Korea
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