• Posted on Wednesday, June 11, 2008
  • email
  • |
  • print
  • |
  • rss

tool name

close
tool goes here

N. Carolina unit's tear-filled return ends tough Iraq tour

Sign up for email newsletters now!

Sign up for email newsletters now!

Never miss a McClatchy story
Comments (0)

ROCKY MOUNT — There have been hundreds of unit homecomings across North Carolina in the past six years, as troops returned from Iraq and Afghanistan. Few, if any, though, were as emotional as the 1132nd Military Police Company's Tuesday.

The 1132nd lost four men in action in three attacks this spring, all in less than a month. More than 20 troops were wounded, some of them badly. The unit's dead accounted for nearly half the state Guard total of nine killed in action in Iraq.

The losses weren't just bad luck. The unit was doing a particularly dangerous job in a bad place at a bad time. It was training Iraqi police officers on the edge of the Baghdad slum called Sadr City, a vast stronghold of the Shiite insurgents loyal to anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. The insurgents waged a campaign of attacks against U.S. forces this spring.

And when they got off the planes that flew them home, the 120 troops were swarmed on the tarmac of Rocky Mount-Wilson Airport by a relieved crowd of nearly 400 people. Most were family and friends. Some were just locals who came out to honor the men and women who had just lived through the deadliest deployment by any North Carolina National Guard company since World War II.

Everywhere, people were bawling and hugging harder than they had ever hugged. Wives, husbands, moms, dads, kids and then soldiers one another.

Pfc. Edward D. Faircloth of Dunn stood and took his hugs, one long crush after another, while clinging to the staff bearing the unit's colors. His mom, Cathy Harrington, clung and cried. Then came men from his own unit, who had themselves just stepped off one of the planes. First to grab him was Sgt. Jerry Davis; then the strapping Sgt. Ben Parrish, his face red, locked onto Faircloth and held him for a long moment. "Doing OK?" was all Parrish could manage between snuffles.

Read the full story at newsobserver.com.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. Obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules.

Comments are displayed newest first. If you would like to read a thread from beginning to end, select "Oldest first" from the drop down menu.

BLOG

Inside Iraq

Written by Iraqi journalists working for McClatchy in Baghdad and outlying provinces.

BLOG

Baghdad Observer

Baghdad Observer is written by McClatchy journalists staffing the Baghdad Bureau.

IRAQ INTELLIGENCE

Q&A: THE THREE TRILLION DOLLAR WAR

For two weeks, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard professor Linda Bilmes, authors of "The Three Trillion Dollar War," fielded questions about the cost of the Iraq war and its impact on the U.S. economy. They're not taking new questions, but they're still posting answers to ones they've already received. Read their responses.

DAILY VIOLENCE REPORT

loading...

Fifth anniversary of the war, 2008

Audio: McClatchy's Iraqi staff talks about the war:
  • Jenan talks about unfulfilled expectations.
  • Haider recalls the deafening bombings.
  • Hussein A. lives a secretive life with fake IDs.
  • Omar is a virtual prisoner because of his name.
  • Nassif is looking for an escape route.
  • Hussein K. had misgivings dating back to 1991's war.
  • Laith watched the invasion of his country from abroad.

CONFRONTING IRAQ

confronting iraq

See our interactive media guide on Iraq.

BLACKWATER

blackwater in iraq

See our timeline and interactive guide to Blackwater's activities in Iraq. Also read stories from McClatchy newspapers on the Blackwater controversy.