After a long day searching homes in suffocating Iraqi heat, Lance Cpl. Mike Young saw a most surprising source of relief - a sprawling Wal-Mart had appeared in the distance.
"No joke - looking through the haze I thought I saw a Wal-Mart. I said to myself, 'I bet they got some cold water in there,'" Young said, recalling a mission last year in a rural area west of Baghdad.
He contemplated running over to fetch water for fellow Marines who were "staggering like dead men." Three of them had collapsed in the heat.
Young soon stirred from his heat-induced hallucination and returned to the struggle of enduring summertime in Iraq.
Daytime temperatures in the Iraqi summer usually range from a low of about 105 degrees Fahrenheit to about 125. Though most bases have added air conditioning, grunts must still venture out to man their posts or patrol steaming streets under an unrelenting sun.
"It's been hotter and hotter than I ever thought I'd be in my life," said Cpl. Eduardo Warren, 20, of Turner, Maine, sweating even as he left for a night mission. "We still get it done."
Besides making conditions miserable for troops, the heat also changes the war itself. Marines in some areas say they patrol less during the hottest hours because fewer insurgents also venture out, creating a siesta cease-fire. But temperatures at night can hover over 100 degrees.
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Monday, August 07, 2006
George Bush And PNAC Suffered From Similar Hallucinations RE: Iraq
From the Houston Chronicle:
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