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Reserve US marines drill for frontlines of Afghanistan

Karzai inaugurates Afghan peace council
Kabul (AFP) Oct 7, 2010 - Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Thursday inaugurated a peace council appointed to broker peace with the Taliban and other insurgents fighting for nine years against his administration. "Dear elders, today's meeting is the inaugural meeting of our High Peace Council," Karzai told the start of the opening session at his heavily-fortified palace in the Afghan capital, to which journalists were invited. On Thursday, the conflict in Afghanistan moved into a 10th year by marking the ninth anniversary since US-led operations began in Afghanistan after the Taliban refused to surrender Al-Qaeda leaders over the September 11 attacks. "Every province, every district and every village are awaiting the High Peace Council efforts... that under your efforts, peace be established in this land," said Karzai, renewing his call on the Taliban to come to the table. "To the opposition, be they the Taliban or anyone who wants to serve his country, we call on them to take the opportunity and respond to this effort and help bring peace to this country," he said.
by Staff Writers
Red Bank, New Jersey (AFP) Oct 7, 2010
On an open field in this suburb of New York City, scores of men in military fatigues are put through their combat paces, hurling fake grenades and dodging imaginary bullets.

A few short weeks earlier, they were still employed in their day jobs as police officers, students, firefighters and other civilian pursuits far removed from the field of battle.

Virtually overnight, however, they have been transformed into the fighting men and women of the US Marines, mere weeks from deployment to one of the world's fiercest war zone, in the mountains of Afghanistan.

The men, all reservists, are part of a group that has become of central importance to recent US war efforts, first in Iraq and now in Afghanistan.

The day of drilling here in Red Bank, New Jersey, about an hour south of New York City, is to determine what kind of physical shape they're in as they prepare to go off to war.

Before long the men, part of the fourth logistical Marine Reserves group, will brave gunfire and suicide bomb attacks driving armored trucks and tanks along the lawless Afghan roads.

"It's difficult and dangerous," said Colonel Michael Melso.

"These guys are without any doubt going to be on the frontlines of the war."

There are some 100,000 marine reservists who take part in training at Red Bank and nearly 200 other marine centers dotted across the United States.

These reservists, who will be mobilized for one year, will take up their training in earnest on November 1 in North Carolina.

The Pentagon has reinforced their vehicles to protect them against the deadly roadside bombs that have caused most of the deaths and injuries to NATO soldiers in Afghanistan.

Still, Corporal Julian Handler said he is still haunted by fear at the prospect of his impending mission there

"I know that the enemy is smarter than he appears to be," said the 20-year old former clothes salesman, who quit his job when he was told to report for duty.

He said he has been preparing himself, mentally and emotionally, for meeting the enemy.

"I think about the IEDs (improvised explosive devices) every day. I spend a lot of time on Youtube, watching videos of IEDs attacks, I speak with Marines who were there," he said.

Before the September 11 terror attacks, military reservists in the United States were known, somewhat derisively, "weekend warriors."

In contrast to active duty soldiers who are deployed full-time, reservists were obligated to suit up in battle fatigues for just one weekend per month for training and drills.

They also were required to take part in two continuous weeks of more extensive training each year.

But the world has changed dramatically since the 2001 attacks.

The mission of the reserve force is to augment the numbers of active troops at time of war or national emergency, and the Pentagon leans heavily on reservists to meet deployments of tens of thousands of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Not only have the reservists been dispatched to the field of battle for months at a time, but many have had repeat deployments, returning twice or even three times.

"Nowadays, if you are a marine -- reserve or active duty -- you're going to deploy. You know that before you sign," said Daniel Solares, 23, one of the reserve marines at Red Bank.

Strict federal laws guarantee that their jobs will still be waiting for reservists upon their return to civilian life, although that has been easier to safeguard in some professions than others.

"For me, it's rather simple, because I'm NYPD. We have a lot of Marines, and a lot of reserve. They're used to it," Solares said.

The New York police officer, whose family hails from Cuba, said he signed up with the marines in order "to give back to this country."

He confessed that he knows next to nothing about the conflict-ridden land where he will likely spend the next several months.

"Afghanistan? I don't know much about the country or the enemy. I know it's going to be more dangerous than Iraq," he said, adding that he was reassured that "we're going to have a lot of training," before deploying.

That training entails four months spent whipping their bodies into shape so that they will be up to speed when deployed alongside active duty soldiers for seven months in Afghanistan.

Like most marines, Oswaldo Espinoza, 25, also confessed ignorance about Afghanistan, but said he is ready to take up the fight there.

"I know Al-Qaeda is working over there," the native of Ecuador said.

"We know that because of our background, they are afraid of the Marines."



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