In Baghdad, Camp Victory packs up

2012-03-30 04:56:51

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CAMP VICTORY, Iraq -- An unlikely quiet hangs over Camp Victory these days, broken only by a rare blast of rocket fire.

This base -- the headquarters of the U.S. military in Iraq -- was once a city unto itself, teeming with 46,000 troops and four-star generals plotting their next moves from Saddam Hussein's old palaces.

In a few short months, the American military presence will be history; the tanks, weapons, computers and personnel all shipped out; the gates locked and the keys turned over to the Iraqi government.

Already, only 24,000 troops remain on the base, and the amenities that once made this the most American of outposts in Iraq -- the Cinnabon, Subway and Burger King kiosks, as well as the PXs that sold everything from microwaves to thong underwear -- are rapidly closing.

A sign tacked up recently in the restroom near one of the last remaining mess halls reads, "Due to the drawdown the maid has been fired. Therefore clean up after yourself!!"

"This whole place is becoming a ghost town," said Lt. Col. Sean Wilson, a public affairs officer for the Army, who lives on base. "You get the feeling you're the last person on Earth."

Like so many before them, several of the troops charged with the historic task of shutting down Camp Victory are just marking their time before their tour ends and they ship out. Others, however, are keenly aware of their role in this, the finale of the U.S. occupation here.

Brig. Gen. Bradley Becker is a deputy commanding general for support for the Army's 25th Infantry Division, which will be the last division headquarters left in Iraq by October. He is overseeing the closure from his office on the base, tracking the details on a dry-erase board on which the rapidly waning days are ticked off. The military has gone from 505 bases at the height of its troop strength in Iraq, in 2008, to 47, and Camp Victory is slated to close even if the Obama administration wins backing for a plan to keep a few thousand U.S. troops in the country beyond the end of the year.


First Published September 18, 2011 12:00 am
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