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Memorial Day in Iraq: Sacrifices remembered

American servicemen and women honored their fallen comrades on Memorial Day in Iraq, as the war winds down there.

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Khalid Mohammed/AP
US soldiers salute during a Memorial Day ceremony at Camp Victory in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday.

With heads bowed beneath a palace dome still etched with the initials of Saddam Hussein, dozens of U.S. service members paid tribute Monday to Americans killed in action not only in Iraq, but also in Afghanistan and in wars of the past.

Officers presented a Memorial Day wreath, a bugler played 鈥淭aps鈥 and a lieutenant general spoke about how 鈥渓ittle compares to the loss of a brother in arms.鈥 Soldiers in uniform and contractors in work boots said the nearly 4,400 Americans who鈥檝e died in Iraq since 2003 were not faceless statistics: They were commanders, friends, family.

For some of the troops who gathered at Camp Victory in Baghdad, it was difficult to discuss individual losses, even now that combat deaths have tapered off and the war here is eclipsed by the bloodshed in Afghanistan, where the number of troops killed in action just passed the 1,000 mark.

鈥淚t鈥檚 too personal,鈥 said Air Force Staff Sgt. Bien Covita, 34, of San Jose, Calif., looking away as he declined to discuss the fallen service member on his mind. He added that he wished that Americans would view Memorial Day as 鈥渕ore than just a day off work. We sacrifice every day for them to sleep comfortably.鈥

Other soldiers said they missed the cookouts and camping trips of Memorial Days in the United States. However, they, too, worried that the holiday is losing some of its traditional meaning at a time when thousands of service members are still deployed in the Middle East.

鈥淔or people back home, all they see is a four-day weekend and the official start of summer,鈥 said Sgt. Joseph Castro, 29, of Guam, from C Company, Special Troops Battalion, III Corps, out of Ft. Hood, Texas. This is his third deployment. 鈥淔or us, there are no weekends. Today means more to me; sometimes people have to be reminded.鈥

Speeches at the ceremony never mentioned American contractors, who鈥檝e assumed increased responsibilities with the drawdown of U.S. forces. The Obama administration plans to have just 50,000 troops remaining in Iraq by the end of summer, though the lack of a stable Iraqi government threatens to delay that goal.

At least 463 American and allied contractors have died since 2003, according to the website icasualties.org, which compiles official death announcements.

Kevin Decker, 54, of Colorado Springs, and Paul Woods, 58, of Detroit, said they reflected Monday on the 鈥渂lessing鈥 of staying alive in their perilous jobs as convoy drivers on roads that are still littered with roadside bombs.

鈥淓very time we come up this way, we see improvements: lights, roadside fuel stations, checkpoints,鈥 said Woods, who鈥檚 been in Iraq for a year and a half. 鈥淚t鈥檚 getting better.鈥

"I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 forgotten. I don鈥檛 think it鈥檒l ever be forgotten,鈥 added Decker, who wears a necklace of good luck charms to mark his three years in Iraq.

Army Brig. Gen. Donald Currier of Folsom, Calif., just outside Sacramento, said he remembered each of the 14 soldiers from the National Guard鈥檚 49th Military Police Brigade who died during the last deployment in 2005-06.

Currier鈥檚 eyes grew wet as he mentioned one particularly beloved guardsman: Sgt. 1st Class Isaac S. Lawson of Sacramento, who was killed at age 35 in a roadside bombing in Baghdad. They were close, Currier said, and the anniversary of his death was near: June 5, 2006.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a particularly hard time of year for us,鈥 Currier said.

The brigade hasn鈥檛 suffered combat deaths on this tour, but there鈥檝e been two suicides, which Currier said were reminders of the rigors of deployment even as the war is winding down and the public eye turns to Afghanistan.

鈥淐learly, there鈥檚 an awareness deficit in the U.S. public, and that鈥檚 OK,鈥 Currier said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e bringing this to a close, and our service members have positioned Iraqis to take over. I think the American public should pay more attention to Afghanistan 鈥 it鈥檚 where our soldiers are in harm鈥檚 way.鈥

Currier paused. Soldiers around him tucked into cakes decorated with military insignia. Some snapped photos of themselves near ceremonial wreaths.

鈥淪till, it would be nice if people remembered we鈥檙e still here,鈥 Currier said with a smile.

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