FORT
BRAGG, N.C. (AP) — Hundreds of U.S. soldiers deployed Saturday from
Fort Bragg, North Carolina, to Kuwait to serve as reinforcements in the
Middle East amid rising tensions following the U.S. killing of a top
Iranian general.
Lt.
Col. Mike Burns, a spokesman for the 82nd Airborne Division, told The
Associated Press 3,500 members of the division’s quick-deployment
brigade, known officially as its Immediate Response Force, will have
deployed within a few days. The most recent group of service members to
deploy will join about 700 who left earlier in the week, Burns said.
A
loading ramp at Fort Bragg was filled Saturday morning with combat gear
and restless soldiers. Some tried to grab a last-minute nap on wooden
benches. Reporters saw others filing onto buses.
The
additional troop deployments reflect concerns about potential Iranian
retaliatory action in the volatile aftermath of Friday’s drone strike
that killed Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s elite Quds Force who has been blamed for attacks on U.S. troops and American allies going back decades.
President
Donald Trump ordered the airstrike near Baghdad’s international
airport. Iran has vowed retribution, raising fears of an all-out war,
but it’s unclear how or when a response might come.
Reporters
weren’t able to interview the soldiers leaving Fort Bragg on Saturday,
but an airman loading one of the cargo planes told an Army cameraman he
was making New Year’s plans when he got a call to help load up the
soldiers, according to video footage released by the military.
“We’re
responsible for loading the cargo. Almost our whole squadron got
alerted. Like a bunch of planes are coming over here,” the unnamed
airman said. “I was getting ready to go out for New Year’s when they
called me.”
In
the gray early morning light Saturday, Army video showed soldiers
dressed in camouflage fatigues filing into planes, carrying rucksacks
and rifles. Humvees were rolled onto another cargo plane and chained in
place for the flight to the Middle East.
Burns
said the soldiers within the Immediate Response Force train constantly
to be ready to respond quickly to crises abroad. When called by their
superiors, they have two hours to get to base with their gear and must
maintain a state of readiness so that they can be in the air headed to
their next location within 18 hours.
“So
whether they were on leave, whether they were home drinking a beer,
whether they were, you know, hanging out, throwing the kids up in the
yard, you get the call and it’s time to go,” he said.
He said that soldiers typically keep individual “go-bags” of their personal gear with them at their living quarters.
The
wife of a member of the 82nd Airborne who deployed earlier this week
said his departure was so abrupt she didn’t have the chance to say
goodbye in person or by phone.
April
Shumard said she was at work on New Year’s Eve and he was watching
their five children when he texted her that he had to rush to base. He
wasn’t sure if it was a drill or a deployment. She said her husband has
been in the military since 2010 and has already deployed twice to
Afghanistan. But with those prior deployments, the family had much more
time to prepare and say goodbye. This time, she got a second message
confirming he was leaving, and he departed in a plane on the afternoon
of New Year’s Day.
“The
kids kept going, ‘When’s Dad going to be home?’” said Shumard, 42.
“It’s literally thrown me for a loop. And him as well. He’s still in
disbelief of where he’s gone. Our heads are spun.”
She
said that Fayetteville is a tight-knit community, and she expects
people to work together to support families who are suddenly missing a
parent.
“This
was so last-minute,” she said, urging people to reach out to 82nd
Airborne families. “Just try to help out whoever you know who might need
some babysitting or help or just get some groceries and bring it to
their house.”
Similarly,
Bri’anna Ferry’s husband got the call on New Year’s Eve, and she said
he was on a plane to the Middle East within hours. She fears he could
miss milestones with their young daughter but also wants him to focus on
his mission.
“I told him, don’t worry about us. We’ll be fine,” she said. “Focus on your mission.”
___
Drew reported from Durham, North Carolina.
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