[Mb-civic] Re: 'One Huge US Jail'
Rhaerther at aol.com
Rhaerther at aol.com
Mon Apr 4 20:05:56 PDT 2005
To give an idea as to what conditions are in the Afgan POW camps a St. Pete
Times article from several weeks ago follows. A few days later a letter to
the editor from a WWII POW was printed, in the German POW camp he was interned
in POW's cleaned the latrines. You'll understand why I think the military
should follow that concept instead of paying Halliburton too much money for
the same task after reading this former Halliburton employees' account of
deception and lies.
Richard Haerther
Dirty deal
Copyright Times Publishing Co. Mar 15, 2005
Correction (3/21/05): A March 15 story incorrectly identified where a
Treasure Island man was sent to work. Antony Lineberger, who had signed up to drive
fuel trucks for Halliburton subsidiary KBR, was stationed at Kandahar Air
Field, Afghanistan. About 13,000 other contracted employees and military
personnel live at the base.
On his first day at work, they issued him body armor. They taught him how to
duct-tape his helmet to keep out deadly gas. They told him about pit vipers
and poisonous spiders, warned him about microscopic sand fleas whose bite
could kill him.
They made him choose a code word in case he got captured.
But no one told him about the toilets.
Antony Lineberger left Treasure Island six weeks ago to drive fuel tankers
across Afghanistan. He had been trying to get a job with Halliburton for more
than nine months.
After 14 years of hauling fuel to boats around Tampa Bay, he longed to see
the Middle East, have a little adventure, make some real money, help out his
country.
The 42-year-old registered Libertarian had cut off his waist- length
ponytail, given up his apartment, stored his furniture, sold his share of the family
business and left his old dog with a friend.
He even married a former roommate so someone would get the death benefits if
the worst happened.
On Jan. 23, the St. Petersburg Times ran a story about Lineberger, "Detour
to Danger."
He planned to stay in Afghanistan for at least a year.
Camp Stronghold Freedom is a U.S. military base in Kandahar, Afghanistan. A
former Taliban outpost, it is now a tent city occupied by 3,000 people,
mostly American soldiers and the workers who support them. KBR, a Halliburton
subsidiary, has shipped hundreds of employees to the 8 square miles of sand.
While American troops flush out insurgents, KBR workers cook the soldiers'
meals, wash their uniforms and transport whatever they need.
Lineberger had signed up to be a heavy truck driver, ferrying gas between
military bases. He agreed to work 12-hour days, seven-day weeks. He figured he
could make $85,000 a year, about four times what he earned in Florida.
He knew it would be hard. He thought he could hack it.
He arrived in Kandahar with seven other civilian recruits on Saturday, Jan.
29, one of the coldest days anyone can remember. The 30 mph winds sliced
through his new orange parka, slapped sand against his tan face. He shielded his
eyes and shouldered his sleeping bag, following the others out of the supply
shed.
The roads were rocks. The air was brown. Fine sand, like baby powder, blew
in thick clouds. "So dusty I can only compare it to living inside a vacuum
cleaner bag," Lineberger e-mailed his sister. "My eight-man tent leaks so much
wind you could fly a freaking kite in it."
The smell, he said, was the worst part. The guys who had been there a while
had a name for it. "Feces breeze."
It wafts in off the lake.
On his second day at work, they showed him his bunker. A cargo container,
buried in the sand, rimmed with sand bags and what looked like worn mattresses.
"Don't worry," they told him, "we only get rocket attacks here every six
months."
They told him he would be working the overnight shift: 5 p.m. to 5 a.m. He
showed up for his shift a half-hour early. He wanted to check out his truck,
look at his map and learn his route. He found his name on the list, under
Services Department. "Antony Lineberger: Driver - SST."
He didn't know what that meant, so the guys who had been there for a while
enlightened him. SST: S-- Sucking Truck.
More than 400 portable toilets rim Camp Stronghold Freedom. Every night, two
1,000-gallon tankers drive around, sucking out the waste. Then, two men have
to hose down the toilets and restock the toilet paper.
Before that night, Lineberger had never even been inside a portable toilet.
At RibFest, in St. Pete, he used to hike a mile to find a proper bathroom.
Now here he was, wearing yellow dishwashing gloves and goggles, trying to
keep the waste from splashing his face.
And since he was the new guy, Lineberger had an extra responsibility. He was
supposed to drop in the urinal cakes.
That was a treat compared to what they flung at him the next night.
On his third day at work, they took him to the brown lake. The honey dippers
unload there, pumping their waste into a sand pit the size of a football
field. Except for the urinal cakes, no one chemically treats the liquid.
He told them he was supposed to be driving fuel tankers. That's what he
signed up for. His recruiter had promised.
Well, see, said the guys who had been there a while, those recruiters aren't
really a part of Halliburton, or even KBR. They're just headhunters, paid by
the number of people they enlist. Nobody in Afghanistan has to honor their
promises.
Didn't Lineberger read Page One, Section One, of the Foreign Service
Employment Agreement?
Yes, he said. He was sure he had. He had read a 3-inch binder full of
information, signed dozens of forms.
"You agree to perform services of the job classification shown," the first
paragraph states, "and other services within your capability as requested by
Employer."
Camp Stronghold Freedom didn't need any fuel truck drivers just then. What
we need, they told Lineberger, is laborers.
They were laughing.
"Tonight," they informed him, "we're taking you on another route."
The tanker truck bumped around the rocky rim of the base, past the PX, by
the portable Wendy's, behind the mess hall where 100 men were shivering,
waiting in line for dinner.
Lineberger watched a bombed-out building slide by the passenger door. He saw
more metal shipping containers, bigger bunkers. He had never been to this
part of the encampment before.
A half-mile past the last lines of tents, rows of barbed wire fencing
appeared, rolling across the desert. The truck stopped outside a chained gate. "You
go on inside," Lineberger said the guys told him. "We'll hand you the hose."
Bewildered, Lineberger climbed out of the tanker. A military police officer
appeared and unlocked a tall gate. He stepped aside so Lineberger could slide
through with the hose. Lineberger followed the guard along the fence,
through another locked door.
When the guard opened the enclosure, dozens of dark eyes swiveled to stare.
A room full of bearded men in orange jumpsuits were squatting on the floor,
scowling.
This was a Taliban POW camp. More than 60 prisoners are held at Camp
Stronghold Freedom.
For every two dozen men, there is a portable toilet. But no one uses it.
Out of protest, out of custom, out of disrespect for their captors - for
whatever reason - the Taliban men refuse to sit on the camp toilets. "They squat
over them and miss the hole with about half of it," Lineberger e-mailed his
sister.
Six inches of human waste was caked around the seat, smeared on the bowl and
walls. Lineberger stood there, pointing his hose at it, trying not to puke.
"After I would suck it, I had to spray it and would get covered in poop," he
e-mailed his sister. "After the first time I did it, I was in shock and
didn't talk the rest of the night. Didn't eat after that either.
"It was like being on Fear Factor for a 12-hour shift, 7 days a week."
Or it would have been, if he had lasted that long.
On his fourth day at work, he went to Human Resources and begged for another
job. Any job. "I came here to drive," he said again.
They told him to be patient. Check the postings on the bulletin board; new
slots are opening every day. Maybe when a driver goes on vacation, we can use
you, they told him.
Lineberger asked around. No truck drivers were due to head home for months.
"I started going into shock. I got shaky and sweaty," he said.
In Iraq and other war zones, Halliburton hires local workers to do service
jobs, like cleaning the bathrooms. But Afghanistan is too unstable; no one is
sure whom to trust. So the dirty work goes to whoever is available.
"We operate in a war zone where things are constantly changing, so KBR
cannot guarantee that an employee will perform the duties for which they were
originally hired," KBR spokeswoman Jennifer Dellinger said in an e-mail to the
Times.
That fourth night, after being refused by Human Resources, Lineberger threw
up on his way to his shift. He threw up again outside the POW camp. He made
himself go in.
Pale and nauseated, he uncoiled the hose, threaded it through the barbed
wire, followed the guard past the crouched prisoners. He stood there, staring at
the throne he was supposed to hose down, trying to hold back what was left
in his stomach.
"I went to college," he kept thinking as human waste misted his goggles. "I
did well on my SATs.
"I'm in MENSA."
He walked off his shift that night. Hiked back to his tent, threw his gloves
into the trash. On the edge of his cot, by the beam of a flashlight,
Lineberger finally did what he probably should have done before he left home: math.
He was earning $2,700 a month, plus a 5 percent foreign service bonus, plus
25 percent danger pay, minus insurance and travel advancements, divided by 84
hours a week . . .
"You only make $15 to $20 per hour," he wrote his sister just after dawn.
"No way I am taking a bath in Taliban poop every night for that."
On his fifth day at work, he turned in his body armor. He gave back the duct
tape. Shredded the pamphlets about deadly sand fleas.
On his sixth day, he boarded a cargo plane.
He had survived in Afghanistan almost a week.
"It's embarrassing to be back here, to have to explain to everyone what
happened," Lineberger said last week. "I wanted to see the world. At least
Afghanistan. Part of a village, even beggars. Something besides porta-potties."
He's back on his old route, delivering fuel to boats along the gulf beaches.
He has moved back into his dad's Treasure Island bungalow, retrieved his old
dog, Prince, from his friend. ("Prince" was his code word.)
As for his wife, well, he's not sure what's going to happen. She didn't
expect him to come home so soon. She married him, mostly, in case he died.
He might not stick around here anyway.
"There's a 17,000-acre tree farm in Honduras, and a friend of mine is
looking for someone to run it," Lineberger said, his green eyes gleaming. He'd have
a company car, a house in the shade, plenty of waves to ride. No body armor
or code words. Just a little adventure.
He wants to go somewhere without tents or prisoners or barbed wire.
Somewhere without cold or blowing sand. Somewhere with forests and plants and
sparkling water all around.
Somewhere that isn't brown.
Lane DeGregory can be reached at (727) 893-8825 or degregory at sptimes.com.
FOR MORE
To read our Jan. 23 article about Antony Lineberger, please click on
_http://www.sptimes.com/links_ (http://www.sptimes.com/links)
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