U.S. Marines in Iraq break pre-battle tension with chariot race
For U.S. Marines awaiting orders to attack Iraq's rebel-held Fallujah, the bags are packed, trucks are loaded and letters have been sent home, leaving one final, pre-assault diversion: the ''Ben-Hur.'' Blowing off steam, hundreds of Marines took their cue from the 1959 Charlton Heston classic and gathered Saturday at a base near Fallujah for a slapstick chariot race featuring cobbled-together carts and confiscated Iraqi horses. ''These men are about to face the Among the highlights for the assembled Marines: When the camp dog, Butch, limped onto the racecourse and grazed on the horses' droppings.
| greatest personal and professional tests of their lifetimes,'' said Lt. Col. Willy Buhl, commander of 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines. ''We wanted to lighten things up, take the tension off what we're about to do,'' said the 42-year-old commander from Los Gatos, Calif., who dreamed up the ''First Annual 'Ben-Hur' Memorial Chariot Race.'' The Marine charioteers, wearing togas over their body armor, waved baseball bats done up as spiked maces and jumped into carts forged from cast-off vehicle parts. The makeshift chariots were pulled by Iraqi horses commandeered from looters in the area.
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Posted by: Mrs. Davis 2004-11-07 |