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Wing ManHow birding and blogging changed one soldier's time in Iraq03 May 2006
Glassing the evening sky for feather and foe.
Photo courtesy of Jonathan Trouern-Trend.
Jonathan Trouern-Trend has been a dedicated bird-watcher since he was about 12. So in 2004, when the now 38-year-old Connecticut National Guard sergeant got sent to Iraq, he had birds on the brain. While stationed at Camp Anaconda -- a huge American installation located about 40 miles north of Baghdad in the Sunni Triangle near the Tigris River -- Trouern-Trend got to know the better birding spots on the base, including a small lagoon and the camp dump. Since he was working in intelligence, the base MPs didn't pay much attention as he peered through his binoculars. He recorded his observations anonymously on the blog Birding Babylon, and the matter-of-fact reports eventually attracted a wide readership.
Jonathan Trouern-Trend.
Trouern-Trend spent a little more than a year on active duty in Iraq and Kuwait, and saw 122 different bird species. His observations have now been collected in a slim, illustrated book also titled Birding Babylon, published by the Sierra Club. While it might seem impossible for a book about the Iraq war to leave politics aside, this volume is purely an appreciation of nature -- wherever it may be found. Today Trouern-Trend is back home in Connecticut, where he works in epidemiology for the American Red Cross and has recently created an interactive site devoted to the natural biodiversity of Iraq. Grist spoke with him by phone a day after he had taken his five children to the zoo in Providence, R.I.
Birding Babylon, by
Jonathan Trouern-Trend, Sierra Club Books, 64 pgs, 2006.
I've had mostly positive comments about the book, although one librarian said it was trite. I realized after reading some of his other work that he thought it would have been a great vehicle to make a political statement.
But I also intuitively knew that other people would be interested -- because this is not how most Americans think about Iraq.
I found blogging useful in many ways. My superiors knew what I was doing and had no problem with it. It's often the other layers of bureaucracy that feel like they need to put their two cents in. I kept the letter and the spirit of the law, I think.
Thinking about it since, this was also a way of making connections with people who might not otherwise have connections with anyone in the military. It's a different demographic.
Truth be told, it was "normal" in some sense most of the time. We were one of the most frequently rocketed and mortared places in Iraq, because we were the logistics hub for the entire country. But it was not like total chaos all the time. They would never send a rocket or mortar our way before let's say 5 or 6:30 in the morning, or after midnight. So you could have a kind of day-to-day existence. People got killed on our base, and quite a few got injured, but ... you couldn't run around all day worrying you were going to get hit by something. My attitude is always, "If it's your time, there's nothing you can do about it."
I've talked to some military folks who say, "Well, obviously he had too much free time." But really, it was just little snapshots here and there. I'd say, "Yes, and how long did you spend playing Xbox every day? Or watching satellite TV?" It's just how people used their time.
More Words of War
Want to read more about the links between war and the environment? Check out these other new titles.
Defiant Gardens: Making Gardens in Wartime explores how seeds and spirit helped people survive the 20th century's most brutal battles. How Green Were the Nazis?: Nature, Environment, and Nation in the Third Reich sheds light on the lesser-known aims of the notorious party, from regional planning to pollution laws. But I understand what you mean. You could make a case about the depleted uranium, the anti-armor rounds that have depleted uranium heads in them. One of our contractors had a master's degree, and did his thesis on contamination around these tanks. When it comes to environmental pollution, those are probably a minor issue. People get really bent out of shape because [they're threatened by] radioactivity. Even though eating mercury will kill you faster, and is more likely to, than walking by some old tank. But children playing on it, goats grazing at it -- probably not a good idea either.
I can say for sure that Saddam was no environmentalist. I was reading something from the Yale School of Forestry: Iraq is [near] the bottom of their list of countries in environmental quality. One of the reasons is that the Tigris and the Euphrates were seen as convenient dumping grounds for chemicals, and industrialization was the highest priority. Cleaning up a lot of the chemicals is the top priority of the Ministry of Environment right now.
In 2003, the Marsh Arabs started busting down the dikes and trying to re-flood areas, but kind of haphazardly. There's an organization called Eden Again that has been trying to engineer the re-flooding in a better way. Now the rebound has been pretty significant.
One project I proposed last year was a bioblitz -- I've participated in a couple here in Connecticut. Basically a bunch of scientists and interested amateurs, and often schoolkids, get together. Often they have a geographic focus. In a 24-hour period, they try to identify or take an inventory of every living thing they can. So it's just trying to take a snapshot, a biological inventory. Often people will find new state records of something -- like some dragonfly no one had ever thought was here.
On the last one I went on, as they were finding things, they'd photograph them and post them up to the web. Technology -- that's easy to do from anywhere in the world right now. An Iraq bioblitz would be just another way to show people that there are other things happening there that they can get on board with ... How many people know that there are striped hyenas running around Iraq? People don't realize that there is some wildness there.
I'm also trying to create some sort of product that schools can use. The Palestinian Authority has a kids' program that's environmentally focused. And they've got a few other things, like instructions on making nest boxes for barn owls, which they give out to the farmers. That's all in Arabic, so I might contact them and ask if we can print this up, and make it more Iraq-focused than Palestinian-focused.
I would like to write something more in-depth and comprehensive. I think there's a good story to be told, about humans and animals through the history of Iraq -- how the dog was domesticated there, sheep, goats. The Babylonians had zoos; they saw something of value in all this exotic wildlife. There's a good story to tell that people can identify with. We'll see if I'm the one to tell it.
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