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Netlore Archive:  In the overcrowded Baltimore Airport, ordinary citizens voluntarily give up their airline seats to U.S. troops on two-week leave from Iraq

Description:  Email flier
Status:  True
Circulating since:  Oct. 2003
Analysis:  See below
 


Email example contributed by K. Davis, 3 Nov 2003:

A Day at Baltimore Airport (The writer and his wife live in LA and both work for Uncle Sam.)

Dear Friends and Family,

    I hope that you will spare me a few minutes of your time to tell you about something that I saw on Monday, October 27. I had been attending a conference in Annapolis and was coming home on Sunday. As you may recall, Los Angeles International Airport was closed on Sunday, October 26, because of the fires that affected air traffic control. Accordingly, my flight, and many others, were canceled and I wound up spending a night in Baltimore.

    My story begins the next day. When I went to check in at the United counter Monday morning I saw a lot of soldiers home from Iraq. Most were very young and all had on their desert camouflage uniforms. This was as change from earlier, when they had to buy civilian clothes in Kuwait to fly home. It was a visible reminder that we are in a war. It probably was pretty close to what train terminals were like in World War II.

    Many people were stopping the troops to talk to them, asking them questions in the Starbucks line or just saying "Welcome Home." In addition to all the flights that had been canceled on Sunday, the weather was terrible in Baltimore and the flights were backed up. So, there were a lot of unhappy people in the terminal trying to get home, but nobody that I saw gave the soldiers a bad time.

    By the afternoon, one plane to Denver had been delayed several hours. United personnel kept asking for volunteers to give up their seats and take another flight. They weren't getting many takers. Finally, a United spokeswoman got on the PA and said this, "Folks. As you can see, there are a lot of soldiers in the waiting area. They only have 14 days of leave and we're trying to get them where they need to go without spending any more time in an airport then they have to. We sold them all tickets, knowing we would oversell the flight. If we can, we want to get them all on this flight. We want all the soldiers to know that we respect what you're doing, we are here for you and we love you."

    At that, the entire terminal of cranky, tired, travel-weary people, a cross-section of America, broke into sustained and heartfelt applause. The soldiers looked surprised and very modest. Most of them just looked at their boots. Many of us were wiping away tears.

    And, yes, people lined up to take the later flight and all the soldiers went to Denver on that flight. That little moment made me proud to be an American, and also told me why we will win this war.

    If you want to send my little story on to your friends and family, feel free. This is not some urban legend. I was there, I was part of it, I saw it happen.

Will Ross
Administrative Judge
United States Department of Defense


Comments:  True story.  Will Ross, a Los Angeles-based administrative judge for the Department of Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals, wrote this heartfelt account of an incident he both witnessed and participated in — the spontaneous outpouring of support for homebound U.S troops passing through the Baltimore/Washington International Airport (BWI) on October 27, 2003.

Approximately 270 soldiers a day have streamed through BWI since late September, when the Operation Iraqi Freedom Rest and Recuperation Leave Program was launched by U.S. Central Command (additional airports were added to the program in November). Troops serving one-year tours of duty are eligible for exactly 15 days' respite, stateside or in Europe, before being shipped back to Iraq.

There were indeed flight delays at major airports all across the United States at the height of the California firestorms on October 27, including overcrowded Baltimore. Even so, says Ross, as many as 30 or 40 ordinary citizens voluntarily gave up their seats on a flight to Denver so some of the combat-weary troops, who were applauded by the crowd after an announcement was made, could get on with their R&R. "I think people realized that this fight is going to be long and drawn-out, and these kids are in the thick of it," he explained to the American Forces Press Service a few days afterward. "It was heartwarming to see their outpouring of support."


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Sources and further reading:

Weary Travelers Support Operation Iraqi Freedom Troops at BWI
American Forces Press Service, 31 October 2003

California Fires Cause Flight Cancellations
Reuters, 27 October 2003

Troops Get Free Trip Home from Iraq
Army News Service, 25 September 2003

An Earned Vacation
Corpus Christi Caller-Times, 20 October 2003


Last updated: 11/06/03


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