Sunday, May 28, 2006

May 28, 2006





Date: Sunday, May 28, 2006 5:30:27 AM



Well while you were all sleeping, I was downtown Kabul shopping, getting Army supplies. I call these "combat shopping" runs. We were in some back alleys. I was "security" we were stopped in an alley, I was in the bed of the Ranger in full gear, and I saw a little afghani girl (5) with her mom, she was dirty and obviously thirsty so I jumped out of the bed over the tailgate and had a bottle of water in hand. I guess I looked terrifying, she was scared stiff, as was her mom. I realized what was happening so I took a knee and held out the water and motioned for her to get it. They figured it out, she took the water. A little afghani thief (small boy) saw her get the water and started to make a move, I saw him, stepped in front of him and yelled "estado sho!" (stop) He saw me armed to the teeth, 3 times his size, and decided that trying to steal a bottle of water from a little girl was not such a good idea. He split, and several older afghani's said my actions were honorable and several thanked me in Dari. "tashakur" (thank you) Later as we were shopping I saw a young boy with a Donkey, couldn't resist, I gave him a bottle of water, got on the donkey in full combat gear and had a picture taken, it's hillarious. Well I have mission related things to do. Later.

Brian

Saturday, May 27, 2006

May 27, 2006

Date: Saturday, May 27, 2006 6:23:07 AM

Very interesting day today, to say the least. I taught a class on ambushes, then conducted an ambush and the ANA Commander was very impressed, and asked how I learned to teach so well, and invited me to eat lunch with the other Afghan Officers. This is a gesture of respect so I did not decline. I ate rice off a platter, flat bread, and boiled sheep and potatoes. Yup, sheep and potatoes. The desert is a mixture of sugar, cream, and rice, but here's the kicker. They eat out of the same bowl at the same time with the same spoons. Yeah, not me. I ate 1/2 first. Mind you, this is all prepared in primitive sanitation conditions. They "washed" my spoon by swirling it in unpurified tap water with no soap, so I ate with a knife and my fingers instead. So don't complain about school lunches anymore...ha ha ha

Brian

May 26, 2006

Date: Friday, May 26, 2006 10:24:42 AM

Today was an incredible day. I got my own 6 ton armored Humvee last night, and today, I got to drive it through downtown Kabul on a convoy operation. Yeah, it brings new meaning to road rage when you have a crew served weapon in a turret on top of your vehicle. For some odd reason, people just move out of your way. My vehicle has smoke grenade launchers on it, Air Conditioning, and a few "classified" gadgets. I went to another base where there was a bazaar, kind of like a giant flea market. The Afghani's sell fur coats 70 bucks, hand made marble glasses and pitchers, 70 bucks, hand carved marble chess sets, 25 bucks. It is amazing what you can buy for almost nothing. Then after browsing the market, I did some maintanence on my vehicle then got to drive back through the city, only to discover, that we had steak for dinner. I can't belive that the Army is actually paying me for this. Well, I'm off to clean weapons.

Brian

May 23, 2006

Date: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 9:14:22 AM

Hey everyone, went out on a combat convoy today, let me tell you... unbelieveable! No traffic rules, speed limits no rules. When someone comes too close I would just point my m4 carbine at them and they moved. When one car got too close I threw a bottle of water off his hood so he backed off. Rather than stop in traffic, we just went the wrong way against traffic, horns blarring, guns aimed out the windows. We were in a 4 door, inter-cooled turbo diesel Ford Ranger with a huge push bumper on it. Needless to say, when we stopped to "shop" for some items, I got out and had my rifle and pistol ready. It was actually a ton of fun. Here's my address

Brian Norman
1BN 1BDE 201st Arcag
Camp Phoenix/Cobra
Apo AE 09320

I need things like AA batteries, Imodium AD, Q-tips, snacks, any medicine, or just a letter. I'll write back, I get free mail privelages and I have addresses. Well I have to go get ready for some "stuff" that is coming up. Later.
Brian

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

May 16, 2006

Tuesday, May 16, 2006 9:58:36 AM

Hello. I am finally in afghanistan. The flight here took me through Germany, and Kurdikstan. The former Soviet republic was beautiful but the infrastructure was run down from years of neglect. I was also in Germany, very unique to say the least. I have several labels and pictures for you. We then flew into Baghram Airbase in Afghanistan. As soon as you land you see the majestic mountains all around you. They are 10,000 plus feet high, but brown. There isn't a lot of vegetation here. Next you notice the heat. Standing still you sweat, moving is even worse. The position pallets of bottled water everywhere. You just walk up and help yourself. The water here is not potable so you have to brush your teeth with bottled water. It was 4 days before we had a shower, yeah imagine the heat, too. We then took a convoy from Baghram to Kabul. The poverty and squalor these people live in is amazing. There isn't much here. They are resourceful, I saw several shops "recycling" used tires, while other cut them up and were making mats and other stuff from them. The kids walk around barefoot and some in clothing that resembles rags. I will in-process tomorrow and then find out where in the country I will be stationed. I still don't have a mailing address but when i get one i will send it. It's 6:25 pm here so there is a 9 hour difference here. Kind of weird, when I am up, people at home are sound asleep. The food on base is excellent by any standards but I won't eat outside the wire, too risky. My tent has airconditioning, yeah a tent with AC. Well I have to go, I'll write more later.

Mr. Norman

Monday, May 15, 2006

May 14, 2006

Sunday, May 14, 2006 10:39:22 PM

Hello,
I am in Kurdistan, one of the former Soviet Republics in central Asia. The flight went great. I slept almost the entire 16 hour flight. It's 8:40 AM here so it's about 10 your time. I have a bunch of labels from sodas and milk and water in all kinds of languages. We stopped in Germany for 3 hours so I have a few pictures there as well. I'll send them ASAP.

Brian

Saturday, May 06, 2006

March 27, 2006

Date: Monday, March 27, 2006 3:00:30 PM

Hey everyone, they finally settled me in to a battalion team (after moving 3 times) so here's the mail.

SSG. Brian Norman
41st BCT (USAETT)
Building 2490
25th Street
Camp Shelby, MS
39407-1000

This will be good until the end of April.

April 12, 2006




Date: Wednesday, April 12, 2006 5:14:35 PM


Here's a photo of me in my new Advanced Combat Uniform. It replaces the BDU's or green uniforms. The other photo is of our unit named "Wolfpack". I am on the far right, back corner.

April 8, 2006



Date: Saturday, April 08, 2006 2:02:16 PM

Go to the link I have posted in this email.Here's a clip of me shooting the 50 caliber machine gun at human sized targets 1/2 mile away. 12 out of 12 kills.

April 4, 2006

Date: Tuesday, April 04, 2006 1:15:26 PM

Trebuchet news release set to take front page of the county paper.

The following is the story which will be included in a future edition of the Harford County Public Schools newspaper. Pictures will also be included.


Brian Norman leaves launch legacy for Wright students

His Trebuchet demonstration precedes deployment to Afghanistan

A day away from being deployed as platoon sergeant leading combat troops in Afghanistan, C. Milton Wright High School world history and government teacher Brian Norman wanted to give his students something to remember him by. So, with the permission of his principal, Bill Ekey, the 31-year-old National Guardsman moved up by more than a month the date of the great Trebuchet Launch on the school’s athletic field.
At 5:30 a.m. on the morning of March 14th, Mr. Norman and several of the 100 students who had spent 2 ½ months on their own time helping him build the 31’ high by 16’ long medieval launching device, lugged it in pieces from the school to the soccer/baseball fields about a hundred yards away and reassembled it there. Beginning in shifts from early in the schoolday, students came out to watch as cantaloupes, pineapples, water jugs, bags of flour, a 12-pack of sodas, a bowling ball, a basketball, and other items were catapulted more than two football-field lengths before crashing to the ground.
“I guess we must have done about 150 ‘throws’ today,” said the intense 31-year-old teacher/soldier. “I taught my students how the catapult and then the Trebuchet had ended the era of castles and forced people to move into cities for protection since heavy rocks could be slung into the castle walls and bring them down.”
Mr. Norman, a native of Pennsylvania, and his students at Magnolia Middle School had made smaller versions of the medieval assault device when he taught there for three years prior to being called to active duty for the first time two years ago. Those launchers threw cans of soda 300 feet. “But this Trebuchet – it threw a cantaloupe 612 feet,” Mr. Norman said with the unbridled enthusiasm that made him a student favorite in the year and a half he taught at C. Milton Wright.
“We’re going to miss him terribly,” said a tearful Carly Garrett, a junior American Government student of Mr. Norman’s and one of those involved in building the Trebuchet. “He gets people’s attention, he doesn’t sugar coat it, and he’s real.”
In the National Guard for 13 years, Mr. Norman had come from his native Pittsburgh to teach at Magnolia Middle six years ago. He was called up with his Delta Company, 1/175th Infantry out of Elkton for a 13-month hitch and deployed to Alabama, returning to the county to be assigned to C. Milton Wright 13 months ago.
“I really enjoyed the kids at Magnolia and I thought teaching at the high school here would be different – but I’ve really built a bond with these kids – this is heartbreaking to have to leave,” the crew-cut teacher/soldier said. “But, I’ll be in Afghanistan with U.S. and Afghan troops in the Afghan Enduring Freedom effort.”
He anticipates he will be deployed in the war-torn area for 13 months and hopes to return to a teaching job in the county again.
“He is an intense person who demands and gets respect,” said Mr. Ekey while watching from a safe distance with a group of about 200 students as Mr. Norman’s mechanical device misfired on its last attempt, tossing a bowling ball backwards some 200 feet. “His students really responded to him.”
Mr. Norman said he received a $200 grant from the C. Milton Wright Parent/Teacher/Student Organization (PTSO) and put in about $300 of his own money to buy the lumber, cables, pulley system, hardware, and sling device for the Trebuchet replica. “My students came in after school and on weekends to build it and we got great support from parents – especially the Stiles and Friend family – the Friends allowed me to test it in their backyard,” said Mr. Norman. “We were going to demonstrate it to the student body later in the spring, but, when I got my orders, Mr. Ekey allowed me to move up the operation.”
The vast majority of C. Milton Wright’s 1800 students were brought by their teachers at various times during the blustery day to watch in amazement as the device lobbed its payload high in the air and then downrange onto the baseball outfield. “Teachers gave up some of their class time to bring their students out here to watch what my students had built – they were extremely well behaved and it just shows how what a great school this is and what top notch students we have,” Mr. Norman said.
With outriggers stretching the width of the launcher to 14’ and the device held in place by heavy rocks, Mr. Norman said the Trebuchet model demonstrated an advancement over the earlier catapult. He said catapults used ropes and tension while the Trebuchet used counterweights to propel projectiles longer distances and with better accuracy.
Mr. Norman also credited Joe Fleishman with putting the device’s demonstration on the school’s website at http://www.cmwtrebuchet.com/.

April 3, 2006




Date: Monday, April 03, 2006 1:55:28 PM


One is a picture of the Body Armor plates inside our vest, the other is our
delapilated Barracks.

April 1, 206



Date: Saturday, April 01, 2006 1:34:16 PM


Just some pictures of stuff.

March 23, 2006

Date: Thursday, March 23, 2006 11:43:59 AM


Hey, things in Mississippi have been going..slow to say the least, however, I have been informed that I will be leaving way sooner than first thought. I was supposed to come home on leave May 24th-June 2nd, but it appears now that I will be in theatre by Arpil's end. I am not too pleased about hearing that, but hey it's the Army, expect the unexpected...Feel free to send letters, I'll do my best to write back. Here's my address

SSg Brian Norman
41st BCT/209th ETT
Building 2490
25th Street
Camp Shelby, MS
39407-1000

I am now the proud owner of a brand new M4 Carbine rifle, soon to outfitted with the "lethality Package" This would include a pistol grip front, tactical flashlight, Opticl Combat Sight and night time laser aiming system, very cool. I'll send some pictures when possible. I have been moved 3 times so far, and moved buildings three times as well. I have been keeping a daily journal to document the stupidity and the good. Well I'll email when I can.

SSg Norman A.K.A Mr. Norman

March 20, 2006

Date: Monday, March 20, 2006 6:52:17 PM

I have arrived in Mississippi, what a dump! The first 2 days were boring, but today I began to learn Dari (kind of like arabic)I will be in the Northern part of the Country when I get there. They are going to issue me an M4 rifle and a pistol, and body armor...very cool, tools of the trade I guess.I should be in Mississippi for 2 months. I have leave scheduled from May 24th to June 2nd so I hope to be back to visit one last time before I roll out. It's going to be tough training the next couple weeks, but I am excited about it, yet disappointed that I have left CMW. combatnorman.tk is a website that I hope to update reguarly, I have some pictures of the dump I live in for you people so I will get them out
soon. Keep me up to date about the school and my new sub. I'll write more when I can. I'll send you all my address when possible.

SSG.Brian Norman