US: The Iraq war has taken a heavy toll, and few residents in the small town of Hollidaysburg need a reminder, writes Stephen Braun in Pennsylvania
It is too soon to erect a war memorial for three sons of this hill-country town killed in combat in Iraq. The war has taken a heavy toll, and few residents need a reminder - either of their loss or of the Iraq conflict's role in the autumn elections.
Brian Baum carries his own private memorial on his right shoulder. He only has to lift his sleeve to bare a tattoo honouring his brother, Ronnie, a marine gunnery sergeant killed by a rocket fired by Iraqi insurgents near Falluja on May 3rd, 2004.
"KIA al Anbar Province," reads the green scrawl, a permanent mark of Ronald Baum's initials and the time and date of his death.
On November 7th Brian Baum expects to vote Republican, just as a solid majority of the town's 5,300 residents has done for decades, mirroring the reliably conservative electoral habits of a region that has long been attuned to the Republican Party's foreign and domestic agendas.
But despite their own support for President Bush and Pennsylvania's Republican candidates, Baum and other family and friends of Hollidaysburg's Iraq casualties have watched uneasily as local backing for the war has ebbed.
Gossip spreads fast here, and so have rumblings against the war. The doubters remain a minority, but the gloomy news from Iraq and reports of disarray among political and military leaders are weakening a once-dependable rural Republican buffer against Democratic voting bases in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
"Nobody comes up and tells me directly. They know how I'd react," said Baum, who also served as a marine sergeant in Iraq and was stationed there when his brother was killed. "But you hear it from the kids in the schools, and you pick it up in conversations when you go out. They're getting tired of the war."
Mayor Joseph Dodson, a lifelong Republican and former army and marine reservist, backed the Iraq invasion, but now wonders whether the US has stayed too long.
"We have to keep the country safe, but I think our military is stretched too thin," Dodson said. "When President Bush landed on that aircraft carrier and said 'mission completed', I thought: 'That's it'. Instead, we're still there dealing with all these religious sects, trying to keep them from killing each other."
The rising pessimism about the war is not expected to threaten the region's Republican congressmen. But pollsters and some Republican leaders say the doubts may depress enough GOP votes in the region to dash the re-election hopes of Senator Rick Santorum, who faces a daunting challenge from Democratic state treasurer Bob Casey jnr.
"It's going to affect Santorum," said Republican representative Bill Shuster, who lives in Hollidaysburg. "Voters who are turning against him are sending a clear message to President Bush about the war."
Shuster, a war supporter, expects to win his own race next week, but frets that the vote will be as much as eight points tighter because of rising concerns about the war.
Brian Baum is less concerned about Republican political fortunes than he is about fraying local support for the war. "We can't pull out now - we can't leave," said Baum, a muscular security director for a local factory. "If we pull out now, what does that mean for all the guys who died? It's all for nothing."
Two other Hollidaysburg men were killed in the Iraq war. Their deaths would be a blip in a big city, but they linger as raw wounds in close-knit Hollidaysburg. Almost every other car parked in the town's prosperous main square carries a faded yellow ribbon in honour of US troops. American flags droop over the porches of dozens of old clapboard houses.
Hollidaysburg is a faded railroad industry hub where a ghostly railcar plant, once one of the largest in the nation, lies abandoned on the town's east side below a hilly expanse of oaks and maples.
But the town has remained vibrant because of an influx of medical and service firms.
Those who lost loved ones in Iraq deal with the grim news in their own ways.
Some relatives, like Carol and Sam Adams, the parents of Brandon Adams, killed in a grenade attack in Falluja, and Ronald Baum's wife, Cynthia, who was left with two young sons and a daughter, have retreated into silence. "We don't like to bring politics into our son's death," said Carol Adams.
Others cling more fiercely to their support for the war as a way to wrest meaning from their mutual tragedies.
Judy Lightner passes the days as melancholy curator to bookcases filled with military mementos from her son, Danny. She sometimes wears his old camouflage khakis to keep his memory alive.
A former Pennsylvania state trooper, Daniel Lightner left behind a trove of medals and uniforms, and a letter that urged his mother "not to be sad, because I volunteered for this mission and I would do it again if I could".
"He believed in the war, so I have to, too," Judy Lightner said.
Brian Baum's only complaint about the war is a strategic one: he faults the US military for failing to move rapidly into the rebel stronghold of Falluja.
The extra months, he said, gave Iraqi insurgents "time to stock up their arms. My brother would be alive today if we had gone into Falluja earlier".
The brothers had deployed to Iraq within three weeks of each other in February 2004. Less than three months later, Ronnie, a member of the 2nd Marine Division, drove into an ambush outside Falluja. Brian Baum was just 30 miles away at the time and he escorted the coffin home on a C-130 transport. In his pocket was his brother's crumpled metal dog tag. - (LA Times-Washington Post service)