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By
Shams Tarek
When
Navy corpsman Ted Bittle enlisted right after graduating high school in
1989, he didn’t realize that he’d end up with a purple heart as the
Navy’s “Doc Bittle” 14 years later.
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“We’re
trying to piece our lives back together,” Bittle said. “I did a lot of
thinking in Iraq about what the future holds. I never want to miss another
day of
my family’s life.
I want to get out
of the Navy, go back home and
get on with my
life.”
PRESS Photo by Shams Tarek
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The
31-year-old was wounded by a suicide bomber in Iraq this month and left
with permanent injuries. This week, he was back at home in Queens.
There
was no big hero’s welcome for Bittle, who removed his purple heart
before landing at JFK Airport on April 25.
Right now he’s just trying to quietly recover and get some rest
with his eight-month old baby Ari and his wife Denise.
They celebrated their first anniversary on April 27, and will
celebrate Bittle’s birthday on May 12.
By
the end of the month Bittle will report back to his base, Camp Pendleton
in San Diego, for a medical evaluation, to process his departure from the
Navy and to prepare for the rest of his life.
Bittle
remembers the day he was wounded with precise detail.
His
mission on April 11 was to help take a Baghdad stadium.
As a Navy corpsman, Bittle’s job was basically to be a kind of
armed medic, trained to treat allies, civilians and POWs wounded in combat
but also engage in firefights if needed.
Deployed
with a unit of special operations-capable Marines, Bittle drove into
Baghdad that morning right alongside rush-hour civilian traffic, an
experience he called “bizarre.”
People waved and cheered along the way.
When
it got late, Bittle and his crew stopped near a bunker and started to
secure it by putting sandbags in the street.
Then,
as the corpsmen were moving the sandbags, Bittle’s life — and that of
three other corpsmen injured in the blast — was changed.
“The
next thing you know there was a huge explosion that blew me back to the
ground,” Bittle said from his cozy Francis Lewis Boulevard apartment.
He fell face down and saw blood gushing from his face; he thought
the bags were booby trapped.
But
the explosion was from a suicide bomber wearing a vest full of ball
bearings. He had been standing about two feet away from Bittle. The
corpsman was later told that
civilians tried to warn the Americans about the attack.
“We
didn’t catch on about that,” Bittle said.
“It happened so quickly.
I didn’t even see the guy until after it happened.
The guy who blew himself up was everywhere.
He blew himself up in half.”
Bittle
and his peers were rushed by helicopter to a Navy shock trauma platoon 45
miles south of Baghdad, where he found himself bleeding back into his
throat.
He
was operated on the next day at an Army hospital at Kuwait City
International Airport, where he stayed a few days before being transferred
to two hospitals in Germany.
He was flown back to Camp Pendleton last week.
Bittle’s
injuries are painful and permanent. The Tae Kwon Do black belt champion
and avid runner has shrapnel embedded in the right side of his body from
his fingertips to his shoulders to his face. A particularly bad wound in
his hand is still open and draining.
There’s no feeling in the right side of his face and he has
almost no vision in his right eye, under which a titanium plate is
embedded to make up for shattered bone.
Even
though he was technically a non-combatant, Bittle was constantly on the
leading edge of the American offensive and “had contact” with enemy
forces every day since entering Iraq on March 20, just hours after the war
started. He
carried an M-16 rifle and nine-millimeter pistol all the time, and had to
fire them frequently.
“The
day I got injured was not the day I thought I was
going to die,” Bittle said.
“The thought of death crowded my mind many times.”
Just
like news viewers watching live “embedded” news reports back home, it
was hard to know how reliable a lot of information was, Bittle said.
He was covered head to toe in a full-body “MOP-4” chemical
suit, but didn’t know if it was necessary.
“We
were told we were gonna get hit by chemical weapons. . . . We were told to
grow mustaches for security purposes; apparently Saddam bought uniforms
that looked like ours.
We were told all kinds of stories — who knows what was and
wasn’t necessarily true,” he said.
Supply
was another problem.
Bittle
and his unit raced across the desert so fast that they had access to and
time for only one freeze-dried MRE, or “Meal, Ready to Eat,” every
day, and moved in armored personnel carriers “without most of the
armor.”
One
bullet pierced the armor of a carrier near Bittle, hitting a gas can and
seriously burning a fellow corpsman in the face.
When
he wasn’t flying over the sand or in a firefight with the enemy,
Bittle’s day-to-day duties were mundane.
He took care of ground troops’ feet, made sure they were on top
of their personal hygiene, administered medication and made sure everyone
was “psychologically okay.”
The
days were long, with never more than about four hours of sleep and hardly
any time for rest or recreation.
Bittle would wake up at 4:45 every morning, stand watch for an hour
and wait for word to either stay in position or continue across the desert
towards Baghdad.
The
troops would “set in” at 11 p.m., at which point the unit’s vehicles
would circle around a makeshift camp and the men would dig holes in the
ground, sometimes neck-high, in which they would either sleep or assume
combat positions.
They slept — little — in sleeping bags or poncho liners under
the open sky.
“It
was hard,” Bittle said. Some soldiers lost 20 pounds and looked
emaciated. “Everyone
was miserable. You’re
hungry and you’re tired, you’re hot, you’re cold.
It was like an emotional rollercoaster.”
Bittle’s
unit took over a Sudanese terror camp in the middle of the desert, where
Marines shot four members, including one man who was shot twice near the
heart. Bittle
saved his life.
“That’s
my job,” Bittle said. “We don’t differentiate.”
Bittle
said he and most of his peers are “apolitical” about the war and the
policies behind it, that they’re just regular men and women with
families who have normal everyday things to worry about.
“It
wasn’t as much about whether this is ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ or
whether Bush is making the right decision,” Bittle said.
“It was about what’ll they do when they get back home?”
Bittle
added that the anti-war protests around the world didn’t phase his
fellow troops. The protestors made him proud to be American.
“It’s
our country,” Bittle said. “It’s the best in the world. There’s no
other place where you can say whatever you believe in.
And that’s what we were there fighting for.”
Another
thing that boosted Bittle’s morale was the support he got from Iraqis on
the ground.
“The
people were saying what we did made a difference, that they did want us
there and they were happy to get rid of this guy. . . .It was nice to see
that the Iraqis didn’t hate us.”
Right
now, Bittle doesn’t watch the news, and he tries not to think about the
war. He’s
more worried about terrorist attacks at home and about “what kind of
government will form” in Iraq.
He
doesn’t know what his status will be in terms of benefits as a veteran.
The Department of Vetarans Affiars requires troops to be in combat
for 180 days to be eligible for the full range of health benefits, and the
discharge process normally takes up to eight months.
He was told that cases for recent Iraq veterans are being expedited
and considered for exceptions, but noted “I don’t know what’s gonna
happen.”
His
wife, a United Airlines flight attendant who was furlowed soon after Sept.
11, 2001, doesn’t have a full-time job.
Front
Page Followup:
Community
To Honor War Hero
By
Shams Tarek
Just
days after a Hollis Navy corpsman returned from Iraq wounded with a Purple
Heart, members of the community have promised to honor the sailor and help
him recover.
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A
public celebration for Iraq war veteran Ted Bittle will be held on
May 10.
PRESS Photo By Shams Tarek
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Ted
Bittle, 31, will be honored at a homecoming celebration on May 10, two
days before his birthday.
The 4:30 p.m. party, at the New Jerusalem Apostolic Church in
Springfield Gardens, is open to the public and will bring Bittle
proclamations from both City Councilman Leroy Comrie and State Senator
Malcolm Smith.
Nicknamed
“Doc Bittle,” the battlefield medic was nearly killed in Baghdad on
April 11 when a suicide bomber blew himself up just a few feet away from
him. He
came home on April 25 after several hospital stays in Iraq, Kuwait,
Germany and his base, Camp Pendleton in San Diego.
An
outpouring of community response followed a front-page story about Bittle
published in both The Queens Tribune and its sister paper, The PRESS
of Southeast Queens, last week.
Wife Denise Bittle said that strangers have asked to shake her
husband’s hand, and the family is getting offered services, like a
recent oil change, for free.
Donations have also been promised to help cater this week’s
homecoming.
“The
response has been great,” Denise Bittle said.
The community has really come together and has been really
supportive. Everybody
has just made us feel very comfortable.”
The
family is also getting help from Lester Muse, veterans’ liaison for
Senator Malcolm Smith and himself a purple heart recipient (Muse was
injured during combat in Vietnam in 1968).
Noting
that Bittle was in combat for less than the 180-day and 90-day minimum
requirements for different levels of federal Veteran’s Administration
(VA) benefits, Muse said that he’s using his contacts at the VA and
independent veterans’ organizations to make sure that exceptions are
made for the sailor.
Muse
also noted that the VA as a rule doesn’t seek out returning veterans to
help them, but waits for them to make the first contact.
The efforts of people like him who take it upon themselves to help
veterans, he said, are necessary until the VA changes its practices.
“He’s
gonna be in better shape than I was when I got home,” Muse said of
Bittle, “‘cause nobody told me jack.
He’s lucky.
I saw the article, and it just so happens that I can help.”
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