Hopefully an Answer to Some of the Debate Over Sending Mail...

TwinMom7

Proud Mom of a United States Marine
Joined
Feb 16, 2000
Messages
1,479
We just received an email today from our unit's Family Support Officer. This article is from Stars and Stripes, which is the military's newspaper. Hopefully this will clear up some questions.

Tuesday, March 25, 2003

Letters being moved to front, unlike first war in Gulf .

By David Josar, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Monday, March 24, 2003

Marine Gunnery Sgt. James Wade helps sort parcels that arrived in Kuwait and are bound for troops deployed throughout the area.

Army Brig. Gen. Sean Byrne, who is in command of - among other operations - mail delivery to U.S. troops in Kuwait and Iraq, on Saturday explains operations. Behind him is Army Maj. Darrell McKown, officer in charge of the Joint Mail Terminal.


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Tips for sending mail

Staff at the Joint Mail Terminal offers these tips for shipping packages and letters to military personnel deployed in the Persian Gulf:

* Use boxes that are strong enough to carry the contents.
* Use boxes that fit the item that is being sent. Do not use boxes that are too large or are too small.
* Fill unused space with packing materials to prevent the containers from being crushed.
* Be sure to include recipient's unit, and write the address in large, easily read letters.

Use a return address.

- David Josar

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - The U.S. general who oversees mail delivery said he has taken steps to ensure that letters and parcels continue getting to troops even as the amount of mail grows.

Army Brig. Gen. Sean Byrne said more planes, better sorting facilities and a strategy to get letters to forward-deployed combat locations should eliminate glitches that angered troops and their families during the last Gulf War.

Mail, Byrne noted, may be the second-most important moment of a soldier's day. The first is chow. And letters can be nearly as important to troops as their weapon and ammunition when they go into combat.

"The letters aren't left behind on a night stand or on a cot when they go into battle," said Byrne. "They are taken along and read over and over."

Mail delivery was a sticking point for troops during Operations Desert Storm and Desert Shield when flights that ferried the mail to the Gulf were canceled, and the parcels and notes stacked up in the United States.

"Everything is coming though," Byrne said Saturday during a tour of the Joint Mail Terminal, a compound of warehouses that the Kuwaiti military had used to store vehicles but now is the temporary home to mountains of parcels.

On Saturday, containers of parcels and letters were unloaded from trucks and rolled down a wheeled ramp, where soldiers and Marines sorted them into piles for individual units. Mail for units that have entered combat are being put into storage containers and will be delivered as soon as the units are in a semi-permanent location.

If those troops move again shortly, Byrne said, only the letters will be moved forward. The packages will arrive once a unit is stable, he said.

Most of the mail will be moved using trucks, although airlift is another possibility, Byrne said.

The packages can be quite unusual.

"We've seen mops, brooms, almost anything," said Army Maj. Darrell McKown, officer in charge of the mail terminal.

Most of the parcels, however, contain more ordinary items. A survey of customs declaration forms indicated most boxes contained snacks, canned tuna, magazines, books, toilet paper and other staples of routine military life while deployed in the desert. Someone was getting a pair of prescription glasses, while another person was receiving a Bible from a Baptist church.

"People want that touch of home," McKown said.

For any troops who die in combat, said Byrne, their letters and parcels will be forwarded to their families after their next of kin has been notified.

Over the past six weeks, mail flow for the American troops into Kuwait has increased from 75,000 pounds a day to around 225,000 pounds a day.

Mail from Germany and Europe, McKown said, should arrive in three to five days to Kuwait, and letters and packages from the United States should arrive in 12 to 13 days. Roughly 70 soldiers, 45 Marines and 30 civilian contractors staff the Joint Mail Terminal.

Watching over the Marines in the mail facility is Marine Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard Margino, who has a half-smoked cigar in his right hand and a gold ring with the Marine insignia of an eagle and a globe on his left.

"Mail is important. It can make or break your day," he said.

"Hopefully we can make someone's day."
 
Thank you for posting this. At least we know that they are still getting their mail.

Hope
 
Thank you, Patty! I'm going to keep sending until our troops come home! :D
 

Thanks for this information, Patty. I went out and bought a bunch of care package goodies today for my 2 adopted soldiers. I hope the packages brighten their day.
 
I am getting a package together now. I found "Gummy Army Men". My best friend's husband who served in Desert Storm told me to send some because the men will get a kick out of them. I hope Titus likes it. Actually, I will have 2 boxes going out in the next day or so.
 
Thank You TwinMom7:D
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So, did I read this right about the forward deployed units?

That letters would get out sooner than pkgs? So, maybe we should be sending a letter separately each time we send a pkg (or more often) since the pkgs might be delayed based on the unit's location?

What do y'all think?
 
Yes, letters will move forward and packages will sit at the base camp. I'm mailing my letters separate from the boxes. We were told that when they return to the base camp (at Camp Coyote) it will be like Christmas.;)
 








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