FORT BRAGG, North Carolina (AP) -- In the year since President Bush and U.S. allies returned official sovereignty to Iraq, life in the community dominated by one of the Army's largest installations has changed little.
Soldiers from Fort Bragg have continued to march into Iraq. And they continue to die.
In the past year, 100 North Carolina-based troops have died in the war, trailing only the toll of 180 from California, according to an Associated Press analysis.
As President Bush plans to come here to make a major, nationally televised policy speech Tuesday night, the mounting casualties and insurgent violence have started to test the public patience for the war, even in a place where signs along the streets boast steadfast support of the troops.
On one such street off base in Fayetteville, 26-year-old Carrie Dimmick said it's about time the United States got its soldiers out of Iraq.
"We told them if they established a government we would back off," she said. "They established a government, but we're still there. I feel like the war is doing more harm than good."
Like many people in this area, 40-year-old day-care center operator Tommy Jones said he initially believed the war was a successful response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
"Now, it seems like we've been there too long," said Jones, who was a Marine 20 years ago. "There have been too many casualties."
Source For Full Article : http://edition.cnn.com/2005/US/06/28/fort.bragg.ap/index.html
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