In terms
of American involvement in Eritrea, Kagnew Station was a latecomer. In fact,
the war in North Africa which had prompted U.S. intervention was nearly over
before Kagnew Station began operations. The turning point was the Battle of El
Alamein where Montgomery's Desert Rats sent theAfrika Korps scurrying
back into Libya. Eisenhower's invasion at Casablanca and Algiers cut off
Rommel's escape route and resulted in what Churchill called «the
beginning of the end.» Three days after communications activities got
underway in Asmara, a victory parade was staged in Tunis. The first round was
over.
Eritrea
was the focal point of American participation in the early part of the war. The
first American military advisors and contract civilians probably arrived in
Asmara late in 1941. All these early support projects were implemented under
the provisions of the Lend-Lease Act. Kagnew Station was not.
Kagnew
Station's inception was in the War Department with a Disposition Form, dated
January 26, 1943, Subject: «establishment of a War Department Fixed Radio
Station in Africa», which detailed operational objectives for what was to
become the 4th Detachment of the Second Signal Service Battalion, Asmara.
Eritrea (The Second Signal Service Battalion was redesignated the Army Security
Agency September 15, 1945).
Second
Lieutenant Clay Littleton arrived in Eritrea April 30, 1943 to begin a
feasibility study as to whether or not Asmara would be suitable for a projected
War Department fixed radio station. Upon his arrival, he arranged housing and
rationing for six enlisted men who were following with the equipment to be used
for the tests.
Asmara
had been the site of an Italian naval radio station -- Radio Marina -- which
was commanded by an Italian rear admiral until Asmara surrendered in April,
1941. The station was located in the Tract A building which now houses the Rod
and Gun Club and the PX Beauty Shop. The station used three steel towers as
antennas which remained intact (with the exception of one whose top was sheared
off by an Italian plane during the war) until 1957. Even under American
occupation, the site was called Radio Marina or more officially, Asmara
Barracks. «Kagnew Station» came with the signing of the Base rights
Agreement in 1953.
By May
17, 1943, the seven man detachment had refurbished existing facilities,
installed their own equipment and had mailed traffic samples to Washington.
Eritrea's geographical location - 15 degrees north of the equator at an
altitude of 7,600 feet -- contributed to anomalous propagation of radio
signals. (An example of the propagation is Kagnew's 1,000 watt AM radio station
which has been received as far away as Finland, Australia and Brazil). The
quality of the samples collected by the Eritrean detachment attested to this
propagation phenomenon and prompted the War Department to expand operations
forthwith.
On June
1, 1943, two officers, one warrant officer and 44 enlisted men began intensive
training at Vint Hill Farms to man the new station. The training went on all
summer while Lieutenant Littleton and his men continued operations in Asmara.
By December, 4 officers and 50 enlisted men staffed Radio Marina.
Information regarding post-war developments at Asmara Barracks is
sketchy at best. The center of activity was the area now know as Tract A
adjacent to the American Consulate compound. The only original buildings
remaining are the old Asmara Officers Club, which now serves as Command
Sergeant Major's quarters, and of course, the former headquarters in the Radio
Marina building. The boundaries of the tract were delineated with barbed
wire.
An
extract from an FY 1945 Historical Report sheds a little light on life at Radio
Marina:
«Asmara Barracks was considered a model Army post at the
beginning of the report period. Few changes were made during the fiscal year. A
miniature golf course was constructed on the post in June, providing a popular
diversion for military personnel. By the end of FY 1945, a new indoor swimming
pool was under construction in downtown Asmara, a few blocks from Asmara
Barracks. At present, there are no swimming pools in the Asmara area due to the
difficulty of obtaining sufficient water. Water is to be made available from
artesian wells.»
«For personnel
who have served sufficient time overseas, short furloughs can be obtained, with
permission to visit nearby points and even Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Lebanon or
Italy.»
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This
brief excerpt is the keynote for development of Kagnew Station. The concern for
recreational diversions continues unabated and there is hardly a year from 1944
to 1970 when a new facility does not appear. It seems that each commander has
been mindful of the culture shock and/or the sense of isolation felt by
American arrivals in Asmara. Millions of dollars have been spent to create a
microcosmic American community in the Eritrean highlands replete with a
dazzling array of recreational facilities sufficient to dispel anyone's sense
of confinement. So it all started with a miniature golf course.
In the
foregoing historical excerpt, Asmara Barracks is referred to as a
«model» Army post. Perhaps that adjective is, in part, a reference
to the organization of the tiny detachment. Post functions such as Unit
Personnel, Civilian Personnel, Finance, Post Exchange, Commissary, Station
Supply, Transportation, Motor Pool, Laundry and Purchasing and Contracting were
operated. The functions were administered by officers of both the 4th
Detachment, Second Signal Service Battalion and the 3176th Signal Service
Detachment, the forerunner of the U.S. Army Strategic Communications Command,
(STRATCOM).
The end
of the war had no immediate effect on the Eritrean detachment. In fact, the
recorded events of 1945 are prosaic at best. The pig farm which supplied at
least a portion of the meat to the Americans lost 68 porkers to a cholera
outbreak. The deaths resulted in closure of the farm in November.Zero
Beat, the station newspaper, was unceremoniously discontinued September 30,
and 29 bodies were disinterred from the station graveyard at Gura and moved to
Heliopolis, Egypt. At least eight of these Gura graves were men of Project
19.
The first
dependents arrived in Asmara September 11, 1946, and in order to accomodate
them, four barracks were converted into quarters for married officers and
NCO's. The first American birth recorded in Asmara was in July, 1948. All
personnel arriving or departing Asmara travelled on the Military Air
Transportation Service (which became the Military Airlift Command in 1966). The
immediate connection was Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
On March
7, 1948, one U.S. Navy officer and five Navy enlisted men arrived as the first
contingent of the U.S. Navy Communication Unit 3. At the time of their arrival,
Army strength had topped 100 and the Navy moved in to share facilities with
their Army counterparts.
The
3176th Signal Service Detachment became the 9434 TSU Middle Eastern Signal
Service Detachment December 1, 1948. It was a functionary of a worldwide
communications network. The location in Eritrea had been carefully selected
because of its inherent ability to relay radio signals to the Middle East,
Europe, North Africa and the Pacific theater. The Asmara detachment maintained
circuits to New Delhi, Tehran and Washington. The first transmitter and
receiver sites were completed in September, 1943. Both of the operations
buildings were underground, and the walls and roof were constructed of ten-inch
bombproof concrete. The transmitter and receiver sites were located at present
day Stonehouse and Tract C, respectively.
At the
close of World War II, all circuits were deactivated except a radio teletype
circuit to Washington, which operated only six to eight hours a day. The excess
equipment was crated and returned to the United States.
The
Korean War introduced many changes in the Asmara communications routine.
Circuits were again activated to Europe, the Middle East and the Philippines,
which, in turn, necessitated many physical expansions at the operations sites.
However, the available space was never commensurate to the needs. Based on the
Korean experience and the ever-increasing Army-Navy commitments, it was decided
to build completely new sites and equip them with the most up-to-date
communications equipment. Construction of the new installations began in March,
1955, but owing to the Middle East Crisis and the closure of the Suez Canal,
delivery schedules were interrupted and the sites did not become operational
until February, 1958. a local contract provided for assembly and installation
of 689 antenna towers. The transmitter site moved to Tract D, and new
facilities at Tracts B and C provided receiver capability.
By
mid-1949, the arrival of the first three Army nurses boosted officer strength
to 13 with a complement of 114 enlisted men representing both Army and Navy.
During 1949, hospital bed capacity increased from four to nine, and the staff
was comprised of one doctor, three nurses and two corpsmen. Owing to the
limited facilities, all dental work, surgery, eye exams, cultures and
serologies were accomplished in Asmara hospitals. Dependents paid for their
treatment.
Quarters
were a continual problem. The eight one-story barracks located in the Radio
Marina compound were spartan and heated with coal stoves and oil space heaters.
In September, 1951, a warehouse was converted to accomodate Security Guard
personnel, and on several occasions over the years, local hotels were leased to
house overflow personnel. Off-post quarters for families were equally austere.
Some of the more ingenious downtown residents obviated the cold-water-only
facilities with wood burning water heaters. Water was trucked to Asmara
Barracks until 1951 when permanent water lines were installed.
As might
be expected, Special Services was the focal point of off-duty activity.
Kagnew's AM radio station started out with Special Services July 1, 1951 and
then moved to a more well-appointed studio (soundproofed with heavy cloth)
above the Finance Office in December. There was also a post theater, bowling
alley, library, swimming in the Consulate pool and the African Knights
Motorcycle Club. Softball was second only to hunting as the favorite off-duty
pursuit. Special Services saw to the nimrod's every need with ammunition and a
complete array of camping gear, and the army Motor Pool provided vehicles for
an average of 500 hunting trips a year. The PX-sponsored «Big Pig
Contest» came at the end of each season and at least some of the entries
approached Boone and Crockett records. There were, at the time, three clubs --
the Oasis Club, the Top 3 Graders and the Officers Club.
When
dependents first arrived in Asmara, school age children were enrolled at the
British School in downtown Asmara. Then, April 1, 1951, the radio Marina School
began its first academic year. The school had one room, one teacher (a
dependent wife), 13 students in grades one through five, no books and no
supplies. The curriculum was designed for an 11 month academic year with
September set aside as vacation. As the dependent population increased, the
school enrollment mounted proportionately and rapidly outgrew the one-room
facility. When the school's first teacher departed, a security guard took over.
In January, 1952, a supply building was converted into a two-room school and
another dependent wife was hired. The security guard taught the first three
grades in the morning, and the fourth, fifth and sixth grades received distaff
attention in the afternoon. The first civilian contract teachers arrived
September 16, 1953. The enrollment at the time was 75 students in eight
grades.
While
Eritrea's fate was debated at the United Nations, political feelings ran high
in Eritrea. Problems of land ownership and contention between Christians and
Muslims contributed to an acuteshifta problem throughout the province.
In July, 1951, all U.S. military vehicles leaving the Asmara city limits were
escorted by military police with jeep-mounted machineguns.
The shifta problem was greatly reduced by a general amnesty offered
by the British Administration, but isolated incidents continued to involve
Americans. In 1955, the Kagnew Gazelle issued this editorial
caveat:
«The shifta attacks most commonly take place on dark,
relatively untraveled roads just beyond the bend of a curve. Here these bandits
place a road block usually composed of piled rock. The unsuspecting motorist
has great difficulty recognizing the road block, and thus the ensuing attack
until he is upon his assailants. Occasionally, the shifta have used
the guise of a police uniform or military jacket to affect the appearance of a
legitimate law officer; however no particular uniform or mode of dress is
typical. «Most shifta bands range from three to fourteen men.
They carry any available weapon -- clubs, knives, swords, firearms.
The shifta are thieves and are mainly interested in relieving the
victim of his valuables.»
In 1959,
the Gazelle covered the presentation of a Soldiers Medal for heroism to
Specialist Four Kenneth W. Hohe. SP4 Hohe was a passenger in a jeep carrying
mail from Massawa to Asmara. The first of the two vehicle convoy was stopped by
five armed shifta and by the time SP4 Hohe's jeep rounded the
curve, the driver of the first vehicle had been ordered out and relieved of his
valuables. Hohe's jeep stopped abruptly 75 fee away:
«The bandits then approached the jeep and when they were
within approximately 15 feet, the driver raised and fired a .45 caliber
automatic pistol, hitting the lead bandit in the abdomen and knocking him to
the ground. Without hesitation or concern for his personal safety, SP4 Hohe
immediately drew his .32 caliber Beretta pistol and began firing at the bandits
who attempted to return the fire, getting off only one round, and fled over the
roadside.»
The
signal event of 1952 was Eritrea's federation with Ethiopia. Upon the
implementation of that U.N. Resolution, the legal currency changed from the
East African Schilling to the Ethiopian dollar at an exchange rate of 2.48
Ethiopian to one U.S. dollar. At almost the same time, Kagnew became fiscally
independent from the Dispersing Office in Cairo which had managed military pay
records since 1949.
With the
signing of the Base Rights Agreement May 22, 1953 came the appellation, Kagnew
Station. The official designation was the United States Army Radio Station:
Kagnew Station. 1953 also was the year of the first University of Maryland
courses, two new bowling alleys (total of four) and the beginning of
negotiations to acquire the CINTIA area of Asmara which would eventually become
Tract E.
On March
17, 1955, Kagnew's single 600 man company was divided into a headquarters
company, a security detachment and an operations detachment. (The operations
detachment was divided into A and B companies in 1966). The men of these
organizations were housed in 12 barracks and five squad tents, and the
Consolidated Mess served 1,600 meals per day including a midnight meal.
The
formal lease for the CINTIA site was signed February 21, 1955. The origin of
the CINTIA is obscure, but the northern end of what is now Tract E was an
Italian heavy equipment and vehicle assembly complex and motor pool until 1942.
The British used the buildings briefly until 1952 when the area was abandoned.
The U.S. Army then used CINTIA for training exercises including nocturnal field
problems replete with mortar flares and blank-firing aggressors. After the
lease was signed, renovation, rehabilitation and new construction got underway.
To make the old buildings serviceable, the U.S. Army planned to spend in excess
of eight million dollars. The process was directed by the Corps of Engineers
and actual construction was contracted to the Crow-Steers-Shepherd Company who
had played a major role in the construction of Wheelus Air Force Base in Libya.
The new site was to be ready for occupancy by the end of 1956.
By the
summer of 1955, the $60,000 Robert E. Lee Dependent School was nearly finished
and the perimeter wall was halfway completed. The school and three air force
type barracks had been given priority. (These three barracks are the STRATCOM
Support company, Headquarters Company and barracks adjacent to the bowling
alley occupied by the military police until 1971.) The school was remodeled
from an Italian building and had five classrooms, a science lab and a library.
The school was affiliated with the U.S. Army Dependents Education Group in
Europe July 1, 1959. In order to become accredited by the North Central
Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, Kagnew's school had to add 12
new classrooms by the end of FY 1961.
The Post
Chapel was also nearing completion. The theater at the Radio Marina site had
done double duty as a chapel with services conducted by missionaries from the
Swedish Mission. The Tract E Chapel had been a light vehicle garage for the
Ethiopian highway Authority. The art glass windows were made in Heidelberg and
paid for by various stateside religious organizations.
1955 was
also the year for the adoption of the Kagnew Station shoulder insignia, the
beginning of the first army operated television station in the world and for
the first edition of a monthly letterpress newspaper, the Kagnew
Gazelle.
SP3 Walt
Reardon's design won a local contest and was eventually accepted by the
Department of the Army. The insignia, like Kagnew Station itself, was the
exception to the rule since Kagnew is not the type of unit authorized a
separate shoulder sleeve insignia under previous or existing Department of the
Army regulations and policies. The official description from the Institute of
heraldry reads:
«On a white escutcheon two inches wide, a red gazelle's head
within a pair of greater kudu horns. The shape of the escutcheon is determined
by the greater kudu horns. Both the kudu and the gazelle are native to and
plentiful in the area surrounding Kagnew, the gazelle in particular having
become a part of the life of the station.»
The
long-awaited initial broadcast of KANU-TV came December 1, 1955. KANU-TV was
among the first occupants of Tract E in newly-constructed studios. The station
broadcast 11 hours a day and offered a sampling of current stateside favorites
like «Toast of the Town», «The Eddie Cantor Show» and
«Burns and Allen». During the fifties, amateur talent ran rampant
at Kagnew. The NCO Club not only sponsored a series of amateur nights, but
«Kagnew Kapers» offered 30 televised minutes of music and variety.
One notable contribution to Kagnew's burgeoning music scene was made by Reggie
Young and his crowd-pleasing ability to play «Dixie» and
«Yankee Doodle» simultaneously on his electric guitar. Coverage of
this musical feat in the Gazelle referred to the «wizard like
touch» of the «classy professional». The PX also tapped local
talent with a series of photo contests and the East African Bubble Gum Blowing
Championship. AM radio moved to Tract E May 11, 1956 and shortly thereafter, a
nightly news wrap-up was simulcast on radio and television.
The first
issue of the Kagnew Gazelle is interesting for a number of obvious
reasons. The following excerpt details the selection process of the name:
«The name Kagnew Gazelle was chosen for the paper after much
debating and studying. We dug through the history of Ethiopia and Eritrea and
found the true meaning of Kagnew which left no doubt on our minds that the
paper should be named as such.»
«After receiving
the following facts, we are sure you will agree that Kagnew Gazelle is an
appropriate title for this publication. Kagnew is the Ethiopian word meaning
«to bring into harmony» and «to bring order out of
chaos». The word Kagnew first appeared in Ethiopian history during the
Battle of Adowa in 1896. Kagnew was the name of an Ethiopian general's horse
that, riderless, galloped towards the attacking Italians heartening the
Ethiopians into repulsing them. Successive attacks by the Ethiopians led by the
general mounted on Kagnew defeated the Italians. Ethiopian legend states that
St. George rode the horse in the first charge.»
«In 1936 when
Ethiopia was again invaded by the Italians, an airplane named Kagnew flown by
an Ethiopian, inflicted considerable damage before being destroyed. After the
war, the name was given to a battalion of the Imperial Body Guard of H.I.M.
Haile Selassie I. This was a select battalion manned by picked personnel and
considered to be the best in the Army.»
«In 1951, the
Kagnew Battalion was sent to Korea as a part of Ethiopia's support of the
United Nations where it distinguished itself in the field. The Battalion
boasted that its men were never taken prisoner, but preferred to die
fighting.»
«And that's the
motto of the Kagnew Gazelle -- to die fighting giving you the best
possible news available.»
The
careful reader will note the «gazelle» is never justified, which
leads one to believe that the selection was arbitrary and the paper could just
as easily have been the Kagnew Baboon. Judging from the Institute
of Heraldry's reference to the gazelle as being a part of the life at Kagnew
Station, however, one may infer that gazelle were indeed plentiful at the time
and were killed off during Kagnew's 20 years of hunting.
Even with
the anticipation and interest in the CINTIA construction, life was routine at
Radio Marina where the predominant interest seems to have been athletics. Field
days and track meets saw Kagnew thinclads determined to better post records,
and the softball seasons lasted six months for the 250 indefatigable
participants. Judging from the early issues of the Kagnew Gazelle,
softball was the most important of all sports. The first no-hit game got banner
headlines. For those less athletically inclined, a model shop, a radio repair
shop and a wood shop were available to accomodate the tinkerer's every
whim.
If one
were to cull the recurring laments from Kagnew's 30 year history, the
logistical snarls of the 10,000 mile supply line would certainly find a place
at the top of the list. But that long-lamented supply line didn't really become
«extended» until the Suez Canal was closed in 1956. Monthly ships
and weekly airplanes were pretty much the rule for the fifties. December 12,
1955 marked the end of Kagnew's reliance on CONUS supply lines, and the first
quartermaster requisition submitted to the Commander in Chief, U.S. Army,
Europe took nearly a year to arrive.
as 1956
progressed, it became apparent that CINTIA would not meet the anticipated date
originally set for «beneficial occupancy». Basically, the delay was
caused by increasing requirements. the chapel, school and television studios
had been put into use in 1955, and by September, 1956, the gymnasium (including
a boxing ring and 6 bowling lanes), the Top Three Club and 17 housing units
were nearing completion. The new post laundry was dedicated September 11, 1956,
and plans were underway for four additional eight-unit apartments and 11
four-plexes.
The Judge
Advocate Office was created August 15, 1956. Prior to that, legal advice was
dispensed from the resident S-2 legal Advisor.
The
perimeter wall around Tract A, the Provost Marshal's Office, the BOQ, the
Transportation Warehouse, nine duplex houses, 11 four-unit apartments and four
eight-unit apartments were completed in 1957, the year of the M-14 rifle.
Concomitantly, the Officers Club, the Oasis Club, swimming pool and hospital
addition were begun. Special Services opened the six lane bowling alley, a
picnic area, a softball diamond and an auto hobby shop, and cinemascope came to
the post theater.
The 4th
Detachment of the Second Signal Service Battalion was redesignated Field
Station 8604 Administrative Area Unit May 15, 1949, and the designation stuck,
with a few variations, until Kagnew officially became the 4th U.S. Army
Security Agency Field station in 1958. The post organization at the time was
comprised of a headquarters company, an operations company, a guard company and
the medical detachment of the U.S. Army Hospital. During that fiscal year, the
Guest House, the Oasis Club, commissary warehouse and swimming pool were
completed. A new 222 man barracks and 50 NCO housing units were planned for FY
1960.
Rest and
relaxation centers in Keren and Massawa were also established. The C.I.A.A.O.
Hotel in Massawa offered army cots and free rooms to enlisted barracks dwellers
and free transportation was provided by Special Services. The Koral House
accommodated officers and civilians. These facilities were closed in 1963
because of financial difficulties. The Red Sea Rest Center was opened November
4, 1967.
the grand
opening of the Keren Rest Center received in-depth Gazelle coverage
June 13, 1959. The Rest Center was located in a private villa leased from an
Italian. In addition to its genteel surroundings, there was a small swimming
pool, horseshoe pits, croquet courts, volleyball, tennis and badminton courts
and a shuffleboard. The Gazelle offered this caution:
«The drive (to Keren) is wonderful. However, there is one
section which will remind you of the Massawa road. It is from the 40 to the 60
kilometer mark. In this 20 kilometers, you drop almost 3,000 feet. If you don't
drive carefully, some member of your party may get sick from the drop in
altitude. After you are beyond the 60 kilometer mark, you will begin to feel
better.»
Alaska
became the 49th state in 1959 and once again from the Gazelle comes
«Across the Commanders Desk» by Post Commander LTC Robert
Harris:
«During an eight day conference in Washington, I attempted to
secure additional money to build more recreational facilities on Kagnew
Station. My request for funds to build a wading pool for our children and a
snack bar and steam bath at the swimming pool was turned down. Our plans for a
miniature golf course have been postponed too, pending the discovery of a
source of funds to pay for its construction.
«We have been
assured that there will be 50 new dependent quarters built plus a new barracks
this year. Construction on the dependent quarters will begin in November.
Construction on the new barracks will begin in the latter part of October. We
are programmed for 61 new dependent quarters during the next fiscal year. We
are also working on plans for a 50 house private rental subdivision adjacent to
Kagnew Station.
«The two Chris
Craft cruisers arrived in Massawa on the 19th of August and will be available
for use in fishing, water skiing and cruises along the Red Sea.
«Special
Services is planning to get more tours into South Africa especially in Kenya
for hunting and photographic tours.
«Arrangements
have been made with the 2nd Air Division at Dhahran for flights to Italy,
Germany, Beirut, Jerusalem, India and other places for leave.
«Midnight movies
were started on 17 August for the benefit of those trick workers who get off
work at midnight. Movies start at 0130. The PX Snack Bar is also open now until
0400. We are also trying to get a juke box in the Snack Bar. Also the new PX
Annex, Recreation Room and Top 5 Snack Bar were opened at Tract A on 17
August. «A word or two on the subject of RUMORS. These can be very
dangerous. They can hurt you, your buddies, your unit and our families if they
are not stopped. On a small post like this, rumors start very easily. If you
are not sure of something that was said, find out the truth, if it is wrong,
get the rumor stopped as quickly as possible.
«Our water
situation has improved in the last few months. We were getting only 45% of the
water normally required for a post our size. Now we are getting about 65% of
the normal requirement. Keep up the good work on water conservation. We hope to
have all we need soon.
It is
noteworthy that even though this article was written in 1959, it could just as
easily have come from any of the 20-plus commanders who have presided over 30
years of development at Kagnew Station.
The first
consideration has always been recreation. The culture shock of Africa has
historically exacted a toll on neophyte Kagnewites. Further, what has come to
be the American standard of high speed travel and untrammeled mobility is
frustrated in Asmara. Travel restrictions imposed to reduce the exposure of
Americans to the bands shifta exacerbated the fact that there just
aren't enough roads in Ethiopia. Forays south, to Addis Ababa, require stout
vehicles, a pioneering spirit and some degree of expertise in auto
mechanics.
So, over
the years, Kagnew commanders channeled funds and energies into recreational
diversions, the underlying rationale being that if you could keep everyone busy
doing something he enjoyed, the peripheral problems would work themselves out.
With the influx of dependents throughout the fifties and sixties, there was an
added element to cater to, and in the long run, Kagnew was rarely wanting.
The next
concern was quarters for there were never enough. Eritrea's post-war economy
couldn't cope with the insatiable American demand for housing, and for the two
decades between 1950 and 1970, Kagnew busily installed set-upon-set of family
quarters and Asmara entrepreneurs took advantage of the lucrative situation. In
the spring of 1972, however, the 20 year housing problem came to an abrupt end
with the Army Security Agency's phaseout from East Africa.
Although
LTC Harris doesn't touch on the nettlesome supply line, he does comment on two
other major problems which have complicated life at Kagnew Station for 30
years--water and rumors.
Flushing
a toilet is something that Americans have come to take for granted, but at
Kagnew Station, flushing has oftentimes been a privilege reserved for only
certain hours of the day. Like most other countries situated a scant 15 degrees
off the equator, Ethiopia relies on a capricious rainy season to deposit a
year's worth of water each summer. Unhappily, the rain isn't guaranteed and
water rationing has occurred about every three years. The rain is a product of
the Intertropical Convergence Zone -- a turbulent confluence of the cool trade
winds of the Northern Hemisphere and the warmer winds from the south. As the
sun moves toward Summer Solstice, this moisture-laden zone moves with it
reaching 15 degrees North by July. Some years the Zone covers 2,000 square
miles, while some years, only 200. In short, when the Zone is small, Kagnew's
toilets don't flush. The most sever shortage began in 1969 when Kagnewites
husbanded water for 18 months.
Finally,
or last but not least, the rumors that have pervaded Kagnew Station merit at
least passing mention. It's probably the small town atmosphere that has spawned
the endless rumors, but since they have been so commonplace, Kagnewites have
learned to cope with them. Early in 1972, when rumors predicted the army
Security Agency's withdrawal, the reaction was varied. Some worried, some
discounted them and some began packing.
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