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NATO commanders have been outspoken on their plans to take Marjah. But they've remained tightlipped on one key bit of information: timing. Few know when the offensive will begin, and those who do are saying nothing. So the Marines are in the starting blocks, waiting in the cold. "The wait is part of the fight," says Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Daniel Perez, a Navy medic. "It gives people the time to pump up with anticipation." Marjah is suspected to be one of the biggest, most dangerous minefields NATO forces have ever faced, and hundreds of the fighters barricaded inside could be planning to fight until death. But Perez said he hasn't seen anyone frightened by the fight -- "or if they are, they're hiding it very well." He says waiting, however long, doesn't matter for the Marines. "It's almost like the Olympics," he said. "You train and train and train ... and this is finally the big show."
[Associated
Press;
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