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With no military background himself, Obama has often sought the guidance of veterans like Flavin, Miska and Bradsher, who serves as a spokeswoman for the National Security Council. Before delivering a speech last week at North Carolina's Fort Bragg, Obama had the Iraq veterans review the remarks he planned to deliver to service members and their families. Darienne Page, an Army veteran now working in the White House on veterans and wounded warrior outreach, traveled with the president to Fort Bragg. The war's finality hit home for her on that trip, she said, when she met a young service member who asked her to thank the president for allowing him to spend his first Christmas home with his family in four years. "To be able to give that to someone and to know that you're responsible for making sure that this guy is home for the holidays, there honestly is no better feeling in the world," said Page, who deployed to Iraq in 2003. Like the president, the Iraq veterans in the White House do not speak about the war as a mission accomplished. They are candid about the challenges Iraq still faces, yet proud of the work they did there: clearing insurgent strongholds, helping bring down the levels of violence, and restoring basic services for the Iraqi people. "Iraq is not a perfect place," Flavin said. "Hopefully it will get closer to the ideal, but it's not there yet and maybe it never will be. But based on our tremendous sacrifice, I do think we're leaving the country in a better place." Each veteran has a vision for Iraq's future: A stable, democratic government. Safe and vibrant cities. A place where they could one day return with their families to visit their Iraqi friends. But for now, with all U.S. troops having left Iraq, their thoughts are increasingly with the families of the nearly 4,500 Americans killed in war and making sure they know a simple truth. "Their sacrifices really were worth it," Bradsher said.
[Associated
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