Kuwaitis were happy we liberated them
Kuwait Towers
Kuwait Towers and the Persian Gulf
Street vendors are common
I liked the lower red sign
In modern Kuwait City . . .
A view in Kuwait City
I did not take this picture: it is of me
The stateliness of St. Mary's Glacier
Something was done to the ore here
Inside part of the ore-processing building, long a…
Mine machinery, long dormant
Tailings
Mine experts would know what this is. I don't.
The Argo Tunnel Mine
I call it a "screw pine," but that's a guess
Windblown snow
St. Mary's Glacier
And as we began . . .
Drawbridge up
All you see . . .
It's called the Plimsoll line . . .
There are sailboats at Port Everglades, too
An older commercial area
Getting ready for the day's business
Near the spice souk
The spice souk itself
A date vendor
A retail spice vendor
A wholesale spice dealer
The television studio, Ministry of Information
My one artsy picture in Kuwait
The moon rises over the Persian Gulf
Such textured bark
Jewelry for sale
Abandon hope, all ye who enter here
Ominous asparagus
Think I'll have an apple instead
The flowers really weren't that yellow
The V key
The V key, all dressed up
Shooting trophy
Proof that fish descended from plants
Notes from the world of ribs
Red algae
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The gun is gone but the empties remain


Iraqi soldiers were sure that U.S. Marines would storm the beach in Kuwait City. We encouraged that belief. They practiced with their Russian-built 13mm machine guns. The Americans, meanwhile, came up from behind. Ha.
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