Tie To The Past, Road To The Future
by U.S. Marine Corps Author April
17,
2023
The violence in Iraq was reaching its
pinnacle in April 2004 as Marines bloodied their way through the
first Battle of Fallujah. Sectarian clashes divided the nation as
Marines with 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment worked desperately
to curtail the insurgency.
Lt. Col. Babu Kaza, who was a
first lieutenant at the time, was stationed at Marine Corps Base
Camp Lejeune serving as a prosecutor in the base’s legal office.
According to Kaza, it was a high-volume trial office and the hardest
he has ever worked in his career.
With the ongoing war in
Iraq, Camp Lejeune was the heartbeat of the Corps with Marine units
constantly training in preparation for deployments to the Middle
East. Kaza, like most Marines, hoped he would soon be on the front
lines of combat.
However, Kaza’s wife Tabitha was pregnant so he
knew it would be some time before he found his way there.
 Pvt. Joshua Kaza, a Marine with Hotel Comapny, was awarded his Eagle, Globe and Anchor by his dad Lt. Col. Babu Kaza at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island on April 8, 2023. The date of April 8 is providential to the family. Babu's friend, 1st Lt. Joshua Palmer, was killed in Al Anbar, Iraq on this day in 2004 and is the very person for who he named his son after. (Image created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Marine Corps photo by CWO3 Bobby Yarbrough.)
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Every day, Kaza read newspapers and watched nightly news broadcasts
for any updates on the war in Iraq. It was a habit that carried over
from the previous year when he was at The Basic School, the initial
training school where all Marine Corps officers are taught.
“The war started in 2003,” said Kaza. “While in officer training, we
would turn on the television and watch the war as it progressed. The
concern for us as second lieutenants was the war was going to be
over before we had the opportunity to be part of it.”
Despite
the concerns, the war in Iraq intensified from 2003 to 2004.
Insurgency grew throughout the country and the Marine Corps was
ordered to support offensive operations in Anbar Province.
Kaza watched from Camp Lejeune as I Marine Expeditionary Force began
Operation Vigilant Resolve in early April. Although Kaza always had
an intellectual inquiry about combat, he was particularly interested
in the Battle of Fallujah because one of his best friends, 1st Lt.
Joshua Palmer, was on the ground fighting there.
Palmer had
been one of Kaza’s roommates at The Basic School. For more than six
months they lived together, worked together, and grew to be great
friends. According to Kaza, the friendship grew easily because the
two shared many similarities such as they had both been prior
enlisted Marines in the Marine Corps Reserves and they shared the
same moral value system.
“He was brilliant and innovative,”
said Kaza. “He was an outside the box thinker who was always making
tactical decisions in training based on doing the right thing, what
made sense, and what was best for Marines. As you might imagine, he
graduated as one of the top ten Marines in the class.”
In
mid-April 2004, Kaza was in his office exchanging emails with
another Marine who he was roommates with asking “Can you believe
Palmer is in Iraq leading Marines in combat now? The email he got in
return was gut-wrenching—it stated Palmer had died on April 8th, a
few days earlier from hostile fire.
“It was devastating,”
said Kaza. “I sat starring at my computer in silence. I thought
there is no way this could be true.”
Kaza said he went home
that night and told his wife, which he admits was pretty emotional.
“For me personally, I hadn’t had anyone close to me die, so
there was that aspect of me having someone I know and am close with
be killed,” said Kaza. “What was going through my head at the time
was accepting the reality of dying in combat operations. I think as
Marines we all understand that theoretically, but to have it be
visceral and real in that respect, is something entirely different.”
Namesake
In January 2004, Babu’s wife Tabitha learned she
was pregnant. It was a renewed joy for the family, who only months
earlier was dealing with the loss of a miscarriage.
In
April, when Palmer passed away, the Kaza’s knew they were having a
boy. Together, they decided to name their son Joshua in honor of
Palmer.
“Joshua in the Old Testament was a warrior, a fighter,”
said Kaza. “It was a fitting name and fitting tribute to honor
Palmer.”
Six months after Joshua was born, Kaza deployed to
Anbar Province. Working with Civil Affairs, Kaza ended up in
Fallujah and drove around the city seeing the leftover devastation
from the previous campaigns. But according to Kaza, he also saw how
the heroism and sacrifice of Marines there had pacified the city.
“Kids would come up and approach us and were happy to see us as
Americans,’ said Kaza. “I credit that to the sacrifice and heroism
of Palmer and Marines like him that gave that city a chance at
democracy.”
When Kaza returned from Iraq, Joshua had changed.
What was once a peaceful baby had become a “death defying daredevil
who was hell on wheels going 100 miles an hour at all times.”
From an early age, Joshua said he wanted to be a Marine. He grew
up athletic and was physically tough, attributes Kaza believed
aligned well with military service. When Joshua got to high school,
Kaza said he went through a rebellious phase telling his dad he was
going to college or joining the Army or Air Force.
“I think
it was his way of being difficult,” said Kaza. “And then one day it
just clicked. He came to me and said can you take me to a recruiter?
I do want to join the Marines and be in the infantry like I always
said I wanted to be.”
As a father, Kaza said he was
overjoyed.
Earning The Title Marine
The recruiting
process was faster than Kaza expected and soon Joshua was on his way
to Parris Island.
After Joshua left for recruit training,
Kaza realized something unexpectedly. If Joshua completed training
without any failures or setbacks he would receive his Eagle, Globe
and Anchor on April 8th ...the anniversary of Palmer’s passing.
According to Kaza, the timing is providential.
Kaza
believes that his son receiving his Eagle, Globe and Anchor on April
8th is a representation of him carrying on Palmer’s legacy and that
Palmer will continue to live through his son within the Marine
Corps.
“The significance of him receiving his Eagle, Globe
and Anchor on the day of Palmer’s death, who he was named after, is
proof that my son is where he is meant to be,” said Kaza. “Every
decision he has ever made in his life has brought him here to this
moment, to this day, to this exact time. It is not a coincidence. It
is meant to be this way for him to carry on that legacy and to carry
on that namesake.”
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