By Marine Corps Cpl. Joseph Scanlan
Regional Command Southwest
CAMP BASTION, Afghanistan, March 27, 2014 – On March 15, a
bright-eyed baby girl was born at South Nassau Communities Hospital in
Oceanside, N.Y. However, her father, Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kalib K. Walker,
was thousands of miles away serving his country in Afghanistan in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom.
Walker, an automatic rifleman with Company B, 1st Battalion,
7th Marine Regiment, and a native of Freeport, N.Y., had been training for his
second deployment to Afghanistan when his wife, Mariolbis, told him she was
pregnant. During his pre-deployment training he was given a rough estimate of
his deployment date and was hopeful he would be present for the birth of his
first child, Kylie. He departed the United States ten days prior to her birth.
“When I found out my due date and realized it was around the
same time Kalib was deploying, I was heartbroken,” said Mariolbis Walker,
Kalib’s wife. “Knowing he wasn’t going to be able to be with me in the delivery
room to experience her birth was miserable.”
Kalib’s prior deployment to Afghanistan during 2012 was
kinetic. He went on several patrols and missions each week and encountered
enemy fire on a regular basis. The battalion’s mission this deployment is to
conduct security force assistance to defeat enemy forces throughout their
battlespace, limited offensive operations and set conditions for the transfer
of full security responsibilities to Afghan National Security Forces in Helmand
province.
“I’m constantly asking myself if he is alright,” Mariolbis
said. “I’m worried about the possibility of him not coming home and never
meeting his daughter.”
Fortunately, for the time being, Kalib has been able to
visually contact Mariolbis and Kylie by using video chat on his phone with the
available Wi-Fi. While he lives at Camp Bastion, he makes an effort to see his
wife and child as much as possible. Due to the time zone difference between New
York and Afghanistan, Kalib wakes up in the morning before the sun rises to see
his wife and daughter before they fall asleep at night.
Not being there for a loved one during a time of need can
put a tremendous amount of stress on an individual, especially if the
individual is away in a combat zone where tomorrows are never promised. Unlike
his first deployment, he now has a wife and child awaiting his return.
“I’m happy and proud to be a father,” Kalib said. “Having a
child definitely changed the way I think and act because I don’t just make
decisions for myself anymore. I make them for my family. I feel terrible
because I can’t be there for my wife when she needs me most, but I volunteered
to fight for my country as a Marine Corps infantryman, and this is one of the
sacrifices I have to make.”
Kalib is slated to return home to his family in September.
This is his final deployment before his current contract with the Marine Corps
ends.
“I know as hard as this deployment is for me, it’s 10 times
harder for him because he is away from his newborn daughter,” Mariolbis said.
“I hope he knows how proud we are of what he is doing for our country. I know
he is going to be an awesome father, and I can’t wait for him to start bonding
with Kylie.”
One of the first things Kalib plans to do when he returns
from Afghanistan is to take his wife and daughter to Walt Disney World in
Orlando, Fla. Kalib plans to pursue a college education and work for a local
fire department after completing his active service in the Marine Corps.
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