Christmas in the Balkans, Mariah Carey-Style
On
an icy winter's night in Kosovo, pop superstar Mariah Carey
brought the house down when she told 700 wildly cheering
American soldiers: "Everyone back homes loves you."
It was pure schmaltz but they loved it -- a chance
for a Christmas singalong in Camp Bondsteel with one of the
world's most famous pop divas.
Patriotism reigned supreme. The New York singer wore a red
dress, a white dress and a blue dress for her quick-change
concert for the troops. Waving the Stars and Stripes,
she had the soldiers bellowing with pride.
She even had them up on stage to decorate the Christmas tree.
The United States has 6,000 peacekeeping troops in Kosovo.
By the end of her tour around three American camps on Tuesday,
the military reckoned she had met half of them. "The
rest are out on patrol," a U.S. Army spokesman said.
Carey, whose hometown was forever scarred by the September
11 attacks on the twin towers of the World Trade Center, is
not one of those stars whose fear of flying has kept them
at home ever since President Bush launched his war on terrorism.
"We want to give these people a little glamour,"
she told Reuters on the tour.
And you cannot do that staying at home.
"Traveling and being around my different fans around
the world is what keeps me going," she said. "I
have a different philosophy to a lot of people."
She was in and out of a Chinook helicopter all day. Every
time, the reception was tumultuous. For the soldiers,
all their Christmases had come at once.
Suddenly at one camp, a soldier shouted out "Go on --
give me a hug." Carey duly obliged.
Carey, reflecting on an emotional day out with the troops,
said: "It was an honor and a privilege to give something
back."
Asked if one day she might ever contemplate entertaining
American troops in Afghanistan, she said: "Yes."
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