COLUMBIA--Gov. Mark Sanford, the only governor
in the nation with an active military obligation, packed up his office
files Friday as he prepared to report for Air Force Reserve officer
training this weekend.
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LOU
KRASKY/AP |
South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford
holds a printer, as he asks should he carry it this way or get
a box, as his personal assistant Catherine Kellahan, looks on,
Friday, in Columbia, S.C, Sanford is packing things to take to
an Air Force Reserve officer training session he is attending
this weekend.
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For
the next two weeks, Sanford wants to be just the lanky guy in fatigues
with first lieutenant bars at Maxwell Air Force Base near Montgomery, Ala.
As the war plays out in Iraq, South Carolina's chief executive will be
sitting in a classroom and going through drills.
"I think it will be a fascinating time to be locked down on an Air
Force base for two weeks of your life," Sanford said.
It's the first time since he left Congress in 2001 that he will be away
from his wife and four sons for an extended time, but the family says they
can handle it.
"Two weeks is going to be easy" compared with time apart while her
husband was in Washington, Jenny Sanford said. Every night he's away from
home, Sanford calls before the children's bedtime. "I expect he will do
the same" for the next two weeks, she said Friday.
"We are going to miss him," she said. But "he's not going to Iraq or
Kuwait."
The Sanfords, however, know that's a possibility some time after the
governor completes his training.
Sanford must complete officer training as a minimum requirement for his
medical service officer position with the 315th Aeromedical Evacuation
Squadron at Charleston Air Force Base. His job is a non-medical role that
deals with the logistics of caring for the sick and wounded.
Sanford also has to complete the Reserve's health services
administration school, either in person or through correspondence courses.
And while this round of training begins at a critical time, Sanford
will continue to handle many of the affairs of state.
First, he's packing two cell phones: one personal and one for state
business.
Then there's the State Law Enforcement Division agent assigned to
protect Sanford. The agent is also in the Air Force Reserve and will
fulfill a two-week training requirement while at Maxwell.
The governor says the agent also is helping him pack and will act as a
liaison between Sanford and his chief of staff, Fred Carter, while the
governor is in Alabama.
"I'm going to carry with me a pile of executive orders" that may be
needed to direct state affairs while he's gone, Sanford said.
Sanford, who took office just two months ago, said he's only a couple
of hours away by plane if something happens that requires him to return
South Carolina.
"If al-Qaida blew up the Wando Terminal ... I'd be back here in an hour
and a half," Sanford said.
His departure means larger roles for his wife and chief of staff, both
of whom will call Sanford each night to go over what needs attention.
"Fred will run the day-to-day (operations), and she'll do some of the
ceremonial for me," the governor said.
Sanford, whose father and grandfather were World War II veterans, says
he grew interested in military service while serving his three terms in
the U.S. House. That interest was stoked when he was invited to a weekend
of maneuvers with Army Rangers in North Carolina.
He said he kept up with the physical demands of 3-mile runs, all-night
marches and crawling through muck. He prizes a picture of himself blending
in with three mud-caked Rangers.
Sanford said he's ready to blend in again.
For the next two weeks, he wants to be "low-key and quiet about my
other roles and responsibilities and just be a part of the group."