Military post offices in Iraq closing Nov. 17

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Because U.S. forces are coming home from Iraq by the end of the year, the U.S. Postal Service will stop accepting mail addressed to military post offices in Iraq starting Nov. 17, Defense Department officials said Oct. 26.

Military post offices in Iraq also will stop processing mail Nov. 17, and service members there should begin now to advise those who send them mail about the Nov. 17 deadline.

Mail still in the postal system through Nov. 17 will be processed and delivered to service members in Iraq, officials said.

In November, U.S. military postal service responsibilities in Iraq will transition to State Department embassy or consulate post offices for service members assigned to Office of Security Cooperation or the Chief of Mission in Iraq.

These sites will provide letter and parcel mail services to service members assigned to the Office of Security Cooperation or the Chief of Mission in Iraq.

The transition will be closely coordinated with the U.S. Postal Service Agency, which will delete ZIP codes for Iraq military post offices from the USPS database to prevent undeliverable mail from entering the postal system after Nov. 17, according to defense officials.

"If APO mail arrives in Iraq after a service member departs, or mail is mistakenly accepted by a USPS post office after Nov. 17, mail will be redirected to the new mailing address provided or, if no mailing address was provided, returned to sender," said Shawn Horton, mail clerk, Dobbins Force Support Squadron.

Related Sites:
Military Postal Service Agency http://hqdainet.army.mil/mpsa/
USPS Postal Bulletins http://about.usps.com/postal-bulletin/pb2011.htm

Story courtesy of Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service, Washington D.C.