Monthly Archives: August 2009

Live Blogging

7:24:22 PM: You Served Radio has started! Check out http://www.blogtalkradio.com/youserved

7:26:44 PM: New blog entry: Live Blogging http://bit.ly/yG6EJ

7:29:31 PM: We’re talking with Phil Carter from http://www.americanfallensoldiers.com/. Phil paints portraits free of charge for families of the fallen.

7:35:25 PM: Families and NOK of the fallen can request a portrait online. http://bit.ly/KzIpA

7:36:50 PM: Chat room questions: Has Phil considered recruiting others to help paint portraits?

7:37:29 PM: Answer: It has been tried, but hasn’t made sense. All portraits are hand delivered and this is Phil’s way to pay back.

8:09:52 PM: Twitter seems to be having more difficulties tonight. Please stay tuned.

8:11:11 PM: We’re now talking with Matt from http://www.greatamericans.com

8:24:00 PM: Matt is going to be launching a major parternship with a major media network after the upcoming holiday!

8:37:43 PM: We are talking with Dana Harbaugh, http://www.pearlsofhonor.com/harley.html

8:39:09 PM: Dana is a Navy brat and a Navy combat vet himself

8:43:21 PM: Dana took his 2009 Harley and had it made into a rolling tribute and history lesson about Pearl Harbor

There is not a better man to lead the 75th Ranger Regiment

When I first saw the article below in Army Times today, I thought to myself ‘where do I know that name from?’ I have spent a majority of my time in the military around Rangers and guys who have spent a lot of time in Regiment or in the Ranger Training Brigade. So initially I thought maybe I had served with him. But as I read the article below, I realized I had read about him several times. He is the guy that Michael Yon wrote about extensively from Michael’s time embedded with deuce-four.

You can read Michael’s awesome story of what COL Kurilla, CSM Prosser and their men went through right here, http://www.michaelyon-online.com/gates-of-fire.htm

 

In fact even Bruce Willis is looking to star in a movie about COL Kurilla and Deuce-Four.

Announced his intention to make a pro-war film in which American soldiers will be depicted as brave fighters for freedom and democracy. It will be based on the exploits of the heavily decorated members of "Deuce Four", the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry, which has spent the past year battling insurgents in the northern Iraqi town of Mosul. Willis attended "Deuce Four"’s homecoming ball this month in Seattle, Washington, where the soldiers are on leave, along with Stephen J. Eads, the producer of Armageddon (1998/I) and The Sixth Sense (1999). The actor said that he was in talks about a film of "these guys who do what they are asked to for very little money to defend and fight for what they consider to be freedom". Willis is likely to take on the role of the unit’s commander, Lieutenant- Colonel Erik Kurilla (November 2005).

 

This guy has not spent his career slipping and dipping into soft assignments, he has truly led from the front and served as an example of what it is like to be a warrior. Congrats Col Kurilla You have earned the command of this honorable and legendary Regiment. You will do great things while there I am sure, and you will serve as the man of which all others in the Regiment aspire to be.

 

Col. Michael E. Kurilla will assume command of the 75th Ranger Regiment during a ceremony 9 a.m. Thursday at the National Infantry Museum’s Soldiers Field at Fort Benning, Ga., according to a press release.

Kurilla, who commanded 2nd Ranger Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, at Fort Lewis, Wash., and recently graduated from the National War College, will assume command of the regiment from Col. Richard D. Clarke, who has been assigned to Fort Bragg, N.C.

Thursday’s change of command ceremony culminates the Ranger Rendezvous, which kicked off Monday with a mass tactical airborne operation featuring more than 1,000 Rangers. The Rendezvous is a unit tradition featuring Ranger demonstrations and events and is often attended by families and veterans as well.

Before commanding 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, Kurilla led 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment, taking his soldiers into combat in Mosul, Iraq, in 2004 and 2005.

The unit’s deployment, which resulted in Kurilla’s soldiers earning five Silver Stars, 31 Bronze Stars with V device and 181 Purple Hearts, was chronicled in Army Times in March 2006. During the deployment, on Aug. 18, 2005, while conducting a combat patrol in western Mosul, Kurilla and his soldiers were involved in the high-speed pursuit of an Opel Vectra in which three insurgents were trying to evade U.S. forces. When the insurgents got out of the car and ran into a neighborhood, Kurilla and his men sealed off the area and began to search for the insurgents.

The soldiers quickly came under enemy fire, and as Kurilla moved towards his soldiers, he rounded a corner and an insurgent shot him three times in both legs and his arm, shattering his left femur. Kurilla continued to fight back, and his command sergeant major, Robert Prosser, later received a Silver Star, the third-highest award for valor, for his actions in taking down the insurgent. Kurilla quickly recovered from his wounds and went on to command 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment.

Last living US WWI Veteran Frank Buckles

Buckles from Sean Dunne on Vimeo.

Sean Dunne, a filmmaker from Brooklyn, NY recently notified us about his 10 minute film of Frank Buckles, the last living US WWI Veteran.  Watch and listen as Frank recounts his recollection of World War I.

Neurotic Indulgences on the Home Front

I’m a stickler for flag protocol, and the flag in the story below is truely tattered. This is one case, however, where I feel that mercy and compassion trumps protocol. Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe there’s no way to say exactly who is right in this matter, but I know how it feels to have your flesh and blood in a war zone. Sometimes we feel a little helpless here on the home front. We can do nothing to directly aid our loved one who is fighting and working so hard. We send prayers and packages. We wait by the phone to hear their voice and to give them uplifting news from home and the reminder that they are thought about and missed very much.

Sometimes we have, what I call, neurotic indulgences.

When my son left for Iraq the last time we were gearing up here at home for PCS. We were looking at 3-4 possible moves before we settled into our destination for a slightly longer stay. Packing went very well for me for the first move, but when I got to the family pictures I simply could not put Mike’s picture in the box. I just couldn’t. I did not realize up until that moment how much that picture meant to me. The thought of packing it caused me to weep. I also confess that while I visited my husband at Ft. Benning I snagged one of his t-shirts that was gently worn (basically smelled like him and the Infantry — but not the sweaty field!) I slept with that t-shirt on his pillow every night. It made me smile and helped me sleep.

I am not a superstitious woman, but I am human. If a picture, or a t-shirt, or a flag is what is holding a family member together during a time of deployment… for the love of mercy, let the family member have it. It’s the only sense of normalcy or control that we have sometimes. The story below struck me because I have a friend who is a Marine wife (he’s retired now). She also had an American Flag up during his deployment and told me that she felt that if she were to take it down something bad would happen to him. She knew better, but at the moment seeing the Flag flying gave her tangible reassurance that her Marine was fine.

Crazy? Maybe. If you have never been in those shoes though, I would withhold judgment.

Neighbors frown over military family’s tattered American flag

Sat, Aug. 01, 2009 06:05PM

EXCERPT

Faded nearly white and torn to shreds, the American flag flying in front of the home of Louis and Jessie Haros has drawn strange looks, and anger, from passers-by in recent weeks.

People have knocked on their door and done everything short of demand that the couple replace the tattered banner. One man even left a brand-new flag on the porch.

Louis Haros knows that sun, wind and rain have taken their toll on the once-new flag. But the last thing he means is to show disrespect. He said that his love for his son, Paul Haros, and for his country, have kept it flying long after the first rips appeared.

This week Paul Haros, a corporal in the California National Guard, is scheduled to return from Iraq. He served with the 82nd Airborne Division in Operation Desert Storm, and has served three tours in Iraq as a member of the Army National Guard.

Paul Haros, 39, hung the flag in front of his parents’ home on Belmont Avenue 11 months ago.

“Before he left, he brought the flag over and put it up,” Louis Haros said. “I told him I wouldn’t take it down until he came back. I didn’t realize it would get so bad so quickly, but I’m still leaving it up until he comes home.” READ ENTIRE ARTICLE

Kudos to You Served’s Troy Steward

Year of the NCO

You Served’s very own Troy Steward was recently “spotlighted” on Army.mil as part of their Year of the Noncommissioned Officer.  Hat tip to the Gazing at the Flag blog for reposting this article about Troy.

Troops MUST Reintegrate Into Their Families

Last week, Vice Chief of Staff of the Army testified before Congress. One of the things he told the panel should scare every single member of the military:

“Spouses were telling me that their husbands were not reintegrating with the family. They just realized that that was too hard to do in the short period of time they had (before returning to war) and they would back off from the family, which creates the relationship problems.”

Dear brothers and sisters in arms, we CANNOT afford to close ourselves off from our families. They are the only ones that can see us through the difficulties of deployment. They are the best thing we have in dealing with our issues and understanding our sacrifices and duties. They sacrifice with us while we are gone and if we shut them out, we denigrate THEIR sacrifices.

It’s hard to ratchet down to the CONUS mindset knowing that in just 12 short months, you’ll be back in the combat mindset, but it’s something that must happen for the sake of our futures and our families’ futures. It would be different if there was a definite end date to these wars we’re fighting, but the enemy has a vote. We don’t now, so we need to take every step possible to find normalcy in the sea of conflict and combat we are so frequently subjected to.

If we can’t lean on and support our families, who can we turn to? Our non-military friends have no idea. Most communities have no clue. Our fellow troops have their own problems and marriages to worry about (though they are also a source to be tapped into). Our families should be our number one priority, not the Army, not the mission. Nothing should hold a higher priority in our lives except maybe our God.

If you make the Army a career, it will last 20-30 years. Your family will be there for much longer if you do it right. Why let something so temporary as the Army take precedence over something you’ve sworn to protect for “time and all eternity” or “until death do you part?”

Yes, the war is draining us emotionally and physically, but if we don’t take the battle to the enemy, they will bring it back home again. We are stronger than that. We cannot let them win by killing us physically and mentally abroad and killing our marriages back home. Now, go your spouse and ______________. (you fill in the blank)

Big pay boost sought for badly injured vets

Severely disabled veterans who need virtually full-time assistance carrying out routine tasks such as bathing, dressing and eating would receive up to $1,410 more a month under a bipartisan bill introduced July 30 by members of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

Under the bill, 100 percent disabled veterans qualifying for the highest rate of special compensation because they need aid and attendance would receive up to $8,642 a month.

The bill, HR 3407, has three other key provisions:

• Some eligibility restrictions on the highest levels of aid and attendance allowances would be relaxed so that veterans suffering from traumatic brain injuries would receive payments now limited to those who have lost limbs.

• Medal of Honor recipients would receive $2,000 in monthly special compensation, twice the current rate.

• Veterans with severe burns would be eligible for adaptive vehicle grants, something not currently covered for those with burn injuries.

Three key lawmakers — two Republicans and one Democrat — are sponsoring the bill that they are calling the Severely Injured Veterans’ Benefits Improvement Act. The Republicans are Reps. Steve Buyer of Indiana and Henry Brown Jr. of South Carolina. Buyer is the senior Republican on the house Veterans’ Affairs Committee, and Brown is ranking Republican on that committee’s health panel.

The Democratic co-sponsor is Rep. Michael Michaud of Maine, chairman of the health panel.

The main obstacle to increasing veterans benefits has been finding a way to pay for it. But aides to Buyer said the cost of this proposal is fully covered by extending expiring provisions that ensure Medicare reimburses the Veterans Affairs Department for some medical treatments of nonservice-connected injuries.

“This is fully paid for,” Buyer spokesman Brian Lawrence said.

The big increases come as a result of doubling aid and attendance benefits for catastrophically injured veterans, who would receive either $7,552 a month or $8,642 a month in total disability compensation and special compensation. The payment level depends on the level of assistance needed to carry out daily activities.

Michaud said the bill is a response to testimony from some veterans groups that the needs of severely injured veterans are not being met by current policies.

“That is unacceptable,” he said.

Buyer said some veterans with severe traumatic brain injuries need constant supervision and help, just like veterans who are paralyzed or have lost multiple limbs.

Current policies that deny them higher rates of aid and attendance payments end up pushing veterans with TBI into residential care programs, when they could stay at home if there were enough money to cover the assistance they need, Michaud said.

“Obviously, this would lead to a better quality of life for those who suffer from this life-altering trauma.”

The bill was introduced just as the House of Representatives was leaving town for its traditional August break. No hearings on the proposal have been scheduled.

This originally appeared in the Army Times

‘Laptops for Flat Tops’ contest from All-American Direct

laptops

Online retailer All-American Direct continues their Laptops for Flat Tops contest this month.  Two  military families will win laptops with webcams with an additional webcam for the soldier to help improve communication during deployment.  To enter, submit a 400 word essay detailing your story of need and why your family should be chosen out of thousands of Americans to win the laptop.  You can also submit a one minute video to YouTube.  For full details and to enter go to www.allamericandirect.com/military and good luck.

Iraq and Afghanistan Medals of Honor

I wanted to provide a list of the Medal of Honor recipients from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars so that you have one place in which to read their story. These are just brief descriptions, but give you an idea for future research into these American heroes:

Lt. Michael P. Murphy
* Lt. Michael P. Murphy, Navy. Led a four-member team against between 30 and 40 Taliban fighters in the vicinity of Asadabad, Afghanistan. When the primary communicator fell mortally wounded, Murphy repeatedly attempted to call for assistance for his injured colleagues. Realizing the impossibility of communicating in the extreme terrain, and in the face of almost certain death, he fought his way into open terrain to gain a better position to transmit a call. His actions deprived him of cover and exposed him to direct enemy fire. Finally achieving contact with his headquarters, Murphy maintained his exposed position while he provided his location and requested immediate support for his team. He continued to engage the enemy until he was mortally wounded.

CPL Jason Dunham
* Cpl. Jason L. Dunham, Marine Corps. While attempting to search vehicles for weapons near the town of Karabilah, Iraq, an insurgent leaped out and attacked Dunham. In the ensuing struggle, he saw the insurgent release a grenade. Dunham immediately alerted his fellow Marines to the threat. Without hesitation, Dunham covered the grenade with his helmet and body, bearing the brunt of the explosion and shielding his colleagues from the blast.

PFC Ross A. McGinnis
* Pfc. Ross A. McGinnis, Army. Manned a machine gun as an insurgent dropped a grenade into his vehicle in northeast Baghdad. Reacting quickly, he yelled grenade. Then, rather than leaping from the gunner’s hatch to safety, McGinnis covered the live grenade, pinning it between his body and the vehicle and absorbing most of the explosion.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Monsoor
* Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael A. Monsoor, Navy. While providing protection from a rooftop in Ramadi, Iraq, an insurgent threw a grenade that hit Monsoor in the chest. He threw himself onto the grenade to absorb the force of the explosion with his body, saving the lives of two teammates.

SFC Paul Ray Smith
* Sgt. 1st Class Paul R. Smith, Army. He was helping to build a holding area for prisoners of war near the Baghdad airport when his unit was attacked by a company-sized enemy force. As the fight developed, Smith braved hostile enemy fire to personally engage the enemy with hand grenades and anti-tank weapons, and he organized the evacuation of three wounded soldiers from an armored personnel carrier. Fearing the enemy would overrun their defenses, Smith moved under withering enemy fire to man a .50 caliber machine gun. In total disregard for his own life, he maintained his exposed position in order to engage the attacking enemy force. During this action, he was mortally wounded. His courageous actions helped defeat the enemy attack, and resulted in as many as 50 enemy soldiers killed, while allowing the safe withdrawal of numerous wounded soldiers.

Sergeant First Class Jared Monti
* Sergeant First Class Jared C. Monti, Army. He was shot as he attempted for a third time to rescue a wounded comrade while conducting combat operations in the mountains near Gowardesh, Afghanistan. The actions took place as he ordered firepower that broke the enemy attacks and killed 22 enemy fighters. President Barack Obama will present the award on Sept. 17 at a White House ceremony.

Warrior of the Week: Colonel Katherine Miller

Colonel Katherine Miller
As the Deputy Provost Marshal General for U.S. Army Corrections Command, Col. Katherine Miller oversees six military prisons throughout the world. A born leader, Miller has always excelled, consistently earning honors for being at the top of her class in every school she attended. When she attended Officer Candidate School (OCS), however, Miller found she had a worthy rival in another student. Despite her best efforts, Miller had to settle for second place in the rankings as the top honor was given to another Soldier, Col. (Ret.) William Long. Miller found Long’s drive, energy and humor irresistible, and the two top students were married shortly after OCS graduation.

Over the past three decades, the Army couple has served together on the battlefield and the home front, teaching their children, Mica and Noah, and the Soldiers in their command to be the best they can be.

When Miller deployed to Afghanistan in 2005 in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, she knew her husband would keep life at home on track and that she had the support of her entire family to go out and complete her mission. Knowing first-hand the importance of keeping her Soldiers’ minds focused on the mission rather than missing home, Miller organized a series of sporting competitions designed to boost morale and increase camaraderie. The event, which was called the PIG Bowl, standing for Pride, Intelligence and Guts, challenged her Soldiers’ skills and raised money for the families of Soldiers killed in action. Miller also applied some of her experiences as a mother to furthering her mission with the Afghan people. Recognizing the universal relevance of family, Miller shared stories about her own family with locals to break down cultural barriers and to foster relationships. As a result of her accomplishments as a Military Police Officer, Miller received the Bronze Star Medal for leadership and meritorious service.

Although, Miller was away for long periods during her daughter’s teen years due to multiple deployments, she knows that she and her husband, together, have raised a strong and independent young woman. Her daughter Mica, a member of the Virginia National Guard and an ROTC cadet at George Mason University, has given Miller a new understanding of her Soldiers. She sees potential for greatness in each of her Soldiers, and pushes each of them to strive to be their best selves.

Armed with her own experiences and lessons learned from raising children in a dual-military family, Miller is committed to other Soldiers raise their own Army Strong families by mentoring junior Soldiers and their spouses. She currently resides with her husband and two children in Fort Belvoir, Va.