Monthly Archives: January 2010

Sea World Offering Free Tickets for Military Members

Sea World is offering free tickets for Military Members. They do this annually and it’s a great offer! Check it out! 

Go to HERO SALUTE to register and for more information — don’t forget to print the form for your free entrance!

The free tickets are valid at any of the following locations:
SeaWorld in: Orlando, San Diego, or San Antonio.
Busch Gardens Tampa Bay or Williamsburg
Sesame Place
Adventure Island
Water Country USA
(Christmas Town at Busch Gardens in Williamsburg, Va. is not part of this program)

Tissue Alert: WWII vet and wife are finally at rest

H/T to www.blackfive.net for the lead on this story. I was checking out some of the latest B5 blogs this morning when I came across this one. I am not an emotional person, but by the time I got to the end of this story I had tears in my eyes. So for those of you with tissues nearby, you may want to grab for them now.

This story is really something that will fill you with three noticeable emotions. At least it did me, as it made me sad, angry and proud all at pretty much the same time. You will feel sadness that human remains were treated this way and that they had no loved ones. It will make you angry that true hero from WWII and his mother in law and wife were thrown out with the trash, but I think it will also make you proud to see how these young people stepped up and did the right thing. It is good to see that the upcoming generation still has scruples and ethics. This is a story that needs to be told, so I hope you will help me spread the word. This story originally appeared in the St. Petersburg Times and online at www.tampabay.com

BUSHNELL — The two teenagers got to the cemetery first.
He wore his dark green dress uniform from the National Guard. She wore a long black dress.
They stood on the edge of the road, across from rows of matching military headstones, waiting for the funeral of the man they had never met.
Mike Colt, 19, and his girlfriend, Carol Sturgell, 18, had driven more than an hour from their Tampa homes on Wednesday to be at Florida National Cemetery.
They weren’t really sure why they had come. They just knew they had to be here.
“It’s kind of sad, huh?” asked Sturgell, scanning the sea of white gravestones.
Colt nodded. “Yeah, but it feels kind of important.”
At 12:20 p.m., a Tampa police car pulled up, then a white Lincoln Town Car. Another police cruiser followed. Two officers stepped out.
“Thank you for being here,” Colt said, shaking both of their hands.
“No, thank you,” said Officer Dan College. “If it weren’t for you guys, none of us would be here.”
• • •
Three weeks ago, on the last Saturday of November, the young couple was hanging out at Sturgell’s house when her brother rode up on his bike, all excited. He had found two fishing poles in this huge pile of trash. Come check it out, he said. So they did.
At the edge of the trash mound, sticking out from beneath a box, Sturgell spied a worn green folder.
She pulled it out, brushed off the dust. Across the top, bold letters said, “Department of Defense.” Inside, she found retirement papers from the U.S. Army; a citation for a Purple Heartissued in 1945; and a certificate for aBronze Star medal “for heroism in ground combat in the vicinity of Normandy, France … June 1944.” In the center of the certificate there was a name: Delbert E. Hahn.
Why would anyone throw that away? Sturgell asked.
And who is that guy? Colt wanted to know. Must be old, a World War II vet. Looks like he served at D-Day!
That night, they took the paperwork back to Sturgell’s house and searched Delbert E. Hahn on the computer. Nothing. They talked about who he might have been, the life he might have led.
The next morning, they went back to the trash heap and searched for more clues. They rummaged through boxes, overturned furniture, picked through piles of the past. Colt moved a ratty couch — and something fell out. A metal vase, or box, some kind of rectangular container about a foot tall. On the base was the name: Delbert E. Hahn.
“It’s him,” Colt told his girlfriend. “This must be him, in his urn.”
Sturgell screamed. She didn’t want to touch it. It was kind of freaky, she said, discovering the remains of some dead guy.
“He shouldn’t be here,” Colt said. “No one should be thrown away like that, just left in a parking lot.”
The dead man wasn’t alone. Under the couch, the couple found two more sets of remains: a cylinder-style container with Barbara Hahn printed on the bottom and another urn, which had no name.
• • •
Tampa Police Cpl. Edward Croissant had just reported for the night shift that Sunday when his officers showed him the urns. This kid and his girlfriend had found them and brought them to the station.
Then an officer told Croissant about the Purple Heart. The Bronze Star. And the Normandy invasion.
And Croissant became irate. He had served eight years in the Navy. He’s in the Coast Guard Reserve. “I had three uncles in World War II. That was the greatest generation. If it wasn’t for those men, we would have nothing,” he said.
“That man saw combat. And someone just dumped him there? He deserves a better ending.”
Police called the Department of Veterans Affairs and learned Hahn had died in 1983, at the age of 62 — and was a highly decorated war hero. The staff sergeant had served in the infantry and been honored with five Bronze Stars and two Purple Hearts.
Barbara Hahn, they learned, was the soldier’s wife.
So how did their remains end up in that mound of garbage? Where was the rest of their family, or friends, anyone who would want their ashes? And who was in that third urn?
• • •
Neighbors filled in some of the story: Barbara Hahn had been a widow forever, they told police. For years, her mother had lived with her. Her mother’s name was Barbara, too.
The elder Barbara had lived to be more than 100. They thought she died around 2000. That third urn, neighbors told police, must be her.
The younger Barbara, the soldier’s wife, got sick in 2003. A couple came to care for her, and she wound up willing them her mobile home. When she died, the couple moved in, took out a mortgage, then didn’t make payments.
The bank foreclosed on the trailer late last year.
In November, officials sent a maintenance company to clear it out. The workers must have just dumped everything behind the vacant building on Busch Boulevard, neighbors told police. Including the remains of three people.
• • •
Just before 1 p.m. Wednesday, the two teenagers led the car line through Florida National Cemetery. Police followed, then the funeral director who had the urns. Outside a wooden gazebo, two rows of National Guardsmen stood at attention.
The funeral director handed the first soldier a flag, the next one the cylinder with Barbara Hahn’s remains, the third one the brass urn with Delbert Hahn.
(Barbara’s mother’s remains are still in the evidence room of the police station. Since she wasn’t a veteran or married to one, she wasn’t entitled to be buried in the military cemetery.)
“Let us open the gates of the Lord,” said a military chaplain, who led the procession of strangers into the gazebo. “Let us remember,” said the chaplain, “none of us lives only unto himself.”
The teenagers sat on the front bench. Three officials from Veterans Affairs sat behind them. They had spent weeks searching for the Hahns’ relatives, any distant kin or friend, someone who might want their ashes — or at least want to come to their burial.
They couldn’t find anyone. Even the couple whom Barbara Hahn had willed her home to didn’t show.
By the time the chaplain lifted his head from the Lord’s Prayer, a long line of men had wrapped around the gazebo. Wearing blue denim shirts and work boots, they clasped their caps in their hands and bowed their heads. Dozens of groundskeepers from the cemetery had left their Christmas party to come pay respects to the man who, in death, had been so disrespected.
A bugler played taps. The riflemen fired three shots. And 56 people watched the honor guard fold a flag over the urns of the man and woman they never knew.
News researcher John Martin contributed to this story.


Jan 7, 2010 Live Blog

8:07:19 PM: CJ, Marcus and Troy are all on the show tonight

6:32:23 AM: New blog entry: Tissue Alert: WWII vet and wife are finally at rest http://bit.ly/5Dn0fx

7:38:08 AM: New blog entry: Sea World Offering Free Tickets for Military Members http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3901

7:52:22 AM: New blog entry: NMFA Offers Military Spouse Scholarships http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3904

8:45:04 AM: New blog entry: Registration for 2010 Annual Miblog Conference is open http://bit.ly/7xhJbJ

12:36:42 PM: New blog entry: Watch Killer Subs on PBS website http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/2010/01/08/watch-killer-subs-on-pbs-website/

12:45:04 PM: New blog entry: Registration for 2010 Annual Miblog Conference is open http://bit.ly/7xhJbJ

4:36:42 PM: New blog entry: Watch Killer Subs on PBS website http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/2010/01/08/watch-killer-subs-on-pbs-website/

7:48:54 PM: You Served now has a new profile picture. We think it is pretty spiffy. What do you think? http://bit.ly/5ZrBJZ

11:48:54 PM: You Served now has a new profile picture. We think it is pretty spiffy. What do you think? http://bit.ly/5ZrBJZ

12:07:12 AM: New blog entry: Don’t Forget About Us On Facebook! http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3918

7:07:33 AM: #MILITARYMON @USNAVYSEALS @guardwife @PatriotAirborne @jolo219 @Shotgun15e @armylovelife @BostonMaggie @TammyMunson @a12iggymom @Lermont
10:15:15 PM: New blog entry: Transitioning to Civilian Life http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3940

1:30:28 AM: New blog entry: Switchfoot Supports the Troops http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3943

7:34:34 AM: New blog entry: As a Followup to Transitioning to Civilian Life http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3947

12:49:27 PM: New blog entry: Post-deployment: 37 things to keep in mind http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3954

7:59:11 PM: New blog entry: No Apologies, Please http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3957

7:42:27 AM: New blog entry: Battlefields and Blessings, Stories of Faith and Courage from the war in Iraq and Afghanistan http://bit.ly/8nW4aH

9:03:26 AM: New blog entry: You Served’s “MilBlog Map” Launches http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/?p=3966

3:47:22 PM: You Served starts in 15 minutes. Tonight Bridge of Sighs (http://bit.ly/6ILVaT) and @PinUpsForVets Gina Elise is on

3:55:01 PM: Listen live in 5 minutes to Episode #71 – Bridge of Sighs, Gina Elise on You Served. http://tobtr.com/s/823652. #BlogTalkRadio

4:00:14 PM: Come listen to Episode #71 – Bridge of Sighs, Gina Elise on You Served on air now! http://tobtr.com/s/823652 #BlogTalkRadio

All American Direct Announces Military Spouse Winners

AllAmericanDirect.com announces two winners in the final €˜Laptops for Flat Tops contest. We have been posting for a while now about this contest, so I wanted to post a follow up about the winners.

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INDIANAPOLIS  (January 5, 2010)€“ AllAmericanDirect.com, a leading e-commerce provider of consumer goods and services, today announces the winners of the Laptops for Flat Tops contest, the company€™s fourth and final contest for the families of military men and women currently serving overseas. Alyssa Mineo of Westlake Village, Calif. and Cara Farmer of Norfolk, Va. have each been chosen to receive a laptop with an embedded Webcam (for their families) and an additional Webcam (for their soldiers).

Three judges selected Mineo and Farmers essays based on their powerful descriptions of how their families have been affected by having a loved one serving overseas and how a laptop and Webcam would improve communication with their loved one. The judges are Col. (Ret.) Dale A. Kissinger, Scott Davis and Jenna Richards.

Alyssa Mineo is the wife of CPL Kevin Mineo of the United States Marine Corps, who is on his fifth deployment and currently stationed in Afghanistan. This deployment will be exceptionally hard for the Mineo family, as Alyssa is eight months pregnant with their second child due on Jan. 31. They are expecting a baby boy and intend to name him Wyatt. Alyssa and Kevin have a four year old daughter named Faith, and both mother and daughter reside in Westlake Village, Calif.

“I feel very blessed to have been chosen as a winner,€ says Alyssa Mineo. €œIt means a great deal to me, especially with this deployment because my husband will not be around for the birth of our second child, our first boy. Thanks to having access to a laptop and webcam, I am anticipating that he will be able to ‘see’ his son instead of receiving pictures a month later. Our four year old daughter is old enough for this deployment to realize how long her Daddy has been gone, and she will be so excited to see her Daddy via webcam. Thank you so much for this opportunity.”

Cara Farmer is the wife of BM2 David W. Farmer, Jr. of the United States Navy, who has been deployed on his second tour of duty in Iraq in June 2009. David and Cara have three children, Destiny, age 7; James, age 5; and Taya, age 3. Cara and the children live in Norfolk, Va.

€œI am very grateful for the laptop and Web cams,€ says Cara Farmer. €œWith David leaving for his second deployment to Iraq, this laptop couldn’t have come at a better time. My children and I now have a better way to communicate with their father that goes above the traditional phone calls and emails. Thank you, AllAmericanDirect.com!

This was the fourth and final Laptops for Flat Tops contest. These were a series of four bi-monthly contests designed as a way for AllAmericanDirect.com to say thank you to the families of military men and women. During the past four contests, eight families have been awarded this prize package.

On behalf of AllAmericanDirect.com, we would like to personally thank every spouse, father, mother, brother, sister, son and daughter who participated in this contest, said Mike Mountford, CEO of AllAmericanDirect.com. And we would like to salute each member of the United States Military for their dedication to serving and protecting our country. These two deserving winners will now be able to interact and communicate with their loved ones on a higher, more interactive level than a phone call, while they are away from their homes.

About AllAmericanDirect.com
AllAmericanDirect.com is a leading online retailer of consumer goods and services, founded in 1983 and acquired in April 2003 by Michael R. Mountford, CEO, and Jon K. Pardieck, president & CFO. AllAmericanDirect.com is a privately held national retailer of DISH Network, Verizon Wireless, HughesNet and an e-commerce provider offering a wealth of products in the consumer marketplace. AllAmericanDirect.com is headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana, with gross annual revenue in excess of $30 million. The company prides itself on helping consumers, €œLive Simple. Shop Smart. For media inquiries, please contact Christy Oberley at Dittoe PR at (317)202-2280 ext. 16. To learn more about All American Direct, please visit http://www.allamericandirect.com

Warrior of the Week – SFC Andrew Lane

sfc andrew lane

With two deployments to Iraq as a Special Forces medic, Sgt. 1st Class Andrew Lane has seen firsthand the progress that has been made. The Noncommissioned Officer, who has always wanted to serve in the Army’s Special Forces, has received multiple awards for his valorous and meritorious service overseas and will be honored at the 2010 Army All-American Bowl.

While deployed in 2006-2007 to An Najaf, Iraq, Lane was a team medic responsible for providing daily and emergency medical care to Soldiers as well as members of the Iraqi National Police Force. Additionally, the Special Forces medic helped train members of the Iraqi Army and police force for combat operations and provided them with basic emergency medical training. For his involvement in a combat operation during the deployment, Lane was awarded the Bronze Star Medal with Valor.

During his most recent deployment from January to August 2009, Lane served as the company senior medic in Baghdad, Iraq. In this role, he provided leadership to the team medics and procured the necessary medical supplies. Additionally, he served as the Special Operations Task Force-Central liaison to the Baghdad Combat Support Hospital, and provided a friendly face as wounded Special Forces Soldiers arrived and ensured the appropriate medical care. For meritorious service throughout the deployment, he received the Bronze Star Medal.

Comparing the two deployments, Lane noted the substantial progress in Iraq that had taken place over the three-year span.

“The biggest change was the ability of local security forces, both police and the Iraqi Army, to do their job successfully with less support from the American and coalition military. While they had limited abilities in 2006, they had stepped it up quite a bit by 2009,” he said.

A native of Sellersburg, Ind., he graduated from New Albany High School, and enlisted in the Army. After 15 years of service, Lane is currently stationed at Fort Campbell, Ky., with the 5th Special Forces Group. His father served as an Army Reserve Special Forces Soldier, and Lane considers it an honor to follow in his father’s footsteps and serve in the Army.

“Right now, I get to do what I’ve wanted to do since I was a little boy. I’m lucky that I get to live out my childhood dream,” he said.

Disney World and Shades of Green offer new military promotion!

Here’s a special-special! From January 3, 2010 through July 31, 2010 Disney and The Shades of Green Resort have worked to make a quick vacation for military families that much more affordable. Check out the highlighted area for an added special for Veterans on R&R. If you know a family, please pass this along!

If you do wind up going, send us some pictures and ride something fun for me! :)

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The Shades of Green Resort, an Armed Forces Recreation Center, and Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla., have teamed up to make a 4-Day vacation for service members and their families even more affordable. Disney announced this week that a 4-Day Military Promotional ticket will go on sale beginning Jan. 3, 2010. From Jan. 3, through July 31, each active or retired member of the U.S. military may purchase up to six special 4-day promotional tickets for $99 each. “Park Hopper” and “Water Park Fun & More” options may also be added for a nominal fee. The Military Promotional tickets are available through the Shades of Green Attraction Ticket Sales Office. The eligible military member must be present when the tickets are purchased and used.

Additionally, the Shades of Green Resort is offering a 50% discount on meals and rooms for any Soldier on authorized R&R leave from the Balkans, Operation Iraqi and Enduring Freedom between Jan. 4 and Jan. 31, 2010.

The Shades of Green Resort is one of four Armed Forces Recreation Centers worldwide, operated by the Army’s Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command. The mission of the resort-style hotels is to support the readiness and well-being of service members through a variety of vacation packages that make affordable vacations at a world-class destination possible. Room rates are on a sliding scale, based on rank, making it affordable for all military families.

Visit www.shadesofgreen.org to learn more about these and other vacation specials.

To make hotel reservations, active and retired U.S. Military personnel may visit www.shadesofgreen.org or call the Shades of Green Resort at 888-593-2242. Shades of Green currently has availability, however, rooms may be limited on certain dates.

Additional ticket offers to other area Theme Parks are also available.

For more information please contact the Shades of Green Attraction Ticket Sales Office at (407) 824-1403.

All Disney Military Promotional tickets and options are non-transferable and must be activated by Sept. 26, 2010. Blackout dates and other limitations may apply.

Cookie Jar Update

As I reported on the New Years, the “Red Bulls” of the 34th Infantry Division were surprised with a Christmas package of cookies and fresh, cold milk.

I want to share with an email from one of the Soldiers that was a recipient of that good will from America. When you don’t think that your efforts in supporting our troops by sending or contributing to the sending of care packages, read this:

THANK YOU FOR THE MILK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

We got the milk on Dec 26th. Ryan was out on convoy, so I had to keep it a surprise for another 4 days before he could know. I was expecting 1 gallon for him…I didn’t know I was getting milk too! What a wonderful surprise! We got a total of 5 gallons I think.

When he got home from convoy, I brought him to my office and made him close his eyes. The I gave him a glass of milk and told him he had to drink it without smelling it first…(he didn’t like that part). He was SO surprised when he tasted it! He drank a whole jug of it that night before we left the office! Our little secret….he almost had tears in his eyes when he tasted it! He couldn’t believe it was “real” milk. He actually ate Oreos with that jug of milk. He said that it was the “bestest Christmas present ever”!

I shared the milk with the guys in the office and SPC Willsey drank a jug all by himself. He said that when he was home on leave he drank a gallon a day because he missed it so much over here. He is going to write you to see if you could send him some as well, I think. I gave him one of the customs slips that has your address on it. Ryan’s commander took a jug and wrote his name all over it so that no one would drink it. We put 2 other jugs in the fridge for community property…they lasted about 3 days.

To answer your QC questions:

We got 10 half gallons of milk

They were still partially frozen when they got here

1 leaked in transit, but the other 9 half gallons were THOROUGHLY enjoyed!!!

I have been asked if we can send you money to get some more shipped here. The flavors requested were 2%, whole, and chocolate milk (that one’s from me) :o ).

It was so awesome to get those boxes in the mail! You have made a lot of folks here so happy to get a piece of home!!

And for the troops out there that are the recipients of these care packages, take the time to send thank you letters like this one. It means so much and takes so little. Be thankful and show it through a simple thanks.

General: SEALs on Trial for Cover-up

This originally appeared on Military.com

The Army general who ordered three local Navy SEALs to trial for their involvement in an alleged case of detainee abuse says he is more upset by the men’s apparent attempt to cover up the incident than by the “relatively minor” injuries inflicted on a high-value detainee.

Maj. Gen. Charles T. Cleveland, head of Special Operations Command Central, wrote to lawmakers who had questioned the prosecutions that their perceptions of the case appear to be based upon “incomplete and factually inaccurate press coverage.”

Fox News was the first to report in November that the SEALs would be prosecuted for their actions in Iraq in early September, spurring tens of thousands of people to sign online petitions calling for the charges to be dropped.

The military released Cleveland’s two-page letter Wednesday evening. It came in response to a Dec. 10 letter from Indiana Rep. Dan Burton, co-signed by 40 other members of Congress.

“While the assault and resulting injury to the detainee were relatively minor, the more disconcerting allegations are those related to the Sailors’ attempts to cover up the incident, particularly in what appears to be an effort to influence the testimony of a witness,” Cleveland wrote.

Petty Officer 1st Class Julio A. Huertas Jr. and Petty Officers 2nd Class Matthew McCabe and Jonathan Keefe, assigned to SEAL Team Ten at the Little Creek campus of the Joint Expeditionary Base , face multiple misdemeanor charges related to the treatment of Ahmed Hashim Abed. Abed is thought to be linked to the 2004 killings of four Blackwater contractors whose bodies were dragged through the streets of Fallujah and suspended from a bridge.

McCabe is the only person charged with assaulting Abed. Prosecutors have said he punched Abed in the midsection.

Huertas and Keefe are charged with dereliction of duty for not protecting Abed, and all three commandos are accused of making a false official statement when questioned about the incident. Huertas also is accused of impeding the investigation.

“General, surely you agree that we are in a war that we must win,” Burton wrote to Cleveland on Dec. 10. “Our troops and your SEALs need to be bold and decisive in combat; not looking over their shoulder fearing legal jeopardy for every action or gesture.”

Citing “press reports,” Burton questioned whether Abed had actually been in the SEALs’ custody when his injuries occurred and said that al-Qaida operatives are trained to “self-inflict injuries for the sole purpose of accusing U.S. forces of abuse.”

Cleveland responded to both points, saying that the allegations of mistreatment didn’t start with Abed and aren’t based solely on his word. Rather, the allegations were “initially raised by other U.S. service members,” he wrote.

And Abed’s alleged injuries occurred several hours after the operation had ended, while he was in U.S. custody at a detainee holding facility, not during the operation that captured him, Cleveland wrote.

About 100 people gathered to protest the charges when McCabe and Huertas were arraigned Dec. 7 at Norfolk Naval Station.

They are scheduled to be tried later this month in Norfolk. Keefe’s trial has been set for April.

All the offenses are misdemeanors punishable by demotion in rank, up to a year in jail and a bad-conduct discharge. Cleveland said he chose to deal with the incident through non judicial punishment – an option that would have kept the case out of the public eye but could have effectively ended the SEALs’ careers.

The men refused that option and chose to face courts-martial.

Cleveland explained that several factors led him to refer the cases to courts-martial:

“Discipline and integrity are primary factors that make our U.S. special operators such an effective fighting force. The abuse of a detainee, no matter how minor, creates strategic repercussions that harm our nation’s security and ultimately costs the lives of U.S. citizens,” he wrote. “When there are reasonable grounds to believe that an offense has been committed, and that a specific individual in my command has committed that offense, it is my duty to take appropriate action to not only ensure justice is done, but also to maintain good order and discipline.”

In his words “… the more disconcerting allegations are those related to the Sailors’ attempts to cover up the incident …” wrote Maj. Gen. Charles T. Cleveland, head of Special Operations Command Central.

Battlefields and Blessings

Coming up on the next You Served Spouse and Family Highlights radio program, I will be talking with co-authors Jocelyn Green, Jane Hampton Cook and John Croushorn. They will be discussing their book Stories of Faith and Courage from the War in Iraq/Afghanistan, part of the Battlefields & Blessings series.

Here is an excerpt from the book and a peek at some of what we will be discussing. Look for the announcement this week for the show’s airing date and time!

From Battlefields and Blessings website:

Stories of Faith and Courage from the War in Iraq/Afghanistan, part of the Battlefields & Blessings series, is a 365-day collection of inspiring stories of courage perseverance and faith-based on firsthand accounts of more than seventy who have served in the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.Through multiple, never-before-told stories, readers will uncover the personal challenges of the battlefield. You’ll hear about the experiences and perspectives of deployed soldiers; chaplains; military wives, widows, parents and siblings; organizers of humanitarian efforts; veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder; missionaries to the Middle East and more.

The book was co-authored by Jocelyn Green, Jane Hampton Cook and John Croushorn, and was released by AMG Publishers in November 2009.

For more information, click on the links below:

Excerpts

Reviews

About the Authors

Purchase the book at Amazon.com.

Red Bulls Caught With Their Hands in the Cookie Jar

COB BASRA, Iraq – Soldiers on Contingency Operating Base Basra were delighted and eager to tear open buckets of Sweet Martha’s cookies and dunk them in fresh milk, all courtesy of a joint-effort with the Blue Star Mothers of America and the Exchange Clubs of Minnesota to send holiday treat to those deployed during the holidays.


(U.S. Army photo by PFC J. Princeville Lawrence)

A taste of home

Eyes lit up as Soldiers of the 34th “Red Bull” Infantry Division popped the lids off of the familiar buckets and told their counterparts who had never had a Sweet Martha about the famous cookies, and how a trip to the Minnesota State Fair just isn’t the same without them.

Since many Soldiers were deployed to Iraq during the fair this year, they were grateful to sink their teeth into something unique to Minnesota and to share that experience with others.


(U.S. Army photo by PFC J. Princeville Lawrence)

Chief Warrant Officer Krystal Jancze, a Portland, Ore. native, initially turned down a box of cookies. When she realized they were from Sweet Martha’s Cookie Jar, a wide grin spread across her face and she quickly changed her mind.
“She was really ecstatic about the cookies,” said Sgt. 1st Class Angela Amundson. “She even warmed them up and had lots of milk.”


(U.S. Army photo by PFC J. Princeville Lawrence)

“Real milk?”

After living so long without fresh milk, the concept really surprised most Soldiers, who stared in disbelief. “Is it still good?” they wondered. But after sipping on freshly poured cups of ice-cold milk, the general consensus was “Mmm …. I haven’t tasted real milk for so long!”

Thanks to Kwik Trip and Carbonic Continental Ice of Burnsville, who had donated and packaged 300 gallons in dry ice, Soldiers were able to drink “real milk” in Iraq. It was an unexpected treat they were eager and grateful to receive. Especially during the holidays, when it is harder than usual to be so far away from home, it feels like a luxury to dunk a Sweet Martha cookie into a glass of real milk.


(U.S. Army photo by PFC J. Princeville Lawrence)

Story courtesy of SPC Stephanie Cassinos, MND-S