Monthly Archives: August 2010

President Bush Greets Troops at DFW

Another reason to love our former president:

Soldier Finds Strength in Family’s Support

Family is our ‘constant’ and our refuge in a rather unpredictable and topsy-turvy world. This is especially true for our Military members. Strong marriages and intact families are not just a societal “nicety” but they are vital to our survival. I am so glad this soldier came home to a loving and supportive family.

EXCERPT

by Elaine Wilson, AFPS
Aug. 9, 2010
elaine.wilson@dma.mil

SOURCE LINK

“Army Maj. Ed Pulido was wounded in Iraq in August 2004 while driving into an area of Iraq known as “IED Alley.” The sport utility vehicle he was driving hit a bomb lodged in the asphalt and exploded, causing severe damage to his leg.

The moment he pushed aside the air bag and saw the injury is one he’ll never forget.

“I’ve had dreams about it all the time,” Maj. Pulido told me. “The night sweats and terrors — it was that moment right there when I put the air bag aside and saw the blood.”

His leg was broken in three places and partially on fire, but he felt no pain. He wasn’t concerned for himself, he said, but for his fellow soldiers and his family. “How will my family live without a father?” he asked himself.

Maj. Pulido was flown to Baghdad then on to the United States, where he underwent more than 18 surgeries. Struggling with infections, Maj. Pulido and his family made the tough decision to amputate his leg.

Maj. Pulido felt a tremendous sense of loss that caused him to spiral into depression, he said.

He worried about how he was going to live without a limb, how he was going to learn to walk again. “I thought, ‘Why don’t I just pull the plug on this thing?’” he said.

He drifted into sleep and woke up hoping it was all just a dream. “But it wasn’t,” he said. “It was a dark time.”

His wife, Karen, and his mother tried to encourage him to think positively. He leaned on them and on chaplains and other wounded servicemembers who came to visit him and slowly fought his way back.

Unknown to him at the time, his wife, mother and daughter, who was 2 at the time, were visiting other wounded warriors in the hospital, a memory that still stirs emotion in him. “I was in my deathbed, and they were taking time to visit other servicemembers and families,” he said. “My little girl still has that gift of giving.”

Maj. Pulido medically retired from the military and now dedicates himself to helping others. He’s passionate about his work for the Folds of Honor Foundation, which offers scholarships to spouses and children of fallen and wounded servicemembers, as well as information on counseling and benefits.

He also found healing in his participation in the “Real Warriors” campaign. The Real Warriors campaign is sponsored by the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury and features stories of servicemembers who sought psychological treatment and continued successful military and civilian careers. Maj. Pulido is the first veteran to participate.

Just the other day, Maj. Pulido put a new flagpole up in front of his new house. And when he looks at it, he no longer feels that cavernous feeling of loss, he said.”  LINK

Combat Vets Face More Unemployment

According to researchers many U.S. combat veterans face significant socioeconomic challenges including higher rates of disability and unemployment. The researchers used data from a longitudinal survey of families and individuals that has been conducted annually since 1968 and compared veterans and non-veterans who would have been ages 25-55 in any year between 1968 to 2003 and would have eligible to serve in World War II, the Korean, post-Korean, Vietnam and post-Vietnam eras. The study, published in the American Sociological Review, found in 1968 slightly more than 10 percent of combat veterans were disabled, but this increased to more than 20 percent in 2003. Combat veterans tended to be employed in the initial years of the survey period at higher rates than the non-combat veteran and civilians, but they have suffered significantly higher levels of unemployment than non-veterans or non-combat veterans in most years after 1975. To read more, go to:http://www.military.com/news/article/combat-vets-face-more-unemployment.html?wh=news


Military Ordered to Stay Off WikiLeaks

The U.S. armed services are issuing internal messages to all personnel barring them from visiting the WikiLeaks website, which recently posted 77,000 classified diplomatic and military messages on the long war in Afghanistan. The orders seem to be the most far-reaching effort by the Pentagon in its ongoing effort to stop the release of classified information. The military is telling the troops they cannot even view what is publicly available, even though the WikiLeaks documents are on hundreds of websites. In addition, the Pentagon is demanding that WikiLeaks return the classified documents it posted on the Internet, as the whistleblower website apparently is preparing another huge document dump. To read this article in its entirety, please go to:http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/aug/6/pentagon-bars-staff-from-visiting-wikileaks-site/

Combined Operation Rescues 27 Prisoners

This edition features a story on how Afghan and coalition forces rescued 27 male Afghan prisoners from a makeshift Taliban prison. Produced by Tech. Sgt. Danielle Dull. Afghanistan

Combined Operation Rescues 27 Prisoners from You Served Radio & Blog on Vimeo.

For You Pilots

Check out the video here and read the story. Holy cow, that was some quick thinking and great flying!!

Soldier of the Week – SPC Jason Lambright

SPC Jason Lambright
The heart of America’s fighting strength is the Army’s Infantry, the combat force specifically trained for fighting on foot. Adaptability, courage, integrity and camaraderie – qualities required of all Infantrymen – helped Spc. Jason Lambright and his platoon sustain over 200 firefights and successfully accomplish dozens of combat and humanitarian aid missions during their yearlong deployment to Afghanistan.

“I knew serving in an Infantry unit wouldn’t be easy, but I wanted to be challenged,” he said. “When I joined the Army, I knew I would be asked to serve overseas. If I was going to deploy, I wanted to be able to come back with a sense of fulfillment.”

While deployed to Kunar in 2009, his platoon in the 32nd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team conducted a number of successful counterinsurgency operations throughout northeastern Afghanistan. In addition to responding to enemy fire almost daily, Lambright was sent on patrol missions throughout the region to establish new defensive locations against enemy forces, including the Taliban.

“Hearing we were keeping the Taliban at bay and that they were scared to move into our area was very rewarding. We knew our efforts had been effective in accomplishing our mission,” he said.

In an effort to build relationships with the locals and further counterinsurgency operations, Lambright and the platoon provided Afghan citizens with necessities, such as food, clothing and school supplies. They also communicated with district officials to determine how to best help the local community.

“When the local Afghanis understood that we were there to help them, they came to respect us,” he said. “We were able to start developing more personal relationships with them and some of the kids even knew our names.”

Throughout his deployment, the Soldier aided in the mobilization of vehicles, troops and weaponry as well as assisted in reconnaissance missions.

Called to deploy early in his military career, Lambright relied on the close bonds with other Soldiers in his platoon.
“We were a tight-knit group, and we almost became our own little family,” he said. “We all tried to support each other, especially when we went out on missions. We couldn’t dwell on the bad, so we had to help each other stay focused to accomplish the mission.”

The bonds among members of his platoon proved particularly helpful, as they were frequently out on missions and unable to regularly communicate with family and friends back home. However, the Soldier was grateful to have the opportunity to deploy.

“Serving in the Army allowed me to provide for my family and support them. While I was overseas, they were all worried for my safety and well-being, but they knew I was doing what I needed to do,” he said.

Since returning from Afghanistan in January, he continues to serve with the 3rd Brigade Combat Team at Fort Drum, N.Y.

He was recently promoted to serve as a team leader for the personal security detachment for the brigade’s colonel and
sergeant major. In the future, he plans to continue to serve for several more years and develop his leadership skills.

“The Army has taught be how to be self-sufficient and think for myself, but also to serve well alongside my fellow Soldiers and contribute to the mission at hand,” he said. “I hope as a leader, I can provide the Soldiers on my team with the resources and training to absorb the knowledge and experience that’s around them and to prepare for our next deployment.”

Troops Don’t Deserve Retirement, Board Says

I’m not sure how coherent I’ll be in writing this, so I’ll try hard to maintain some sort of calm while responding to this article in the Stars and Stripes.

The Defense Business Board — tasked by Defense Secretary Robert Gates to find ways to reduce the DOD budget — says annual Treasury Department payments into the system will balloon from $47.7 billion this year to $59.3 billion by 2020.

The 25-member group of civilian business leaders suggests that the Defense Department look at changing the current system, even hinting at raising the number of years troops must serve before being eligible for retirement pay.

The current system “encourages our military to leave at 20 years when they are most productive and experienced, and then pays them and their families and their survivors for another 40 years,” committee chairman Arnold Punaro told board members at their quarterly meeting late last month.

So, here’s a question for this board of “civilian business leaders” that probably never served a day in their lives! Is 20 years of stress, frequent family separations, combat deployment, overseas tours, field training exercises, long work days, and frequent weekend duty not enough?!

Since 9/11, I’ve probably been away from home 40% of the time at least. Others have been gone more than that. I read all these boohoo stories of politicians, celebrities, and business leaders that whine because they have to spend 2-3 days away from their families. Meanwhile, our troops spend months AND YEARS at a time away from their families.

They aren’t spending this time in board meetings, sales pitches, or business lunches. They’re being shot at, mortared, and blown up. They question whether each day will be their last. Meanwhile, when they’re back home, they’re sleeping on uncomfortable cots in unbearably hot (or cold) tents for weeks at a time preparing for that eventual combat. They don’t shower, eat crappy food, and drink warm water. They’re awaken at 0500 and get to sleep at 2200 if they’re lucky.

Every Monday, my troops are sweating their ass off in a concrete motor pool maintaining vehicles that are as tired as the Soldiers working on them. Then, they come back to an undermanned office and try to catch up on all the work that got stacked up throughout the day.

Their families worry about how they will manage if something should happen to their loved one during this training or combat deployment. Spouses raise kids alone, pay bills, and handle everything involved with insurance, rent, mortgage, whatever. They are forced to quit jobs when their service member is moved to another state (or country). They soothe their children crying themselves to sleep because mommy or daddy is deployed.

And yet, troops don’t deserve the lucrative compensation that 20 years of beating, abuse, and harassment has done to them.

Maybe before these morons spout off at the mouth from their six figure salaries about whether or not there is a “more equitable possibility” for retirement pay!

Here’s an idea on how to save money for the government: END WASTEFUL GOVERNMENT SPENDING ON WORTHLESS SOCIAL PROGRAMS! Instead of spending billions and billions more in borrowed money to pay people sitting in their living rooms or unable to find jobs, how about we cut these programs? How about we stop sending money we don’t have to foreign countries that are using it to scam our citizens and kill our troops? How about we stop the drug war that hasn’t done anything but make the trade more dangerous and profitable than ever? How about we cut federal staffs in half? How about we stop creating agencies to regulate everything from light bulbs to cow farts? How about we get rid of NPR? How about we abolish the department of Education and let the states do their jobs?

And here’s the kicker! How about we end pensions for Presidents and Congressmen that only serve 4-8 years!!

Edisun coming on You Served

Edisun is coming onto You Served Radio this week on August 17th. These guys have toured a lot for troops. They have been on ships, in war zones and in places around the world where troops are serving just to ensure safety of America and our allies. They truly care about warriors and trying to make sure that all of them are entertained. Check out the video below to see some clips from their latest trip to Iraq as part of one of their most popular music videos. Be sure and tune in to www.blogtalkradio.com/youseved this August 17th at 8PM EST to listen to Troy, CJ and Marcus talk to the band.

Incentive Offered to Troops to Stay with Unit

Short-timers headed to the combat theater again are being offered special pay of up to $500 a month if they agree to stay with their unit through its deployment.  The Deployment Extension Incentive Pay (DEIP) program was first introduced last year as the Army prepared to wean itself off the stop-loss policies that have been used in various forms since the beginning of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.  The DEIP program is available to active-duty enlisted Soldiers who are assigned to units designated for deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan.  For further information, please click on the following link:http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/08/army_specialpay_080910w/