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Archive for the ‘Military News’ Category

WWII Experiences of Raymond Huling

Two weeks ago, Alabama lost one of its most decorated WWII combat veterans. This is the story Raymond Huling of Fyffe, Alabama, as told by his grandson-in-law, Shane Trotman. He was laid to rest in an honorable ceremony staffed by Soldiers of the 59th Ordinance Brigade of Redstone Arsenal.

Raymond was born in Decatur, Alabama on October 24, 1922. On September 20, 1942, at the age of nineteen, he married Martha Lea Wilson, the “girl next door” better known as Pat. Together, they planned to move and pursue his dream of becoming a professional baseball player.

In December, after only two months of marriage, Raymond received his call to duty to the United States Army. He was dispatched to the European Theatre of Operations in August of 1943 as a Private in the legendary 36th Infantry Division. Raymond was part of the invasion of Salerno, Italy on September 3, 1943. Only three weeks after the initial invasion, he learned of the arrival of his first child. However, Raymond was not to see his daughter until she was more than two years old (and we complain about 12 month deployments?!).

Raymond was in Company G, 141st Regiment of the 36th ID. On December 10, after only a few months of active combat, Raymond was wounded for the first time by a German mortar shell while attacking the town on San Pietro, Italy. He was subsequently hospitalized for six weeks in Tunis, North Africa. The injury consisted of only flesh wounds to the leg and arm and as soon as he recovered, he returned to combat. Raymond fought battles through Sicily, Italy, on to the North Africa, and then was sent to participate in the invasion of Southern France; eventually helping to liberate Paris. As the war went on, Raymond was promoted from Private to Buck Sergeant, to Staff Sergeant, and then to Technical Sergeant (or Platoon Sergeant). After his promotion to TSgt, Raymond was captured by the Germans in an incident that can only be viewed as miraculous. The following is his firsthand account of the incident:

huling

“I was with two scouts, out ahead of our advancing platoon, when we walked through a cut in the road, right into a German ambush. The Germans had the advantage of an elevated position, and they all had their rifles trained on the three of us. They captured us without firing a shot and took us to a nearby German camp to interrogate us. The two scouts, Joe Spera and Spephen Vass, were questioned first and Joe was soon persuaded to answer most of the Germans’ questions. When I refused to answer any of the questions other than name, rank, and serial number, the interrogating German officer asked me in perfect English ‘Do you #*#* Americans really think that you will win the war’? I answered ‘I don’t know if we will or not, but losing me won’t make much difference on way or another.’ This made him mad and he hit me in the face, knocking me down. Throughout the rest of the war, whenever we captured prisoners, I watched for that officer but never saw him again.

“I was starting to get desperate because I knew that, when the Germans had gotten all the information that they could, we would all three be sent to Germany to a prison camp. That night, I finally got the opportunity that I had been waiting for. The one armed guard that the officer had appointed to guard us decided to smoke one of the Chesterfield cigarettes that the Germans had taken from us. When he lit up, I hit him as hard as I could and knocked him out cold. Then I screamed for the other two to run and I ran all-out toward the edge of camp. The German officer ran outside, chasing me while spraying machine-gun bullets all around me! I could hear the bullets hitting around me as I made it over an embankment into the cover of some bushes. They filled the bushes with bullets but I didn’t get hit a single time. When I broke and ran, Spera and Vass just froze, and they remained prisoners. I made it back to my platoon before that night was over and found out that I had already been reported as missing in action. A few weeks later, Spera managed to escape and rejoin our platoon, but Vass was transferred to a German prison camp…we never heard from him again.”

Eventually, Raymond was wounded a second time by shrapnel. While Raymond was being patched up, he allowed a rifleman from his platoon to use his pass to go to town and get a break from the front lines. When the rifleman returned, he had purchased Raymond a 21-jewel GI Swiss wristwatch. Raymond returned to combat, and he let Spera, his friend with whom he had briefly been a POW, wear the wristwatch. As the war went on, Spera was fatally wounded in another battle. A German mortar hit close by, and a piece of shrapnel caught Spera in the throat, slicing his jugular vein. He was trying to tell Raymond something as he died but Raymond could not understand him. The watch stayed on Spera’s wrist; Raymond could not bear to get it back.

During the war, Raymond was part of two beach invasions: one in Italy and one in France. On the way to the southern France invasion, Raymond was assigned to the flagship leading a convoy of ships. The Secretary of the Navy, Forestall, was also on the flagship. During this voyage off the coast of Corsica, Italy, the convoy encountered a German submarine. A British destroyer, which was escorting the convoy, eliminated the submarine. Raymond could feel his ship shaking as the submarine was destroyed.

During the beach invasions, the Soldiers would leave their ship in CPT boats (18 Soldiers per boat), run as close to the beach as possible, drop the gate on the boat, and advance against enemy fire. This was often at the cost of heavy casualties, with some men not even making it to the beach. After a “hot landing” under heavy fire in Southern France, Raymond’s platoon secured their primary target, a set of German anti-aircraft guns located in a concrete bunker on a high bluff, and captured 11 German prisoners. During this incident, the commanding German officer surrendered first. Raymond tried to use what little German language skills that he had learned to warn the officer to tell his comrades to come out and surrender. The German officer then spoke English, attempting to convince the Americans that no other survivors were present. However, after Raymond threatened to throw hand grenades into the concrete bunkers, the German major called for the other German Soldiers to come out and surrender.

Raymond shared a tragedy with me that happened during that battle. As the Soldiers were approaching the concrete bunkers, Rifleman Walsh stepped on a land mine, blowing his leg completely off just above his boot. Raymond immediately jumped up to run through the mind field to Walsh, but Walsh levered his weapon and aimed it right at Raymond. He refused to let Raymond risk coming through the mine field to rescue him. Raymond hesitated, then went anyway; going slowly and carefully to keep from getting blown up himself. They got Walsh out of there, but Raymond never heard whether he survived or not.

Raymond was in active combat for twenty-two months. During this period, his longest battle was 126 days of continuous combat. He received his third and final injury from a German 120mm mortar. During a battle in France, he was pinned in a foxhole with two other Soldiers, and they could hear the mortars getting closer as the Germans were trying to zero in on them. The Germans finally hit their target. Raymond was rescued, still in his foxhole shot all to pieces with the other two men dead. His right leg was blown almost completely apart at his knee, his left leg had caught shrapnel in the thigh, his lungs were punctured, and much of the muscle was blown off from his left arm.

Raymond was carried away on a stretcher in a Jeep to a field hospital, and the moved to the 23rd General Hospital in France. At this time, his surviving comrades thought him to be dead. However, by the grace of God, he somehow survived and succeeded in his fight with doctors to keep his leg after gangrene had set in (his knee was removed and his leg sown back on a few inches shorter than his other one). Major Godfrey, an ex football coach and team physician for the Buffalo Bills, was the initial surgeon for Raymond in France. His prescription consisted of a shot of penicillin and a “shot” of whiskey every two hours. Raymond arrived back at Mitchell Field in New York in a full body cast.

Raymond is one of the most highly decorated veterans in Alabama, receiving most of the honors possible to him other than the Medal of Honor. In fact, a picture of him receiving the Silver Star remains at the state capital in Montgomery. As a result of his military experiences, Raymond was awarded:
• 3 Purple Hearts
• 4 Combat Stars
• One Silver Star
• One Bronze Star
• The Presidential Unit Situation Bar (outstanding battle in combat, awarded by President Harry Truman to the whole platoon)
• Efficiency Honor Fidelity Medal
• European/African/Middle Eastern Campaign Medals
• American Campaign Medal

While looking through papers and memorabilia from the war, his grandson was fascinated to find a document listing the events that lead to Raymond’s award of the Silver Star. The top of the document was headed “RESTRICTED”. The following is the account in the document of the events:

Under the provisions of Army Regulations 600-45, the following individual is awarded a Silver Star for gallantry in action.

Raymond L. Huling, [Service number], Staff Sergeant, Company G, 141st Infantry Regiment, for gallantry in action on 11 June 1944 in Italy. Moving forward in front of his platoon when its attack was stopped by heavy small arms fire, Sergeant Huling, a squad leader, led his men in a renewal of the assault. Encouraging them by his daring disregard of the enemy fire, he directed a furious onslaught against the hostile forces and drove them out of their position. Sergeant Huling personally accounted for two enemy snipers who had attempted to pick off his automatic rifle team. He skillfully deployed his fire power in the most strategic positions, and undertook to fill in a gap in the lines created by the withdrawal of other troops because of the severity of the fighting.

Entering the service from Bridgeport, Alabama.

In 1945, four months after his injury, Raymond was finally united with his wife and two-year-old daughter at Northington General Hospital in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Pat was always fond of telling this incident, and she even recorded it before she passed away:

“His daughter, Nancy Carolyn, was two years old before he ever got to see her. She came with me to finally get to see him at Northington General Hospital in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. She looked at him and said ‘you’re not my daddy; my daddy is a Soldier boy.’ We like to have cracked up then as they both tried to stare each other down. She had carried a picture of him in uniform around so long that she didn’t know him in PJs.”

After several additional operations, Raymond was eventually transferred to Oliver General Hospital in Augusta, Georgia for a series of bone grafts on his right leg. It was there that his wife, Pat, gave birth to their second daughter, Ina Beatrice on November 20, 1946. On August 20, 1947, Raymond was finally well enough to be discharged to come home.

Raymond recovered from his war injuries to the extent that he could live a fairly normal life although his right leg had no knee and was shorter than the left one. He lived in Bridgeport, Alabama with his family. After being dismissed from the hospital, Raymond was notified by the Veterans Administration that he would only receive a temporary 40% disability pension until they received all of his records. Unable to get a job, Raymond started trapping for furs on the Tennessee River. About a week before Christmas 1947, Raymond had trapped 67 muskrats and 4 mink furs, which he sold to a local dealer for nearly three hundred dollars. This provided the girls with a good Christmas. On Labor Day, September 6, 1948, Raymond and Pat were blessed with their third daughter, Sharon Elizabeth. Finally, in March, 1949, Raymond received a letter saying that his records on file showed that he was considered disabled to a degree of 80%. In March 1950, Raymond went to work for the Tennessee Valley Authority, where he enjoyed a thirty-four year career until his eventual retirement.

Raymond told his grandson that a few years ago, he was attending a veterans’ reunion in Montgomery, Alabama when a gentleman approached him and asked his name. The man had been the platoon sergeant for the 3rd Platoon, Company G while Raymond had command of the 2nd Platoon. He then told Raymond, “I saw your name on the roster and had to see if it was really you. I didn’t think it could be…you are the walking dead. I was there when we pulled you out of the foxhole, and I saw you dying.” As Raymond shared this incident with me, he seemed to really grasp and appreciate the extent to which his survival had been miraculous.

Raymond then showed his grandson what was the most fascinating bit of memorabilia from WWII he had ever seen. After opening a chest containing guns, official papers, and articles from the war, Raymond showed him “the flag.” It was a large Nazi flag with a large gash cut through the middle, along with the autographs of the thirty-six members of his platoon written on the flag. Raymond explained, saying that, as his division was advancing through Italy they “had the Germans on the run.” As the Germans retreated from the town of Naples, Italy, one of his men went to the second story of a building and, using his bayonet through a window, removed the flag from the building, cutting it in the process. The Soldier gave the flag to Raymond and he decided to get all of the men to autograph it. Getting only one or two signatures at a time, it took Raymond about two months to get all of the autographs on the German flag. He then sent it home to the states. Raymond’s father-in-law was a postman, and during the rest of the war, various Post Offices took turns displaying the flag. Although more than sixty years had passed, Raymond would look at the names on the flag and say, “this was John Hickman; he was killed by a sniper. This was Henry; he was killed by a land min. This was Claude Splawn; he was killed y an artillery shell.” Raymond’s grandson realized then that the war would never really leave the veterans who gave so much to their country, but it will be a part of them as long as they live.

As Shane sat in a dim living room discussing the war with Raymond, he wondered how much of his time was spent at his home in Fyffe, Alabama, and how much is spent at another place; a place on distant shores where men are really men; living, fighting, laughing, crying, and dying together for the noble cause of freedom. He wondered if the sounds of tanks, machine guns, and that fateful artillery shell fill Raymond’s memories during times alone. Many of us will experience a time when we realize that our time and purpose on Earth is coming to a close. However, very few people will ever look back on the experiences that Raymond endured. He believes that Raymond found comfort in the knowledge that his courage and perseverance did not fail him when he needed it the most. He can also rest in the assurance that God surely protected and delivered him for a reason; Raymond’s purpose on Earth was not yet finished.

Raymond lived with his wife Pat in Fyffe, Alabama until 1997, when God called Pat home. He was an active member of Corinth Baptist church. On 9/11/2009, fittingly the anniversary of the date when our nation sacrificed so much, God called Raymond home. He will be loved and missed by many, and owed a debt of gratitude by all.

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New Multimedia Campaign Inspires America’s Youth to Earn the Title of ‘Marine’

marine
QUANTICO, Va. (September 18, 2009) – The United States Marine Corps is launching a new multimedia campaign, America’s Few, to challenge America’s youth to prove they have what it takes to become a Marine.

The America’s Few campaign includes national TV, print and online advertising, in addition to digital mall signage, in-school TV, and social media websites. The TV advertisement airs on Saturday, September 19, during the University of Florida vs. University of Tennessee college football game on CBS at 3:30 p.m. ET. The TV advertisement will air again on September 20 during the NFL Today Show at 12:00 p.m. ET and again during the NFL Regional and National football games. The TV advertisement will also run September 21 on ESPN during Monday Night Football’s coverage of the Indianapolis Colts vs. Miami Dolphins game at 8:30 p.m. ET.

The Marine Corps aims to recruit the best in each generation, focusing on young Americans who hear the call to become a Marine and decide to make the life-changing decision to answer it. The America’s Few campaign features three Marines who answered that call and earned the title Marine after completing the most demanding recruit training our nation offers. The three Marines, LCpl Oscar Franquez, Jr. of Canyon Country, Calif., LCpl Benjamin Lee of Tulsa, Okla., and LCpl Martin McCallum of Freeport, N.Y., are all members of the USMC Silent Drill Platoon, based at Marine Barracks Washington, D.C.

“The calling to become a United States Marine has always been answered by the best and brightest of each generation,” said Major General Robert E. Milstead, Jr., Commanding General, Marine Corps Recruiting Command.

The America’s Few campaign comes at a juncture when the Marine Corps is focusing not only on enlistment numbers, but on the quality of new Marine recruits when more and more young men and women are considering military service as an option.

“There is only one reason to put yourself through the toughest 12 weeks of your life – and that is to become a United States Marine,” said LCpl Franquez. “Becoming a Marine has allowed me to defend my country and become part of a centuries old tradition of service and sacrifice.

For generations, the Marine Corps has taken young Americans who have answered the call and forged them into Marines through a time-tested crucible known as recruit training.

“Recruit training was the greatest challenge of my life,” said LCpl Lee. “Our title is earned, never given.

Marine Corps recruit training transforms the many into the few. It is an unwavering and relentless process that presents the ultimate challenge: an epic test of mind, body and character that molds our Nation’s greatest warriors.

“The training pushed me far beyond my perceived limits and inspired me to be my best. In the end, I demonstrated to myself and my family that I have what it takes to be a Marine,” said LCpl McCallum.

America’s Few is a prequel to America’s Marines, launched in January 2008, to strengthen America’s understanding of what the Marine Corps stands for. The America’s Marines campaign consisted of a nationwide tour, a new Web site and a TV advertisement that featured a symbolic line of Marines standing ready to defend our nation. It was filmed at iconic landmarks and picturesque small towns across the United States. America’s Few was filmed this summer at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, S.C., and on location at Point Judith, R.I.

The America’s Few advertisement and additional online features are available at Marines.com.

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Pentagon Hall of Heroes Inducts SFC Monti

Deputy Secretary of Defense William J. Lynn III, Secretary of the Army Pete Geren, and Vice Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli will participate in a ceremony inducting Army Sgt. 1st Class Jared C. Monti into the Pentagon’s Hall of Heroes from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., EDT, Friday, Sept. 18, 2009, at the Pentagon auditorium (6th corridor, basement level).

Monti will be awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously at a White House ceremony scheduled for Sept. 17. His parents will be present for the unveiling of the Hall of Heroes plaque on Friday, Sept. 18.

Monti is recognized for actions above and beyond the call of duty during combat that cost him his life on June 21, 2006, in Afghanistan. He is the sixth service member to be awarded the Medal of Honor during the Global War on Terror, the second to receive it for actions in Afghanistan.

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WWII, Korea, Vietnam Veteran Passes On

Found this story buried in the obituaries and didn’t want this going unknown. This hero served his country in WWII, Korea and Vietnam! He was awarded numerous medals for valor. May God bless our combat veterans.

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Colonel Richard D. Humphreys, 85, retired U.S. Marine, attorney-at-law, and real estate agent, of Forsyth Place, died Sunday, Sept. 13, 2009, at 8:10 a.m. at the Stone Pear Pavilion at the Fox Nursing Home in Chester.

Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., March 13, 1924, a son of the late Harry W. and Helen V. Davidson, he was a 1944 graduate of Franklin & Marshall College. He furthered his education in 1949 at the Dickinson School of Law where he earned a J.D. in Law. A Distinguished Graduate of the Naval War College in 1967 and a holder of the Certified Commercial Investment Member designation (CCIM) from the Realtors National Marketing Institute of the National Association of Realtors. He was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the United States Supreme Court, and the United States Court of Military Appeals.

He is past president of the Rotary Club of East Liverpool, and the Columbiana County Board of Realtors, and a former member of the Ohio Job Training Partnership, Inc., the Realtors National Marketing Institute, and the National Association of Realtors. He is a former member of and past chairperson of the Private Industry Council of Mahoning-Columbiana Counties, the Southern Columbiana County Joint Services Employers Committee, and of the Ohio Small Business Council Coordinating Board. He was formerly a member of the Ohio Governor’s Human Resources Advisory Council, the Business Advisory Council of the National Alliance of Business, the Advisory Committee for the Columbiana County Incubator, and a member of the Steering Committee of the Mahoning Valley Incubator. He is a member of the First United Methodist Church of East Liverpool, a member of Chapter No. 126 of the Korean War Veterans Association, a life member of the Korean War Veterans Association, a life member of the Disabled American Veterans, a member of the Dog Company 2nd Battalion Seventh Marines Association, and a member of the American Legion Post No. 374. He is the author of “Triumph on 1240″ the history of the Marines of D Company 2nd Battalion 7th Marines 1st Marine Division in Korea.

Colonel Humphreys’ active military service began with his enlistment as a Private in the U.S. Marine Corps on Dec. 14, 1942, and ended with his retirement on April 30, 1970, as a Colonel of Marines on duty as the Director of Legislative Plans and Coordination, Office of the Secretary of Defense. He joined the Second Battalion 7th Marines in Korea on Dec. 6, 1950, and was a Platoon Commander of the 3rd Platoon and later the company Executive Officer until June 6, 1951, when he was wounded and evacuated to the hospital in Japan. During his active service he received the following decorations and awards: The Silver Star Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Bronze Star Medal with Combat V, the Purple Heart Medal with one Star, the Secretary of Defense Identification Badge, the Good Conduct Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, the Victory Medal (WWII), the Navy Occupation Service Medal, the National Defense Service Medal with one Star, the Korean Service Medal with three Stars, the United Nations Service Medal, the Korean Presidential Unit Citation, the Presidential Unit Citation, the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, the Navy Letter of Commendation, the Vietnam Service Medal with one Star, the Vietnam Campaign Medal with device, and the Navy Commendation Medal with combat V.

Since his retirement from the service, he served in several positions in the East Liverpool Area Chamber of Commerce including that of Executive Vice President and Secretary from 1982 to 1987. He was also a member of the Riverview Cemetery Association Board.

His wife, Ann Louise Stewart Kerr Humphreys, survives at home. The couple married June 1, 1980.

There is a daughter, Paula Humphreys Land, and her husband Richard, of St. Jo, Texas; along with two sons, David S. Kerr, and his wife Victoria of Ellicott City, Md., and James R. Kerr, and his wife Marguerite of Medina.

Other survivors include six grandchildren: Catherine Gay, and her husband Matthew, Kenton Hutcherson, Allison Land, Virginia Land, Amy Kerr and Nicholas Kerr; and two great-grandchildren, Taylor and Lauren Gay; one sister, Jane Agriesti, and her husband Carl, of Johnson City, Tenn.; as well as a brother, David Humphreys, and his wife Loretta, of Pittsburgh.

He was preceded in death by a son, Richard D. Humphreys Jr., on July 10, 2009, a sister Marjorie Bright, and a brother Howard Humphreys.

Friends may call Tuesday afternoon and evening at the Dawson Funeral Home where the family will be present from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. The Rev. Dale Sutton of the First United Methodist Church will conduct a funeral service at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.

Burial will be at Riverview Cemetery where full military honors will be conducted.

Following the service, family and friends will gather at the Dawson Family Center for further remembrance.

In lieu of flowers, memorial tributes may take the form of contributions in care of the First United Methodist Church, 200 West Fifth Street, East Liverpool, Ohio 43920 or the Beaver Local High School Marine Corps JROTC, 13187 State Route 7, Lisbon, Ohio 44432.

View this obituary and send condolences online at www.dawsonfuneralhome.com

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Flyleaf Entertains the Troops

Flyleaf
North Shore Journal has a post up of another great band that visited deployed troops. I’m a Flyleaf fan as well, so it’s good to see that they support our troops. And if any bands out there wonder if visiting the troops will make any difference, just read this:

“We spend so much time worrying about what we don’t have and struggling to forget how dangerous our line of work is,” said Sgt. Megg Streva, 1-12 INF mechanic. “Then a band like Flyleaf comes all the way out here to give us a part of normalcy back and thank us for what we’re doing…it reminds us why we’re here and who were fighting for.”

flyleaf visits troops

For the rest of this post, check out the Chuck’s post at North Shore Journal.

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Warrior of the Week – CPT Darby Boudreaux

CPT Darby Boudreaux
Everyday Soldiers of the U.S. Army fight to protect our country, our families and our lives. Many have given the ultimate sacrifice. Many, even after suffering traumatic injuries of war, continue to serve.

Captain Darby Boudreaux, 225th Engineer Brigade, was severely injured by an improvised explosive device on May 25, 2005 in a route clearance mission near Ghazaliya in western Baghdad. A minor artery was severed in his right leg and he lost a significant amount of blood.

Boudreaux spent the next three months recovering and going through painful rehabilitation.

Even with life threatening injuries, Bourdreauz says that the most traumatic part of the whole ordeal was not the impact of the blast or how close he came to death, but the fact he had to leave his Soldiers behind.

So four years later, he convinced his command to allow him to return to Iraq.

Currently, Boudreaux is the officer in charge and an instructor at the 225th Engineer Brigade Task Force Iron Claw Academy. He uses his near death experience to give Soldiers a chance at success and a better chance to stay alive by teaching Improvised Explosive Device identification.

Even with pieces of metal still lodged inside his body, Cpt. Boudreaux is satisfied that he was able to finally complete his mission on the battlefield.

For his heroism on the battlefield and his commitment to his Soldiers, Cpt. Darby Boudreaux is this week’s Warrior-Soldier of the Week.

Photo by Lt. Col. Pat Simon

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Petraeus Receives American Legion Distinguished Service Medal

The CENTCOM Commander, GEN David Petraeus, receiving the American Legion Distinguished Service Medal during the 91st Annual American Legion Convention in Louisville, KY.

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Silver Star Awarded to Veteran 40 Years Later

By Jennifer Borrasso

11:55 AM EDT, August 22, 2009
It was an honor for a former soldier from Lackawanna County forty years after his time in Vietnam.

It was a special ceremony at Genetti’s in Wilkes-Barre to honor one man’s heroism.

“The president of the United States of America has awarded the Silver Star to Private First Class Paul J. Wedlock, United States Army. . . ” the loudspeaker sounded on Friday evening.

Congressman Paul Kanjorski, D-Nanticoke, pinned the Silver Star onto Paul Wedlock of Scranton.

In 1969 Wedlock was 19 years old and serving with the U.S. Army in South Vietnam. During one firefight, he crawled across a battlefield to pull his severely wounded commanding officer to safety.

“I don’t feel like I’m a hero, no not at all, not at all, it’s just one of the things we do that’s our job being in infantry,” PFC Wedlock said of his bravery.

Read the rest here.

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Lynndie England’s Victim Complex

Everyone that cares knows the name “Lynndie England” when they hear it. It conjures up images of torture, evil, and utterly sinister behavior.

A few days ago, England was invited to speak by Angela Kinney, president of the Library of Congress Professional Association. The event, scheduled to be held at the Library of Congress, had to be canceled due to supposed threats.

What the hell is the Library of Congress doing inviting England to begin with? This “woman” is directly responsible for the deaths of troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some were beheaded as a direct result of her behavior.

And yet, England thinks SHE is the victim in all this. Sorry, Lynndie! You got off easy. You should have been charged with murder and attempted murder in the deaths of your fellow Soldiers! And yet, she has the nerve to say that her life sucks because she was “in a photograph for like a split second or something.” No, Lynndie, your life sucks because you made poor decisions in torturing, belittling and humiliating Iraqis against the laws of warfare and the Geneva Convention for which you to trained to comply with.

She talks in the interview about how the Iraqis were so bad in how they treated their captives that they burnt and hung us from bridges. What she won’t tell you is that this happened AFTER the photos were made public and as a result of HER behavior!!

And yet, that doesn’t stop her from going around claiming to be the victim in all of this, as she does in a recent BBC News interview. Instead of taking responsibility for her actions, she blames her boyfriend, her superiors, college fraternities, and the Iraqis themselves.

England is supposedly on anti-depressants and can’t get a job. No one will employ her. And no one should employ her until she recognizes she was wrong. Until she can blame herself for what happened at that notorious prison nearly six years ago, she will never get over it. If, indeed, her superiors told her to do this, why did she say that her boyfriend was the one pushing her to do it? If she was ordered to torture and humiliate prisoners, what is the name of the person or persons making those orders? What are we supposed to believe when she initially says she only did it because her boyfriend wanted her to and then says that is “what we were ordered to do?”

Lynndie was invited to the Library of Congress to speak about a new biography about her called “Tortured: Lynndie England, Abu Ghraib and the Photographs That Shocked the World,” by Gary S. Winkler. See the entire BBC interview here.

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Speicher Search Details Announced

The Navy announced today additional details regarding the recent discovery of the remains of Navy Capt. Michael “Scott” Speicher in Iraq. Speicher was shot down flying a combat mission in an F/A-18 Hornet over west-central Iraq on Jan. 17, 1991, during Operation Desert Storm.

Acting in part on information provided by an Iraqi citizen in early July, Multi National Force – West’s (MNF-W) personnel recovery team went to a location in the desert which was believed to be the crash site of Speicher’s jet. The Iraqi, a Bedouin, was 11 years old at the time of the crash and did not have direct knowledge of where Speicher was buried, but knew of other Bedouins who did. He willingly provided his information during general discussion with MNF-W personnel and stated he was unaware of the U.S. government’s interest in this case until queried by U.S. investigators in July 2009.

The Iraqi citizens led MNF-W’s personnel recovery team to the area they believed Speicher was buried. The area where the remains were recovered was located approximately 100 kilometers west of Ramadi, in Anbar province. There were two sites that teams searched. One site was next to the downed aircraft that was discovered in 1993 and the other site was approximately two kilometers away. The second site was where Speicher’s remains were recovered.

The recovery personnel searched two sites from July 22-29. The personnel recovery team consisted of approximately 150 people, mostly Marines and other forces under MNF-W.

The recovered remains include bones and multiple skeletal fragments. Based on visual examination of the remains and dental records at the site, a preliminary assessment was reached that the remains were that of Speicher. After searching the site another day, no further remains were recovered.

On July 30, the remains were turned over from the recovery team to MNF-W mortuary affairs at Al Asad. The remains were then transported to Dover Port Mortuary at Dover Air Force Base, Del. They were examined by the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology’s (AFIP) Armed Forces medical examiner who positively identified them as those of Speicher on Aug. 1.

Positive identification by AFIP was made by comparing Speicher’s dental records with the jawbone recovered at the site. The teeth were a match, both visually and radiographically. AFIP’s DNA Lab in Rockville, Md., confirmed the remains to be Speicher on Aug. 2 via DNA comparison tests of the remains by comparing them to DNA reference samples previously provided by family members.

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