Archive for the ‘Valhalla’ Category

Marine legend Lt. Gen. Victor Krulak

January 7, 2009

I never met the man while growing up on Camp Pendleton, but I certainly did hear about him from time to time. Everything that I ever heard about him from the mostly older Marines, was that he was a “Marines Marine.”

Rest in peace General, you most certainly earned it.

Marine legend Lt. Gen. Victor Krulak dies

The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Jan 2, 2009 10:14:36 EST

SAN DIEGO — Lt. Gen. Victor Krulak, who headed all Marine forces in the Pacific during part of the Vietnam War, has died. He was 95.

Krulak died Monday at the Wesley Palms Retirement Community in San Diego, according to Edith Soderquist, a staff member at the facility. The cause of death was not immediately known.

Krulak commanded about 100,000 Marines in the Pacific from 1964 to 1968 — a span that saw the United States dramatically increase buildup in Vietnam.

Krulak, nicknamed “Brute” for his direct, no-nonsense style, was a decorated veteran of World War II and the Korean War.

After retirement, he often criticized the government’s handling of the Vietnam War. He wrote that the war could have been won only if the Vietnamese had been protected and befriended and if enemy supplies from North Vietnam were cut off.

“The destruction of the port of Haiphong would have changed the whole character of the war,” he said two decades after the fall of Saigon.

Krulak once summed up the U.S. dilemma in Vietnam by saying, “It has no front lines. The battlefield is in the minds of 16 or 17 million people.”

Before assuming command of Fleet Marine Force Pacific, Krulak served as principal adviser on counterinsurgency warfare to then-Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and the joint chiefs of staff.

“I never got enthusiasm out of war, and I’m convinced that the true pacifists are the professional soldiers who have actually seen it,” Krulak said many years after retiring from the post.

During World War II on the island of Choiseul, Krulak led his outnumbered battalion during an eight-day raid on Japanese forces, diverting the enemy’s attention from the U.S. invasion of Bougainville.

Krulak’s troops destroyed hundreds of tons of supplies, burning both camps and landing barges. He was wounded on Oct. 13, 1943, and later received the Navy Cross for heroism along with the Purple Heart.

At age 43 he became the youngest brigadier general in Marine Corps history up to that time. Krulak received the second of two Distinguished Service Medals when he retired from the military.

For the next nine years, he worked for Copley Newspapers, serving at various times as director of editorial and news policy and news media president of Copley News Service. He retired as vice president of The Copley Press Inc. in 1977 and contributed columns on international affairs and military matters for Copley News Service.

He also wrote the book “First to Fight,” an insider’s view of the Marine Corps.

His son Charles Krulak served as commandant — the Marines’ top post — from 1995 to 1999.

SOURCE

Navy SEAL killed in Iraq to get Medal of Honor

March 31, 2008

I’ve posted elsewhere on this blog about this action involving this group of American Warriors. This was an unusual situation, and these are, and were unusual men. I can remember Seals coming into Ross – Sands Delicatessen in Point Loma. They were boisterous, and serious all at the same time. Man, could those guys eat!

Fair winds and following seas…

 ‘He never took his eye off the grenade,’ attack survivor says of his heroism

SAN DIEGO – An elite Navy SEAL who threw himself on top of a grenade in Iraq to save his comrades will be posthumously awarded the nation’s highest military tribute, a White House spokeswoman said Monday.

The Medal of Honor will be awarded to Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael A. Monsoor. His family will receive the medal during a White House ceremony April 8.

Monsoor is the fifth person to receive the honor since the beginning of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

“Petty Officer Monsoor distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism on Sept. 29, 2006,” press secretary Dana Perino told reporters during a briefing aboard Air Force One as President Bush headed to Europe for a NATO summit.

Monsoor was part of a sniper security team in Ramadi with three other SEALs and eight Iraqi soldiers, according to a Navy account. An insurgent fighter threw the grenade, which struck Monsoor in the chest before falling in front of him.

Monsoor then threw himself on the grenade, according to a SEAL who spoke to The Associated Press in 2006 on condition of anonymity because his work requires his identity to remain secret.

‘We owe him’
“He never took his eye off the grenade, his only movement was down toward it,” said a 28-year-old lieutenant, who suffered shrapnel wounds to both legs that day. “He undoubtedly saved mine and the other SEALs’ lives, and we owe him.”

Two SEALs next to Monsoor were injured; another who was 10 feet to 15 feet from the blast was unhurt. Monsoor, from Garden Grove, Calif., was 25 at the time.

Monsoor, a platoon machine gunner, had received the Silver Star, the third-highest award for combat valor, for his actions pulling a wounded SEAL to safety during a May 9, 2006, firefight in Ramadi.

He was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star for his sacrifice in Ramadi.

Sixteen SEALs have been killed in Afghanistan. Eleven of them died in June 2005 when a helicopter was shot down near the Pakistan border while ferrying reinforcements for troops pursuing al-Qaida militants.

There are about 2,300 of the elite fighters, based in Coronado and Little Creek, Va.

The Navy is trying to boost the number by 500 — a challenge considering more than 75 percent of candidates drop out of training, notorious for “Hell Week,” five days of continual drills by the ocean broken by only four hours sleep total.

Monsoor made it through training on his second attempt.

source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23886008

Medal of Honor given to Sioux for heroism

March 3, 2008

SOURCE : http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23456218

When, I ask, will my nation learn?

WASHINGTON – President Bush apologized Monday that the country waited decades to honor Master Sgt. Woodrow Wilson Keeble for his military valor in Korea, giving him the Medal of Honor more than 25 years after he died.

Keeble is the first full-blooded Sioux Indian to receive the nation’s highest military award. But it came almost six decades after he saved the lives of fellow soldiers. Keeble died in 1982.

“On behalf of our grateful nation, I deeply regret that this tribute comes decades too late,” Bush said at the White House medal ceremony. “Woody will never hold this medal in his hands or wear it on his uniform. He will never hear a president thank him for his heroism. He will never stand here to see the pride of his friends and loved ones, as I see in their eyes now.”

~snip~

Profiles of valor: USAF Tech. Sgt. Chapman

February 15, 2008

United States Air Force Tech. Sgt. John Chapman, from Fayetteville, North Carolina, was involved in a reconnaissance mission in northern Afghanistan on 4 March 2002 when the team’s twin-engine Chinook helicopter came under heavy fire. It was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade and crash-landed. Chapman called in air support to cover the team, which was now exposed to enemy fire. He also directed a helicopter rescue of his team and aircrew members and led the search for a Navy SEAL who had fallen from the helicopter. Chapman killed two jihadis during the search, but came upon a machine-gun nest. Though the enemy fired on the rescue team on three sides, Chapman fired back. Soon, however, multiple wounds claimed his life, though he is credited with saving the lives of the others in the rescue team. For his actions, Chapman was posthumously awarded the Air Force Cross, and a U.S. Navy cargo ship was named in his honor.

Source: Patriot Post

Profiles in Valor; Operation Redwing

October 15, 2007

Full story here: http://www.navy.mil/moh/mpmurphy/soa.html

On June 28, 2005, deep behind enemy lines east of Asadabad in the Hindu Kush of Afghanistan, a very committed four-man Navy SEAL team was conducting a reconnaissance mission at the unforgiving altitude of approximately 10,000 feet. The SEALs, Lt. Michael Murphy, Gunner’s Mate 2nd Class (SEAL) Danny Dietz, Sonar Technician 2nd Class (SEAL) Matthew Axelson and Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class (SEAL) Marcus Luttrell had a vital task.  The four SEALs were scouting Ahmad Shah – a terrorist in his mid-30s who grew up in the adjacent mountains just to the south.

Under the assumed name Muhammad Ismail, Shah led a guerrilla group known to locals as the “Mountain Tigers” that had aligned with the Taliban and other militant groups close to the Pakistani border. The SEAL mission was compromised when the team was spotted by local nationals, who presumably reported its presence and location to the Taliban.

A fierce firefight erupted between the four SEALs and a much larger enemy force of more than 50 anti-coalition militia.  The enemy had the SEALs outnumbered.  They also had terrain advantage.  They launched a well-organized, three-sided attack on the SEALs.  The firefight continued relentlessly as the overwhelming militia forced the team deeper into a ravine.  

Trying to reach safety, the four men, now each wounded, began bounding down the mountain’s steep sides, making leaps of 20 to 30 feet. Approximately 45 minutes into the fight, pinned down by overwhelming forces, Dietz, the communications petty officer, sought open air to place a distress call back to the base. But before he could, he was shot in the hand, the blast shattering his thumb.

Snip ~

Can we say Medal of Honor? I knew we could!

Profiles in Valor, delayed tribute to an American Warrior

October 5, 2007

It is not often that tears fill my eyes at my age. But this is indeed one of those times…

http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/swdyer.htm

ANC Website Top BANNER 2
Scott William Dyer
Chief Warrant Officer, United States Army
Florida State Flag
NEWS RELEASES from the United States Department of Defense
No. 1027-06 IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 13, 2006
Media Contact: (703) 697-5131/697-5132
Public/Industry(703) 428-0711DoD Identifies Army Casualty

The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

Chief Warrant Officer Scott W. Dyer, 38, of Cocoa Beach, Florida, died October 11, 2006, in Banditemur, Afghanistan, from injuries suffered during combat operations. Dyer was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

For further information related to this release the media can contact the U.S. Army Special Operations Command public affairs office at (910) 432-6005.


RELEASE NUMBER: 061013-01
DATE POSTED: OCTOBER 13, 2006
PRESS RELEASE: Army Special Forces Soldier dies in Afghanistan
U.S. Army Special Forces Command Public Affairs OfficeFORT BRAGG, N.C. (USASOC News Service, October 13, 2006) — An Army Special Forces Soldier stationed here died Oct. 11, in southern Afghanistan while deployed in support of combat operations.

CW2 Scott W. Dyer, 38, an assistant detachment commander, assigned to 3rd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group here, died from injuries sustained in support of combat operations.

He deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in August 2006.

A native of Titusville, Florida, Dyer enlisted in the Army November 11, 1987, as a cavalry scout.  After completing basic and advanced individual training at Fort Knox, Kentucky, he was assigned to the Joint Readiness Training Center at Fort Polk, Louisiana. In 1993, Dyer volunteered for Special Forces training and upon completion of the Special Forces Qualification Course he was assigned to 3rd SFG as a Special Forces engineer.  He served with the 3rd SFG until January 2002 when he was assigned to the 96th Civil Affairs Battalion, here, as a civil affairs engineer.

In 2003, Dyer volunteered to attend Warrant Officer’s Candidate School and graduated in June of that year.  He was reassigned to the 3rd SFG in February 2004 as an assistant detachment commander.

His awards and decorations include the Meritorious Service Medal, Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Armed Forces Service Medal, Humanitarian Service Medal, NCO Professional Development Ribbon, Army Service Ribbon, Combat Infantry Badge, Master Parachutist Badge, Military Freefall Jumpmaster Badge, Military Freefall Parachutist Badge, Air Assault Badge, Ranger Tab and the Special Forces Tab.  His posthumous awards include the Bronze Star Medal for valor, and the Purple Heart.

Dyer is survived by his wife Jodi, son Casey, daughter Sidney, mother Sandra Miller and step-father Steve Miller of Tequesta, Florida, father Carl Dyer of Alexandria, Virginia, and sisters Tawnia Peterson of Orlando, Florida, and Dawn Hill of Rockledge, Florida.

SW Dyer US Army PHOTO

Courtesy of the Orlando Sentinel: 14 October 2006

Army Special Forces soldier Scott William Dyer died smiling this week in a helicopter high above the mountains of southern Afghanistan, his mother said Friday.

Dyer had been struck by heavy fire Wednesday. His men tried to save him by pulling his wounded body onto the aircraft.

But it was too late. As Dyer’s Captain took his hand, the soldier looked up, smiled and slipped away. He was 38.

“He lived life, every second, up until his death,” his mother, Sandy Miller, said Friday.

“We were so proud of him,” she said.

Dyer is the 26th Floridian to die in Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom.

Raised in Brevard County, Dyer was a chief warrant officer assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group out of Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He received numerous awards before his death and was posthumously awarded a Purple Heart and Bronze Star for valor. His funeral will be at Arlington National Cemetery.

In addition to Miller, Dyer is survived by wife Jodi, 37, and their children, Casey, 10, and Sidney, 6, of Sanford, North Carolina; and sisters Tawnie Peterson of Chuluota and Dawn Hill of Rockledge.

Dyer grew up in Port St. John, where Miller and her children moved after she divorced.

There, they were close to Dyer’s grandfather, a World War II Navy veteran who worked in the space industry. He told the boy about his wartime adventures.

When Dyer was 5, he told his mother his future was set.

“There were two things he was going to do: He was going to be a soldier and ride a motorcycle,” Miller said.

“He later added, ‘Jump out of airplanes,’ ” she said.

Life was pleasant on the Brevard coast, Miller said, and Dyer threw himself into it. As a student at Titusville High School, he was on the football, wrestling and track teams. He could have attended college on a wrestling scholarship but decided against it, his mother said.

One week after Dyer’s 1987 graduation, he signed up for the Army as a cavalry scout.

Dyer was an athletic man, and the military suited him well. He graduated at the top of his Army Ranger class, Miller said, and volunteered for Special Forces in 1993.

“He was proud of what he did,” Miller said.

Even as opinion soured on American involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, he told Miller the conflict was the only way to stop terrorists from attacking the U.S., she said.

He also believed in family. He met Jodi while he was assigned to Fort Smith, Arkansas, and knew immediately they would fall in love, Miller said. They married in 1989 at Cherry Down Park in Cape Canaveral.

It took hard work for Dyer to balance his love of family and the Army, Miller said, but he did it. When he was at his Sanford, NorthCarolina, home, he coached his children’s sports teams and took them and their friends wakeboarding often. They took family trips to Hawaii and Alaska.

When he was in Iraq or Afghanistan, he talked to his children every day using the Internet and a Web camera — even on the day he died, Miller said.

It happened after nightfall, Jodi and others told Miller. His team was hovering in a helicopter above a mountaintop.

Dyer was the first to jump out. Ground fire hit him. His men pulled him back inside for safety, but he was already too badly injured.

Hours later, Miller got a call at her home in Jupiter.

“Mom, Scott has passed,” Jodi told Miller. Within minutes, Miller was driving to North Carolina to prepare to bury her son.


18 October 2006:Sandy Miller of Tequesta watched her grandson, Casey Dyer, on Saturday as his mother, Jodi attached the Special Forces emblem to his football helmet, then the fathers of his teammates marched onto the field to put emblems on their helmets as well.

It was a small step of “normalcy” for the 10-year-old, whose father, Scott Dyer, 38, had died Wednesday in Afghanistan, after his Black Hawk helicopter was under small arms fire.

Miller’s son, Scott, was on his third tour of Afghanistan when he was killed. An Army Ranger, a member of the Special Forces and one of the elite who did high-altitude sky-diving, Dyer was a 19-year military veteran. “He has a wonderful legacy,” said Miller from Dyer’s family home in Sanford, North Carolina, near Fort Bragg.

“He was an honor graduate of the Ranger class of July 1992, graduated from Special Forces in 1993 and was an honor graduate of the Warrant Officer class three years ago,” Miller said. “I’m hearing stories of this fantastic person. We had so many people telling us what we call the ‘Scott stories,’ and last night we were outside by the lake with a case of beer telling Scott stories until 2 in the morning.”

Miller said she received a phone call from Afghanistan Tuesday, telling her that the rampside ceremony, where the military loads the coffin of the soldier onto the plane to bring it home, had 500 people there.

“This was at 11 at night,” she said. “There were people from every nation fighting with them, and Scott and I used to talk on Yahoo three or four times a week via a webcam and he’d tell me how great the Swedes were or the English. And they were there at rampside for him.”

A memorial service is scheduled at Fort Bragg’s JFK Chapel on Thursday. Scott’s coffin is in Washington, awaiting burial at Arlington National Cemetery, he mother said. The two services will be marking the life of a man that his mother called “my best friend and the number one father in the whole world.”

Giving the eulogy at the Thursday memorial service will be Rick Fritps, a fellow warrant officer, who was also a classmate of Dyer’s when they both went to Titusville High School. Dyer’s daughter, Sidney, 6, will be singing a song at her father’s service.

“There’s a contingent of 14 of his friends from Titusville coming to Fort Bragg for the memorial,” said Miller.

“Scott was in the service for 19 years, and he made the most incredible friends. We’ve had calls from Iraq, Afghanistan, Japan, Nigeria, everywhere he’s been. They are coming in by the hour and by the day. The outpouring of love and support from Titusville and around the world is wonderful.”

Neighbors in the Miller’s Tequesta neighborhood are now trying to coordinate an effort to put flags along the Miller’s street in time for the 10 a.m. memorial on Thursday, as a show of their support for the family.

Miller has high praise for Dyer’s wife, Jodi.

“These military wives of husbands in the Special Forces who are deployed, they know their husbands will be out of the country all they time. What a wonderful crew of women they are and what a remarkable woman my daughter-in-law is.

“Sidney, at 6, is outgoing and doesn’t really understand yet what this means. Casey is quiet, and he played ball on Saturday and his mother sent him back to school on Monday. We felt is was best that he begin to have a return of a little normalcy in his life.”

In addition to his wife, Jodi, and children, Casey and Sidney, Dyer is survived by his mother and stepfather, Sandy and Steve Miller of Tequesta; his father, Carl of Alexandria, Virginia; and his two sisters, Tawnia Peterson of Oveido and her husband Chris and Dawn Hill of Rockledge, and her husband Michael.

The memorial service for Scott Dyer will be Thursday at 10 a.m. in Fort Bragg. Graveside services will be at 1 p.m. October 26, 2006, at Arlington National Cemetery, with the full military honors, including a horse-drawn caisson, bagpipe, 21-gun salute and “Taps.”

“What is funny is that Scott didn’t like horses, and here he will be at Arlington in a horse-drawn carriage,” he mother said.

When he was home on leave, Dyer spent time helping to rebuild basketball courts and other children’s recreational amenities in the neighborhood, according to Miller.

Because of this devotion to children’s recreation, in lieu of flowers, donations should be sent to the Scott Dyer Memorial Fund for the Children’s Recreation Committee of Carolina Lakes Property Owners Association, 91 Clubhouse Drive, Sandford, N.C. 27332.


Even though he was 7,000 miles away, Army Chief Warrant Officer Scott W. Dyer made his family a priority.He spoke with his wife, Jodi, and their children, Casey, 10, and Sidney, 6, via webcam every chance he got.

“We’d look at each other on the computer and make faces and make each other laugh,” said Jodi Dyer, whose husband was on his second tour in Afghanistan.

Dyer, of Cocoa Beach, Florida, died October 11, 2006, from injuries he suffered jumping from a helicopter during combat in Banditemur, Afghanistan. He was 38.

Yesterday, hundreds of mourners — many in uniform — gathered at Arlington National Cemetery to pay respects to the loyal friend, father and son.

Dyer was the 41st person killed supporting Operation Enduring Freedom to be buried at Arlington.

A military band led the procession through the blustery wind to the grave site, where a chaplain delivered a sermon. A brigadier general presented U.S. flags to Dyer’s wife; his mother, Sandy Miller; and his father, Carl Dyer. Mourners wiped their eyes as a bugler, standing among the rows of white headstones, played taps.

Dyer was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, at Fort Bragg, N.C. Almost 400 people, including friends from grade school and high school, had packed the John F. Kennedy Memorial Chapel at Fort Bragg last week for a memorial service for Dyer. An additional 500 stood outside in tents.

“Every friend he made he kept for life,” his wife said. “He would get on the phone and talk to his friends for hours, saying he would make dinner for me, but he never would.”

Since his death, scores of friends have posted comments in an online memory book.

Mark Kenda of Clearwater, Florida, said he had been friends with Dyer since seventh grade.

“He has paid the ultimate sacrifice to make this world a better place for those who remain,” Kenda wrote. “I was fortunate enough to be able to call Scott my friend.”

Dyer’s 19-year military career took him to assignments in Africa, Haiti and Bosnia, and twice to Iraq. He received many awards and decorations, including the Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Meritorious Service Medal and Humanitarian Service Medal.

As a member of the Special Forces, or Green Berets, he was trained to jump from helicopters at high altitudes, his wife said. He also learned French Creole and Arabic, and used the latter in Afghanistan to help train local troops.

“When he was over there, he said he was making a difference,” Jodi Dyer said. “They were making gains, and he was just hoping that eventually they could pull out and the Afghans could take care of themselves.”

When Dyer wasn’t on assignment, he coached his kids’ basketball, soccer and baseball teams, his wife said.

The last time they spoke on the phone, he had just returned from a mission and was exhausted, she said. But his spirits lifted when she told him their son had won his football game.

He was up for reenlistment in two years, his wife said.

“He was going to reenlist, but he didn’t want to miss another football game or another graduation,” she said. “He was 100 percent ready to spend time with his kids.”

SW Dyer Funeral Services PHOTO


Two Army soldiers assigned to an honor guard platoon prepare for the funeral of 
Army Chief Warrant Officer Scott William Dyer, of Titusville, Florida, during funeral services at 
Arlington National Cemetery, Wednesday, October 25, 2006.

SW Dyer Funeral Services PHOTO
An Army soldier assigned to an honor guard platoon prepares for the funeral of 
Army Chief Warrant Officer Scott William Dyer, of Titusville, Florida, during funeral services 
at Arlington National Cemetery, Wednesday, October 25, 2006.


Army soldiers assigned to an honor guard platoon lower the casket of Army Chief
Warrant Officer Scott William Dyer, of Titusville, Florida, during funeral services at 
Arlington National Cemetery Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2006. Dyer was killed in Afghanistan October 9, 2006

SW Dyer Funeral Services PHOTO
Brigadier General Joseph B. Dibartolomeo presents the U.S. flag from CWO Dyer’s coffin to his
widow, Jodi Dyer, and their children, Sidney, 6, and Casey, 10.

SW Dyer Funeral Services PHOTO
An Army soldier, left, comforts Jodi Dyer, right, wife of Army Chief Warrant Officer Scott William 
Dyer, of Titusville, Florida, during funeral services at Arlington National Cemetery, Wednesday, October 25, 2006.


Posted: 14 October 2006 Updated: 18 October 2006 Updated: 21 October 2006 Updated: 25 October 2006 Updated: 27 October 2006


Updated: 10 December 2006 Updated: 21 April 2007 Updated: 18 May 2007 Updated: 15 July 2007

US Army Ranger Tab
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 US Army Special Forces
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Legion of Merit
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bronze Star Medal
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Purple Heart Medal
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Rick Fitts Visits SW Dyer At Arlington National Cemetery PHOTO

SW Dyer Gravesite PHOTO & Visit May 2007
Photos Courtesy of Chief Warrant Officer Rick Fritts: May 2007
(Scott’s Best Friend Since Childhood)
 

SW Dyer Gravesite PHOTO

SW Dyer Unit Members Visit To ANC - April 2007 - PHOTO
Photos Courtesy of Tom Gugiluzza-Smith, 21 April 2007

SW Dyer Gravesite PHOTO

SW Dyer Gravesite PHOTO
Photos Courtesy of Holly, December 2006

SW Dyer Gravesite PHOTO

SW Dyer Gravesite PHOTO
Photos Courtesy of Holly, October 2006

_popupControl(); geovisit(); Marines may indeed guard the gates of heaven. But, after all, there are those that stand out in the cold, and direct their fire…

PETTY OFFICER 2ND CLASS CHARLES LUKE “DOC” MILAM, UNITED STATES NAVY

September 30, 2007

PETTY OFFICER 2ND CLASS CHARLES LUKE “DOC” MILAM, UNITED STATES NAVY

2nd Marine Special Operations Battalion, Afghanistan

As you read this, Doc is on patrol along the streets of Heaven, caring for his beloved Marines.

Doc Milam, from Littleton, was killed in action fighting terrorists in Afghanistan. He won the Bronze Star for valor and the Purple Heart.

Fair winds and following seas, Doc.

 

Is it just my imagination, or has Littleton Colorado supplied hero’s for America far out of proportion to the towns size?

Flag marks SEAL’s sacrifice

July 1, 2007

Banner that flew in Afghanistan is raised at Capitol
Javier Manzano © The Rocky

Cindy Dietz, right, mother of fallen Navy SEAL Danny Dietz, waits with state Sen. Steve Ward, holding flag, and Colorado State Patrol Trooper Mike Garcia for the start of Thursday’s ceremony honoring her son. “I don’t know what else to say other than we love him,” Dietz said.
By James B. Meadow, Rocky Mountain News
June 29, 2007
The American flag hung motionless in the hazy, breezeless sky, a solemn red-white-and- blue reminder of the man who had sacrificed his life for it two years ago to the day.
For the tourists who took photos and the strolling locals who paid no attention to them, it was a sleepy-quiet Thursday morning on the west steps of the state Capitol. Even the traffic below seemed more lulling than clamorous.

But for Cindy Dietz it was “a very hard day.”

On June 28, 2005, her son, Navy SEAL Danny P. Dietz, was killed on a mission in Afghanistan.

On June 28, 2007, a star-spangled banner that had once flown over Bagram Airfield – Dietz’s base – in that faraway Asian land was hoisted up a 35-foot flagpole that sat on a hill not very far from the Littleton neighborhood where he was born and raised.

Moments before Colorado State Trooper Mike Garcia raised the flag, Cindy Dietz had said softly, “I’m honored. It’s so special to me that this flag was flying over Danny’s base. And now it’s flying in his home state.”

Later, she would overcome her sadness. Summoning up composure and grace, she would stand before the media and say, “Two years ago, my oldest son was killed in Afghanistan.”

A soft hesitation, then, “I don’t know what else to say other than we love him.”

Joining her for the occasion were Danny’s brother, Eric, and his grandmother, Dolores Gilmer, along with a smattering of public officials.

Among them was state Sen. Steve Ward, who not only represents the Dietzes’ district, but who, as a Marine Corps colonel, was stationed at Bagram for two years himself. It was Ward who obtained the flag for the Dietz family.

“He was a brave man who died tragically and heroically,” said Ward, alluding to Petty Officer 2nd Class Danny Dietz being posthumously awarded the Navy Cross – the nation’s second-highest military honor – for his bravery in the face of fierce combat.

The same flag that honored -Dietz will be used Wednesday at the July Fourth dedication ceremony of a statue of him that will be held in Littleton’s Berry Park extension.

But Littleton Police Chief Heather Coogan wasn’t thinking a week ahead as she watched the ceremony.

“This demonstrates that we have so many fine young people who have such a strong sense of duty, honor and patriotism,” said Coogan. “Being here to watch this just feels absolutely right.”

After a long minute, Garcia slowly began lowering the limp flag.

But halfway down, a quicksilver breath of wind caught it. And suddenly, for several blinks of the eye, there it was, spread against the sky: a 3-foot-by-5- foot piece of red-white-and-blue cloth that represented something for which a Colorado warrior was willing to give his life.

If you go

• What: Dedication of the Danny Dietz Memorial Sculpture

• When: 11 a.m. Wednesday

• Where: Berry Park extension, 5507 S. King St., Littleton

• More info: littletongov.org

Mitchell Forrest Simmons

June 9, 2007

Another warrior from the “Greatest Generation” departed with honors this week. Mitchell Forrest Simmons was 89. He was born and raised in South Carolina. Upon graduating from Clemson, he joined the Marine Corps and attained the rank of Major, after leading assaults at historic battles on Guadalcanal, Peleliu and Okinawa. Mitch conducted his life as an offering, indebted to his Creator, rather than living life as if it were owed to him. He lived to go, not to stay. He fought the good fight and he kept the faith. I knew Mitch since I was a child. He was a great American and will be missed by many, especially his wife, Fran, children, grandchildren and great grandchildren. 

Guard the gates of heaven Mitch.

The Caste of Warriors

May 22, 2007

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18796642/

It is said that there are those that are Warriors that do not know that they are Warriors. It should also be noted that many, simply do not recognize a Warrior for what He is.

Ladies, and Gentlemen; Here is a simple fact: “Know a Warrior by His deeds.”

By Hector Gutierrez

Rocky Mountain News

May 22, 2007

If the Army needed someone to write a manual about winning the hearts and minds of children during war, it could have turned to Sgt. 1st Class Scott J. Brown.Brown reached out to children during the war in Iraq, and was good at it, his family said Monday. By nature he loved children. Brown had a son, two daughters, and nephews and nieces who adored him, his family said.

Brown took it upon himself to create his own outreach project, with family members sending him stuffed animals, toys and games that he could hand out to Iraqi youngsters who were devastated by war and may have built some mistrust of American soldiers.

“When he was in Iraq, he asked me to send boxes of stuffed animals so that he could hand them out to the children,” his sister, Debbi Hood, said. “I guess it was a way for soldiers to show the children of Iraq that Americans were safe and good people. They built their trust that way . . . He felt sorry for them.”

Brown, 33, died Friday in Iraq after he was hit by small-arms fire, the Defense Department said.

He was the second soldier with Colorado ties to be killed last Friday.

Sgt. Ryan J. Baum, 27, of Aurora, also died of wounds he suffered from small-arms fire, the department said. Baum was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 509th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, Fort Richardson, Alaska.

In addition to Operation Iraqi Freedom, Brown toured other world hot spots, including Afghanistan, Kuwait and Kosovo.

When he married his wife, Delilah, nearly two years ago, Brown was deployed again to serve in Afghanistan and then two more tours in Iraq. He saw his wife for only about four months during the couple’s nearly two years of marriage.

“You could see by his rank that he was an awesome soldier for only being in the Army for nine years,” his family said in a statement.

“Scott was always so humble about his job and didn’t like to be considered a hero. He said, ‘I am just doing my job for my country and so my family can live in a land of freedom.’ “

Brown grew up in Brookfield, Wis., and was a huge Packers fan, his family said. He graduated from Brookfield Central High School, but moved to Fort Collins, where he lived with his sister for about a year and a half.

His sister remembered that while growing up, he sometimes talked about following in the footsteps of his late father, Vernon Brown, who served in the Korean War. At 24, Scott Brown enlisted.

He was assigned to Fort Benning, Ga., later moved to Fort Hood, Texas, then deployed to Kosovo and Kuwait.

He eventually made it into airborne and was assigned with the 1st Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division in Fort Bragg, N.C.

Funeral services for Brown are expected to be held in Milwaukee.

In addition to his sister, Brown is survived by his wife, Delilah, son, Taylor (TJ), and stepdaughters, Vicki and Cassie; his mother, Lynne, stepfather, Lory Ferguson; and his brother, Michael.

“Scott would do anything for anybody, especially when it had to do with kids,” his family’s statement read. “His heart was as big as his dedication to his country. He never let us worry about him and always assured us that he would be fine.”

I submit that this man was a Warrior.

Fallen Marines Guard the gates of Heaven. Paratroopers guard the paths to the gates.