Archive for the ‘War’ Category

Veterans Day 2007

November 11, 2007

My friend Roger Helle was 17 years old when he joined the Marine Corps. The product of a broken home, he was very insecure and hoped becoming a Marine would provide him the confidence he lacked.

In February 1966, five months into his first 13-month tour in Vietnam, Roger’s unit was searching for Viet Cong around Gia Le. Roger had walked point for patrols during the previous four months and had been shot once, so his intuition about the enemy’s presence was acutely tuned.

On a night mission to a small fishing village reportedly occupied by VC, Roger and 12 other Marines were moving down a trail lined with dense bamboo. His squad leader had taken Roger’s position as point man, and Roger’s instinct told him the squad was moving too fast along the trail. So urgent was his sense that something was wrong that he wanted to call out, but did not want to betray their position.

In an instant, gunfire erupted and a series of “daisy-chain” explosions propelled Roger and two other Marines over the vegetation into an adjacent rice paddy. As he slowly recovered from the shock of the concussion generated by the explosions, he could see green tracers from VC weapons cutting up and down the trail.

The ambush was over as quickly as it began, and more than 60 VC emerged like ghosts from the bamboo, killed the wounded Marines on the trail, collected their weapons and disappeared.

As Roger regained his senses, he pulled the other two Marines in the water to the edge of the rice paddy. He then pawed around in the muddy water for his M-14, and crawled back onto the trail to check for survivors among the ten remaining Marines—among his friends. The squad leader had taken 29 rounds. There were no survivors.

Roger recovered a radio under one of the dead, crawled back to the water’s edge with the wounded Marines, and called base camp with their coordinates. Within a half hour, Chinooks arrived with quick reaction squads to recover the injured and dead.

The two Marines Roger pulled from the water were evacuated to Da Nang, but died en route.

Roger was the sole survivor of that horrific ambush. There was no consolation for the “survivor’s guilt” he experienced—not the anger, not the nightmares—not for years.

In July 1970, two tours, two Purple Hearts and numerous other decorations later, Roger Helle, now a sergeant and platoon leader for a “killer team,” was walking point on a mission back to a village to destroy earthen tunnels used by the VC for escape and evasion.

Normally, a platoon leader would not take the point position in front of his men; if he was wounded or killed, it could threaten the continuity and survivability of the whole platoon. However, suffering four years of guilt after relinquishing his position on point and losing his entire squad, Roger was not about to ask one of his guys to walk point for what he considered a “mop-up” mission.

Their packs overloaded with C-4 explosives to destroy the VC tunnels, Roger’s platoon took frequent breaks. After one stop, he crossed a field about 50 yards ahead of his platoon to check for booby traps. While scanning the area, he sensed a glint of something in his peripheral vision, coming through the air. A grenade bounced off his leg—and a second later, exploded under his feet, violently impelling him backward and then to the ground.

Roger recounts that the detonation “felt like thousands of volts of electricity surging through my body.” After hitting the ground, he says, “My body would not respond to what my mind wanted it to do.”

Amazingly, he managed to stagger to his feet and wipe enough blood from his eyes to see an enemy soldier, about ten yards in front of him, point his weapon and fire. As the rifle recoiled, two rounds hit Roger, spinning him around and knocking him face down to the ground. As he rolled back toward the light of the sky, he could make out the silhouette of that NVA soldier standing above him. Their eyes met as the enemy thrust his bayonet into Roger’s abdomen.

Just a few seconds, and an eternity, had elapsed.

Roger’s platoon had instinctively hit the ground after the grenade detonated, but six of his men rose up in time to see the NVA soldier over their platoon leader. They fired on the enemy as he withdrew his bayonet, and he dropped a few feet from Roger.

Roger was riddled with shrapnel from the grenade, hit with two rifle rounds and bayoneted. Worse yet, the shrapnel had detonated one of the phosphorus grenades in his demolition bag. His clothing and body were on fire. He managed to get out of his burning flack jacket, but the pain racked his body.

At that moment, Roger says, “I was tired of the killing, tired of losing friends, tired of trying to make sense of the war and my life. I just wanted to die and have all this suffering be over.”

Roger was evacuated to the 95th EVAC Hospital, China Beach, where he underwent numerous surgeries. After six days at death’s door, he regained consciousness long enough to recognize a familiar voice on the ward—that of his brother Ron, asking a physician if Roger was there.

After telling Ron that his brother was going to die, a nurse led him to Roger’s bedside. Ron stood over Roger for a minute, trying to recognize what was left of his brother, and then started to sob, falling to the end of Roger’s bed in grief.

“Your brother is going to die.” The finality of those words were sinking in, as Ron wept, compelling Roger to pray, “God, if there really is a God… if you let me live, I’ll do anything you want.” With that, he fell unconscious again.

In the days that followed, Ron (who also had three Purple Hearts and later received the Navy Cross for jumping on a grenade to protect other Marines) never left the side of his brother. Roger saw many injured men brought into that ward and could only watch as life drained from their bodies. Miraculously, Roger’s condition improved. The road to recovery was long and hard, but 31 operations later, including four to reconstruct his face, recover he did.

Along the way, Roger met his Savior and fulfilled his promise to God—and he has served in full-time ministry since 1978. Indeed, in a war with no victors and replete with death, Roger found victory over death through Christ. He also met and married his wife and ministry partner, Shirley, and they now have two children and three grandchildren.

Today, some 37 years later, Roger appears as robust as a Patriot’s linebacker. He leads a challenging but successful discipleship to young people in the grip of life-controlling addictions. “Life is a gift from God,” says Roger. “What we do with it can be our gift to God.”

Roger’s ministry to others also includes 16 trips back to Vietnam since 1989, where he and “Vets with a Mission” have helped to build orphanages, clinics and hospitals for rural peasants ignored by their Communist government and they have supplied them with millions of dollars of donated medical supplies.

This Christian Soldier understands well the counsel of Ecclesiastes 3:1-3—“There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven: a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot, a time to kill and a time to heal.” His third book, “A time to kill and a time to heal,” takes its inspiration from that passage, as does Roger.

Regarding Vietnam and the current war in Iraq and Afghanistan, Roger is characteristically candid: “I have never regretted a minute of my service in Vietnam. That’s because I did not see the war the way the media portrayed it. I saw it through the eyes of the people that I lived with, the people of Vietnam who wanted to live free in peace.”

He continues, “As The Patriot noted years ago in its analysis of the media’s Vietnam war coverage, ‘General Vo Nguyen Giap, Vietnam’s most decorated military leader, wrote in retrospect that if not for the disunity created by John Kerry, Jane Fonda and their ilk, and promoted by the U.S. media, Hanoi would have ultimately surrendered’.”

Roger adds, “Vietnam will not be a failure if we learn the lessons of that conflict. Politicians cannot run the war—the generals must lead and lead well. The majority of people in Iraq and Afghanistan want peace and freedom, but the media’s portrayal of that critical conflict is just as prejudiced as it was during Vietnam—maybe more so. The Left, with the media’s help, may force the same scenario in Iraq that they forced in Vietnam, with the same consequences for the entire region. The vast majority of our Armed Forces in the region both understand and support our mission.”

To Roger, and to all fellow Patriots who have served our nation with courage and great sacrifice, we offer our heartfelt gratitude. You have honored your oath to “support and defend… so help me God,” as do those on the front line in the war with Jihadistan today. You have kept the flame of liberty, lit by our Founders, burning bright for future generations.

In 1918, the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month marked the cessation of World War I hostilities. This date is now designated in honor of our veterans, and a focal point for national observance is the placing of a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery.

Today, nearly 24 million (eight percent) of our countrymen are veterans. Of those, 33 percent served in Vietnam, 18 percent in the Gulf War, 14 percent in WWII and 13 percent in Korea. About three percent served in Iraq and Afghanistan and other counter-terrorism theaters. More than 25 percent of those veterans suffer some disability.

Please pause with us at 1100 EST this Sunday to pray for all our veterans.

SOURCE: The Patriot Post

and a time for war…

October 21, 2007

One of the most troubled regions in the world is about to have yet another round of warfare. Will this suceed in pacifying the area? I seriously doubt that it will. After all, when has there been peace there in all of known history?

source: http://atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/IJ19Df01.html

Pakistan plans all-out war on militants
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

An all-out battle for control of Pakistan’s restive North and South Waziristan is about to commence between the Pakistani military and the Taliban and al-Qaeda adherents who have made these tribal areas their own.

~snip~

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!

A silver lining to the cloud in Iraq?

October 15, 2007

We are reading about modest sucess in Iraq regarding AQI. Is this really a sign of progress though?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21299285/

I myself think caution would be the best approach. Al Qaeda has, worldwide, had an amazing ability to stage come backs. Always in a very deadly fashion. What I am thinking, is that they are laying low in Iraq, and shifting influence toward other areas of the world. My self and others said from the beginning of the operations in Iraq that we thought that it was a mistake. Did Saddam and his murdering brood need to be eliminated? Certainly that is so, but we already had our a tiger by the tail in Afghanistan. We needed to finish that fight before going out looking for another one to get into. Now, it is being reported that the Taliban, and Al Qaeda are coming back in a strong way there.

Warfront with Jihadistan: Green Berets

October 7, 2007

In last week’s witch hunt, “unbiased journalism” attempted to convict two from among America’s most elite fighting force, despite conclusive evidence that both were blameless. In Afghanistan last October, under the direction of Army Special Forces Capt. Dave Staffel, Master Sgt. Troy Anderson killed insurgent leader Nawab Buntangyar with a single, 100-yard sniper shot, thus “rehabilitating” the architect of countless suicide and roadside bombings. Incredibly, rather than being awarded medals for ridding planet Earth of this vermin, these two Green Berets were charged with premeditated murder, on the basis that Buntangyar was unarmed when he was shot. Apparently, SOCOM must now deploy lawyers when it sends out its finest, along with primers on Miranda warnings.

Two official Army investigations each concluded that Staffel’s seven-man team had fully complied with U.S. rules of engagement. Further, the reports noted that having been classified as an enemy combatant, Buntangyar was “fair game” as a target, armed or not. Finally, of considerable weight was the nontrivial issue that Buntangyar happened to showcase on the Special Forces’ “Top Ten” list of individuals to be killed or captured.

Evidently more convinced by media trials than he was by the Army’s Criminal Investigation Command, however, the recently-pinned-on Army three-star charged with Special Forces oversight in Afghanistan, Lt. Gen. Frank Kearney, convened yet another hearing to weigh evidence against the two soldiers. As the attorney for Capt. Staffel noted, Kearney’s charges carried an air of “military politics” about them. Fortunately, the American justice system trumped media jurists in this case, but only barely. Although the two soldiers were exonerated earlier this week, neither Lt. Gen. Kearney nor any within media circles offered so much as an oops-we-goofed comment to clear the soldiers’ good names.  {snip}

source: Patriot Post

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…

Iran’s parliament votes to label CIA, U.S. Army ‘terrorist’ groups « It’s time to say “When.”

September 30, 2007

Iran’s parliament votes to label CIA, U.S. Army ‘terrorist’ groups « It’s time to say “When.”

What we have here, I believe, is a clear cut case of the kettle calling the pot black. Has the United States ever done anything that it should not have done with the benefit of hindsight? Certainly that is true. However, nearly everything that was pointed out passes “Just War Doctrine” as a basis for taking the actions that were done at the times that they were done.

This whole piece, in my opinion is just another example of the thought processes of those that I call neo communist’s and the hate America first coalition.

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?

Not Guilty! For the most part anyways…

September 28, 2007

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070928/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_soldier_trial

I’m not one for covering things up, or for Nuremberg defenses. However, these young Soldiers were just guilty of making a good kill look cleaner. The Sergeant that told people to plant evidence is the one that I have serious questions about. That was not good judgment, or leadership in the least.

Profiles of valor: Army Lt. Brennan Goltry

September 25, 2007

On the evening of 2 February 2007, Army Lt. Brennan Goltry was commanding the second truck of a five-vehicle convoy in Samarra, Iraq, when enemy insurgents fired on the lead humvee, crippling it and wounding its gunner. After directing his driver to position his vehicle as a shield for the injured soldier, Goltry opened his door amid a barrage of incoming rounds and returned fire. He sustained two gunshot wounds to his left leg. Undeterred, he continued shooting until the enemy was neutralized. Disregarding his own injuries, Goltry rallied his men and countered the ambush with an offensive. His platoon repelled the enemy, securing strategic positions and capturing one enemy combatant. When a medical vehicle sought to evacuate Goltry, he refused, choosing instead to remain with his troops.

Lt. Goltry is quick to redirect any praise for his actions toward his soldiers: “I’m real proud of my men,” he says. “They fight real hard for me and they’ve saved my [rear] more than once.” He terms the events “just another day.” Indeed, fellow officer Capt. Buddy Ferris notes, “[T]his is the type of stuff he does every day. It’s not the first time he’s been shot, and it’s not the first time he charged the enemy.”

For his actions, now-Captain Goltry was awarded the Silver Star, the Combat Infantryman Badge and two Purple Hearts. He is expected to receive a third Purple Heart for injuries sustained during an insurgent attack on 6 May.

Carry on Captain!