Category: Support the troops

  • Get’cher Hugs for TSO

    There’s a USO Girls event this weekend in some tiny Texas town I’ve never heard of, but according to them, Uncle Jimbo and our own TSO will be attending. I don’t know if it’s legal or not, but Jamie and Caroline are soliciting hugs over the internet across state lines to benefit the Warrior Legacy Foundation.

    Somehow, if you can’t be there to get your $2 hug and kiss, you can take a certain measure of joy from the fact that TSO (recently quoted; “You people are killing me. Hate hugs.”) will collect your hug for you.

    I’m taking my car to Cashpoint to get the cash I need.

  • Army ending retirees’ volunteer program

    The Washington Times reports that the Army is ending a program that allowed retirees to return to service to help fill critical slots;

    Lt. Col. George Wright, 55, an Army spokesman — himself a program participant who signed up to return to service in 2007 after nine years of retirement — said the program is being terminated because the Army had to reduce personnel to reach a congressionally mandated limit on the total number of soldiers.

    “The end of the program is driven by end-strength concerns,” he said, adding that the Army was engaged in a constant process of managing its size by “fine-tuning” its enlistment and retention figures.

    According to the Times, participation in the program has been broader than most of Americans probably realize;

    Since the program began after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, 2,851 veterans with 20 years or more experience – mostly between the ages of 45 and 55 – have passed through the program, according to Army figures. Nearly 750 have served in Iraq or Afghanistan.

    Army figures show three participants have been wounded and one — Maj. Steven Hutchison, 60, of Scottsdale, Ariz. — has been killed.

    One volunteer was inspired by the troops she cared for at Walter Reed;

    [Master Sgt. Donna Thomas, 51] who is currently serving with the Multi-National Security Transition Command in Iraq, told The Washington Times that 11 months after retiring in 2006 following 22 years of active service, she decided to re-enlist while working as a civilian at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

    Her inspiration came from wounded soldiers she met.

    “They had such great attitudes. They all wanted to come back,” she said. “It made me feel that I needed to renew my own commitment.”

    Actually, that’s what inspired me to volunteer for the program. The son of one of my friends from my high school days was in Walter Reed and lost half of one leg in a helicopter crash in the early days of the Iraq war. When I visited him, he was adamant about staying in the Army and returning to Iraq. How can you not be tempted to serve with a generation of soldiers like him.

    But, unfortunately, it was not to be. My medical record since retirement sounds much worse than it actually is, so the Army rejected me (so much for the Left’s line that they’ll take anyone and send them to war).

    Not every retiree will be forced out when the program ends, though;

    Col. Wright said the Army began phasing out the program in March and would end it by October, sending home the 1,163 retirees now enrolled.

    A few exceptions with special skills — 41 to date — could be approved to remain in service.

  • Happy 234th Birthday, US Army

    army-birthday-cake-2009

    234 years young, the US Army, the professional standard for every military force in the world, celebrates it’s birthday today, in this, the Year of the Non Commissioned Offcer. In that spirit, here’s the message from the Army’s Top NCO, Sergeant Major of the Army Kenneth Preston;

    And the message from the president;

    potus_army_birthday_09_large

    Please stand for the Army song;

  • People/MLB All-Stars Among Us

    I’ll be honest, I can’t even really figure out what this thing is. It’s some thing where you vote for people who do charitable things, and they get something, maybe a trip to the MLB all star game or something. It’s really not all together clear either at the site or from the email I got from Major League Baseball. (That’s the governing body which overseas the sport wherein my beloved Boston Red Sox have now taken 8 straight games against the Evil Empire Soviet Union New York Yankees, but I digress.)

    Anyway, I went through each of the nominees, and found four which are military related. Go vote for them if you would:
    leslie-barrett

    ryan-housleymatt-kuntz

    ryan-kules1

  • Stars and Stripes explores camaraderie

    Geoff Ziezulewicz at Stars and Stripes wrote an excellent article trying to explain to civilians that “Band of Brothers” bond that combat troops share with each other in Unique camaraderie forged by troops downrange lasts far beyond deployment. Here’s snippet;

    “These guys grabbed me and we hauled ass into a building,” he said. “These guys are high speed as hell. They’ll protect me in any situation. I was confused during my first deployment and these guys were on it.

    “I felt completely confident that I would get through that night,” he said. “No issues.”

    You have to read the whole thing – I wish I could put it all here.

  • Way to support the Military, Military.com

    Don Carl emailed me that I should check out Military.com’s headline about the racist nutjob in DC yesterday. For a military-oriented website, they certainly did a disservice to the military with this poorly-considered headline;

    Photobucket

    James VonBrunn was a lot of other things besides a Navy Captain (which was nearly 70 years ago, by the way, and has anyone bothered to verify that beyond his own ramblings?), why couldn’t they put one of those other things in the headline instead of feeding the anti-military frenzy.

    I’m off of Military.com, just like I’m off of Little Green Footballs.

  • Of Grunts and Medics; RIP Major Wahlen

    dnews Wahlen medal of honor

    I had the distinct honor of sharing Guiness and bar room table with two of the paratroopers from the 173rd who had been wounded at Ranch House Outpost last year. During the course of the conversation, I mentioned that my son was an Air Force surgical technician. In unison, the two battle-hardened troopers yelled “Oh, we love medics!” That’s been the consensus among most infantrymen I’ve known.

    It’s probably because of the heroic true life stories, like this one of the recently deceased George Wahlen (Washington Post link);

    He was injured in the eye by mortar shell shrapnel, but he refused to be evacuated and remained to help the wounded. He “defied the continuous pounding of heavy mortars and deadly fire of enemy rifles to care for the wounded, working rapidly in an area swept by constant fire and treating 14 casualties before returning to his own platoon,” read his citation for the Medal of Honor, the military’s highest award for valor.

    Less than a month later, after shrapnel broke one of his legs, Maj. Wahlen continued to provide medical aid on the battlefield.

    “I bandaged myself up, took a shot of morphine and crawled over and started helping a Marine that had both his legs blown off,” he later told the Salt Lake Tribune. He said of his decision to stay and help: “When you’ve been with these guys, they’re like family. You don’t want to let them down.”

    You can read his Medal of Honor citation at this link. After World War II, and his discharge from the Navy, George Wahlen followed his “family” to the Korean War and the Vietnam War in the Army before he finally retired. Then he went to work for the Department of Veteran Affairs and continued to care for his “family”. After a lifetime of caring for the troops he loved so dearly, 84-year-old George Wahlen finally succumbed to cancer last week in the VA Medical Center that bears his name.

    Yeah, grunts love them some medics, or corpsmen, and it’s largely because of the type people who go into the profession…people like George Wahlen.

    Take it easy, now, Major Wahlen.

  • Five working days later

    Monday morning two US soldiers were senselessly shot, one was murdered, within our borders while they were on a break. They were shot by what now appears to be a lone whacko, although the circle may widen soon. That shooter was apparently trained, or at least influenced to commit this crime, in a foreign country. And here we are five working days later and not one word from our President on the incident. I’ve heard about some statement that his office released to Arkansas media about the shooting, but I haven’t seen it.

    In the circles I travel in, there’s only one place to look for a statement from the President – on the White House website. it’s where I found this statement on that website about a similar crime that happened the day before the shooting in Little Rock;

    That particular shooting happened on a Sunday and was released the same day – a non-working day for many of us. But five working days later, there’s nothing about PVT Long’s death in the five pages preceding that particular link. Nothing.

    I cut Obama some slack – maybe he didn’t want to anger the “Muslim world” before his Big Speech, but that speech is over…he’s in Germany today. The President and Commander-in-Chief plans on honoring the US military members who gave their lives for their country on Normandy beaches tomorrow – yet he can’t honor one lone soldier who was murdered solely because he happened to be a soldier taking a break last Monday in Little Rock, Arkansas under Obama’s command.

    Five working days later.