Category: We Remember

  • U.S. Remains Returned By North Korea Could Take Days Or Decades To Identify

    returned

    I’ll simply post the article in its entirety. There is really nothing more to say except, Welcome Home.

    Reuters Link

    WASHINGTON – When the remains of Americans handed over by North Korea arrive in Hawaii on Wednesday, the U.S. military will begin a painstaking identification process that experts said could take from three days to two decades to complete.
    The 55 boxes, draped in the blue and white flag of the United Nations, are each small enough to be carried in one person’s arms.

    They bear not only the remains thought to be of missing servicemen from the 1950-53 Korean War, but also a message of good faith made by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at his summit with U.S. President Donald Trump in June.

    The remains within each box may not be those of a single person and are likely fragments of bones, said Paul Cole, an expert on recovery of soldiers missing in action and prisoners of war, who worked as a visiting scientific fellow at Hawaii’s Central Identification Laboratory where the boxes will land.

    The commingling of remains reflects the violent impacts to which human beings are subjected in war.

    At the laboratory, work will be done to determine if the remains are human. Then experts will count the bones and come up with a minimum number of individuals that could be in the shipment.

    Each bone, or fragment, offers a clue. The femur indicates height, the pelvis age, the face and skull national origin. The clavicle and teeth offer some of the best comparison to the personnel file the Department of Defense keeps of missing servicemen, said Cole, author of the book “POW/MIA Accounting: Searching for America’s Missing Servicemen in the Soviet Union.”

    Six Decades Of Waiting
    When bones meet the size requirement, the lab will cut and send a piece to the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory, where it will be analyzed and compared to family reference samples.

    If the bone is too small, DNA analysis cannot be done. Federal law prohibits the destruction of evidence in testing, and DNA analysis destroys the bone, said Cole.
    Those kinds of challenges can drag out the process by many years.

    “Problems such as inability to get DNA from bones and lack of a DNA reference sample from the family can be major stumbling blocks,” said Chuck Prichard, director of public affairs for the Defense POW/MIA Personnel Accounting Agency, the U.S. military’s main unit for finding and identifying missing members.

    The identification process does not prove the bones belong to one person, but rather that they could not belong to anybody else, Cole said. Sometimes all families receive are fragments small enough to fit in the palm of a hand.

    Still, the mission is loaded with expectations and political weight.

    Trump last week thanked Kim for keeping the promise he made as part of their talks about North Korea’s denuclearization.

    “And I’m sure that he will continue to fulfill that promise as they search and search and search,” said Trump, who has sent Vice President Mike Pence to Hawaii to receive the remains.

    The U.S. State Department said this month it would resume joint field activities to search for the remains of Americans missing from the war. A total of 5,300 American servicemen are believed to have been lost in what is now North Korea.

    Gail Embery first found out when she was about 10 years old that her father, Sergeant Coleman Edwards, had gone missing in Korea. She is hopeful that her father’s remains are among those arriving on Wednesday.

    “I always knew that I would have to find my father. I always knew it in my heart,” Embery said. “I’m 73 now, and I am still looking.”

    Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis in Washington; Additional reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Mary Milliken and James Dalgleish

  • Ah, Jonn . . . We Hardly Knew Ye

    10:45PM EDT

    I’ve been on the road or otherwise tied up most of the day. So this article is, unfortunately, a bit late.

    I got the news of Jonn’s passing this morning. I nearly missed it; it was only happenstance that I saw Dave Hardin’s reply to a comment telling me I needed to check my email. (Many thanks, Dave; I owe you one.)

    The news came as somewhat of a shock. Jonn seemed to be doing well when I visited him last month. But none of us ever know how much time the Almighty has allotted us – or our friends.

    TSO’s article/eulogy for Jonn of earlier today says most things that need to be said. His article is eloquent, heartfelt, and excellent. It’s a fitting goodbye for Jonn.

    Still, I’d like to add my own small bit.

    I didn’t know Jonn as well as TSO, and I won’t pretend otherwise. Still, I think I knew him well enough to say the following:

    – he loved his country, serving it for decades;

    – he loved and took care of his family;

    – he loved truth, and detested lies; and

    – he was willing to stand by his convictions, come what may.

    In short, Jonn was a man of honor – and of courage. Hell, seeing how he handled the nasty curve life threw him with ALS aptly proved the latter.

    I’m proud to have known Jonn. And I’d have been honored to have served alongside him, in peace or in war.

    I’m proud to have considered Jonn a friend. I’ll miss him.

    Longtime TAH readers know of my liking for music, especially of that by the late Warren Zevon. I’m going to take the liberty of using one of Warren’s tunes as a final musical tribute. Jonn wouldn’t have asked for this – but I’ll do it on his behalf anyway.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1KjRLq4uF4A

    Adios, mi amigo. Vaya con Dios.

    Lo recordaremos.

  • RIP, SFC Jonn Lilyea  (Pinned as first post)

    RIP, SFC Jonn Lilyea (Pinned as first post)

    Well, we all end the Land Nav course of life someday, and for Jonn, that day was yesterday. He had a heart attack and passed away at the hospital. All men die, not all men truly live. Jonn did though, Lord knows Jonn did.

    Wish I knew something to say to help with the pain, but after a sleepless night and some decidedly non-manly sobbing, I just don’t even know what to say. He was a friend, he was a mentor, and I’ll miss him. From meeting my wife to getting my job to the son I named after Jonn, I pretty much owe him in some part for everything I have, and it’s not a debt I take lightly. (Somewhat humorously, my last actual conversation with Jonn was about how his namesake, Ransom Jonn Seavey is a fat happy kid who just plays….until Moana comes on and then dude sits there all starry eyed. I postulated that giving him the name must have made him love what Jonn always called lovingly the “Little Brown Women.”)

    As twisted as it is, I’ll never forget the exact moment that Jonn and I bonded. I was blogging at The Sniper, and he had this enterprise going, but the old schoolers will remember that if we got 10 comments back then than the post was on fire. But “Army Sergeant” invited the two of us to Winter Soldier, and although I *internet knew* Jonn, I didn’t *really* know him. We got to the hearings and the IVAW people segregated us from everyone else and gave us full time minders that literally read our posts as they went up. We were both almost at the bailing point when one guy got up and told some asinine story about how they blew up an old lady with a Mk 19, even though she was bringing them groceries. The story was so preposterous on the face of it that Jonn and I started guffawing. Here we were in a room full of dirty old 60’s hippies who were crying and Jonn and I were laughing so hard we started crying too.

    I’m not going to go through his whole bio, you guys know it probably as well or better than I do. He was a hero in every sense of the word, but the most amazing thing was that dude was harder than iron, but he had a soft spot, which was forgiving but just as no-nonsense. He didn’t care what anyone did in the military but was grateful for that service, and never valued his own service higher than anyone else’s. The way he became the IVAW whisperer and helped some of those guys out was the epitome of what the brotherhood of veterans was all about. Sure, he’d give them no end of shit, but if they needed help Jonn would drop whatever he was doing and see that they got that help.

    Nothing has been locked down as far as a service. We know he wanted to be buried in his uniform in Arlington, a place I’ve been to many times with him. As things become clearer I’ll let you guys know what’s up. Ditto the blog, we’ll talk about that after we’re done grieving.

    If you are a person of faith, I’d ask you to pray for Jonn’s family during this time of profound mourning. If you are a warrior, drink to our friend as he makes his way to Valhalla. They’ll probably make him the sergeant at arms there so he can toss out the phonies that show up uninvited with ludicrous stories of Top Secret derring-do.

    As I sat there last night remembering all the times I’d spent with Jonn I thought of Invictus, which fits Jonn to a T.

    Out of the night that covers me,
    Black as the pit from pole to pole,
    I thank whatever gods may be
    For my unconquerable soul.

    In the fell clutch of circumstance
    I have not winced nor cried aloud.
    Under the bludgeonings of chance
    My head is bloody, but unbowed.

    Beyond this place of wrath and tears
    Looms but the Horror of the shade,
    And yet the menace of the years
    Finds and shall find me unafraid.

    It matters not how strait the gate,
    How charged with punishments the scroll,
    I am the master of my fate,
    I am the captain of my soul.

    RIP buddy. We love you.

  • North Korea returns the remains of Americans lost during the war.

    Associated Press and many others are reporting the first group of remains have arrived on US soil.  Welcome home.

     

    North Korea on Friday returned the remains of what are believed to be U.S. servicemen killed during the Korean War, the White House said, with a U.S military plane making a rare trip from a U.S. base in South Korea to a coastal city in the North to retrieve the remains.

    “We are encouraged by North Korea’s actions and the momentum for positive change,” the White House said

    I wonder if they will be recognized as POWs ?

  • Navy Commemorates the sinking of  USS San Diego

    Navy Commemorates the sinking of USS San Diego

    The US Navy commemorated the sinking of the USS San Diego (ACR 6), Pennsylvania-class armored cruiser, off the coast of New York a hundred years ago last week. The ship was in route to meet up with a convoy it was to escort to Europe when an explosion occurred on the port side near the port side engine and below the waater line.

    The source of the explosion is still a mystery. The captain, Harley H. Christy, claimed that it was a torpedo from a German submarine, the Naval Court of Inquiry determined that it was a German mine that caused the explosion and sank the cruiser in 28 minutes.

    According to Wiki, six sailors lost their lives, out of a crew of 80 officers 745 enlisted 64 Marines;

    Two men were killed instantly when the explosion occurred, a crewman who had been oiling the port propeller shaft was never seen again, a man was killed by one of the smokestacks breaking loose as the ship capsized, one was killed when a liferaft fell on his head, and the sixth was trapped inside the crow’s nest and drowned.

    There’s video of the ceremony at DVIDS;

    The crew aboard the USNS Grasp (T-ARS-51) and Sailors assigned to Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit (MDSU) 2 participate in a wreath-laying ceremony to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the USS San Diego (ACR 6).

  • Adrian Cronauer passes

    Adrian Cronauer passes

    AnotherPat sends us the sad news that Adrian Joseph Cronauer has passed at the age of 79. Cronauer is best known for the Robin Williams movie “Good Morning, Vietnam” which was supposed to be based on Cronauer’s experiences in Vietnam, even though, Cronauer admitted that little of the portrayal was true.

    From Wiki;

    In the late 1970s, Cronauer had an idea for a television sitcom that would be a blend of M*A*S*H* and WKRP in Cincinnati, two popular TV series of that era. It was not until some years later that he was able to elicit interest in the proposal which became the film Good Morning, Vietnam. The movie was based on his experiences as a Saigon-based DJ during the Vietnam War, where he served from 1965 to 1966. His program was known as the “Dawn Buster.” According to Cronauer, other than the film’s portrayal of him being a radio host, very little of the film reflects his experiences, except the bombing of a restaurant which Cronauer witnessed from nearby. A subsequent special program on National Public Radio about the role of the American Forces Vietnam Network (AFVN-military radio and television) earned Cronauer a 1992 Ohio State Award and two 1991 Gold Medals from the New York Radio Festival. Prior to getting stationed in Vietnam he was stationed at Iraklion Air Station Crete, Greece.

    Cronauer’s service to his country didn’t end when he was discharged according to WDBJ;

    According to his obituary, Cronauer served as a confidential advisor to the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense from 2001 through 2009.

    Cronauer represented the POW/MIA office at meetings with the office of the Secretary of Defense. He led responsibility for DPMO’s dealings with international organizations like the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Tripartite Commission.

    For his efforts in those regards, Cronauer holds the Secretary of Defense Medal for Exceptional Public Service.

    A former U.S. Air Force sergeant, Cronauer sat on the Board of Directors for the National D-Day Memorial in Bedford

  • Michael Chesna, Weymouth officer, killed

    Michael Chesna, Weymouth officer, killed

    JacktheJarhead sends us a link to the sad news that Weymouth, Massachusetts police officer Michael Chesna was murdered by 20-year-old Emanuel Lopes.

    Police say the suspect crashed a car, fled the scene, and was later discovered by Chesna allegedly vandalizing a home. Prosecutors say that’s when he attacked Chesna with a rock to the head. Chesna fell to the ground, and officials say, Lopes took the officer’s gun and shot Chesna multiple times in the head and chest.

    Lopes then fled and fired more shots during a chase. Police say one of those shots fatally struck the woman in her home.

    Lopes was shot in the leg during pursuit by other officers. Unfortunately, he’s expected to recover.

    According to Weymouth Police Chief Richard Grimes, Chesna is a military veteran of the war in Afghanistan;

    Grimes said he had spoken to Chesna’s mother and she said her son joined the military ‘‘to open the doors to get in this job.’’

  • Itta Bena, MS remembers fallen Marines

    Itta Bena, MS remembers fallen Marines

    BlueCord Dad sends us a link to the story of Itta Bena, Mississippi and their memorial to the 15 Marines and the Navy Corpsman who died in a plane crash last year in a soybean field.

    It’s an active form of memory — building, telling, hiking, running — to honor the New York-based crewmembers who flew the KC-130T military transport, as well as the special forces Marines they were carrying from North Carolina to California for training.

    “All we want to do is talk about them and share who they were with the rest of the world,” said Anna Johnson, the widow of Gunnery Sgt. Brendan Johnson, a crew member.

    More than 200 family members and friends gathered Saturday in the Mississippi Delta town of Itta Bena to dedicate a monument to the July 10, 2017, crash of the plane, whose call sign was Yanky 72.