Posted on 06/30/2005 11:54:26 AM PDT by West Coast Conservative
So you are referring to Franklin?
Sad news..
God Bless their souls.
yes
RIP brave soldiers. Courage, dear families. Watch over them all, Lord. Grant all the peace that passes understanding. In the name of Jesus; Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
NSDQ
Amen.
I like the 10,000 to 0 ratio.
from fifty thousand feet, or 200 feet UNDER the ocean.
two or three of those, and this islamist terror operation would become the priority of every remaining 'government' on the face of the earth...
get the islamists out yourself, or the USA will wipe out every venue where they exist.
and we should start here at home, by closing their terrorist recruiting and training centers... islamist mosques and madrassas.
but we wont.
It's not pc.
It might make the whole islamist world want to kill us.
... worthy to note that at least 100 MILLION Of them already have been radicalized and want to do just that... according to pipes... 10 percent of islam is radicalized.
at that rate... 10,000 a day, it would still take 10,000 days to wipe radical islam out... 30 years. I guess we are in it for the long haul even if we use nukes. of course we could always go for the 100 thousand to zero option... and cut the time required to 2.75 years.
and we could start with Tehran.
who knows... maybe the radicals could be persuaded to 'unradicalize' voluntarily, if confronted with unimaginable amounts of overwhelming force and loss.
God bless their souls and may He give comfort to their families. My family will remember them all in prayers tonight.
You always hold out hope. In this case, it certainly didn't go our way. We are winning the war. Men (and women) like thare are the reasons why we are. Losing one makes you sad. Loosing sixteen makes you sixteen times as sad.
Thank you for your sacrifice. I certainly appreciate what you were helping to do.
Lots, apparently, but no one is counting. The battle is ongoing, and the virgin supply is said to be running low.
Did I hear correctly on the local news that the military (at least at Ft. Campbell) has not confirmed the deaths?
You really know how to"do the math".
I just got home from a meeting and on the radio they said that all on board had died.
Rest in Peace
Blessings,
trussell
If you want on/off my prayer ping list, please let me know. All requests happily honored.
Thank God for all of these heroes! I join in prayer for all the loved ones.
Sad
May god bless their soul .
From the "Free Lance-Star" of Fredericksburg, VA:
http://fredericksburg.com/News/FLS/2005/072005/07012005/111741
Local soldier dies in crash
North Stafford man killed in Afghanistan helicopter crash
By MELISSA NIX
A 31-year-old Army sergeant originally from North Stafford is believed to be one of 16 U.S. service members killed in Tuesday's helicopter crash in Afghanistan.
Lee Russell, the father of Master Sgt. Michael Russell, said he was told Wednesday by a chaplain and an officer from Fort Belvoir that his son was dead.
Yesterday afternoon, Lt. Gen. James Conway, director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Pentagon reporters that 16 bodies aboard the helicopter had been recovered.
Authorities initially reported 17 people were on board, but the manifest included a person who apparently missed the flight, military officials told The Associated Press.
It was the heaviest loss of American lives in a single attack in Afghanistan.
Russell's family learned Tuesday night that elements of his unit, the 3rd Battalion of the Army's 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, had been aboard the MH-47 Chinook helicopter shot down by insurgents. The unit is based at Hunter Army Airfield near Savannah, Ga.
The waiting was terrible for the family.
"The longer it went, the worse it got," Russell's father said, as he talked with a reporter via cell phone while en route to Russell's home in Savannah, Ga., to be with his son's wife, Annette, and his two granddaughters, Lauren, 5, and Magan, 1.
Though Russell was a family man, he never complained about being sent out of the country, his father said. "His unit was one of the only ones [in the armed forces] who could perform such missions against the Taliban."
The 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment is equipped with specially designed Chinooks that are versatile in all types of terrain, weather and low-light conditions. The downed MH-47 was one of these special helicopters.
This was the sixth time Russell, a flight engineer, had been sent to Afghanistan since Sept. 11, 2001. He was first sent there on the second Sunday after the World Trade Center attacks.
Russell returned to Afghanistan a month and a half ago, said his father.
He was able to see his son a few days before his departure, but had had no communication with him since he left.
"When he went back this time, he told me they would be really busy," his father said. On previous Afghanistan missions, his son had been able to call or e-mail once every two weeks, he said.
Michael Russell joined the Army after graduating from North Stafford High School in 1991. He went into special operations in 1999.
Though such a unit is prestigious, Russell was not the kind to brag, said his father.
His son was proud of the men he served with and would brag about them, instead, he said.
"I've met most of them," said Lee Russell, "and I'm so proud to know them."
He described his son as a "good kid" and an excellent father.
Growing up, Russell was a Scout, played baseball and was an avid NASCAR and Washington Redskins fan, he said.
Russell didn't see his children very much because he was often overseas, but when "he was home, he was with them all the time."
Kenneth Luehrs, a Spotsylvania County resident and Russell's uncle, said his nephew "was doing what he absolutely loved to do. It was a dream for him." He and his wife, Anne, had last seen their nephew at Thanksgiving.
The Luehrses remember their nephew, when he was growing up, as a pleasant, quiet child who spent a lot of time outdoors.
"He smiled all the time, almost like he knew something that the rest of us didn't," Anne Luehrs said.
"He had beautiful red hair like his father. His two children, Magan and Lauren, are redheads, too."
Russell's older brother, Lee Jr., 33, also served in the military. He spent six years in the Navy, and made the rank of petty officer, second class.
"We're proud of him, and we miss him," said Russell's older brother, who lives in Raleigh, N.C. but was with Russell's wife and children in Savannah yesterday. Russell also has a sister, Melissa Ann Yahnert, who lives in southern Virginia.
Reports from the AP and Stars and Stripes noted the downed MH-47 was carrying Navy SEALs and an Army air crew to a firefight, as part of Operation Red Wing, an effort to curb Taliban and al-Qaida attacks on the U.S.-led coalition in eastern Afghanistan's hostile Kunar province.
"I just wish we could have kept assets in Afghanistan in order to get [the Taliban], instead of diverting them to Iraq," said Russell's father. "If we're not careful, we're going to lose Iraq, too."
As of June 29, 2005, the Department of Defense has reported 194 military deaths in conjunction with Operation Enduring Freedom, the U.S. campaign to capture al-Qaida leaders and halt terrorist activities in Afghanistan.
Staff librarian Craig Schulin contributed to this report.
To reach MELISSA NIX: 540/374-5000 ext. 5710
Date published: 7/1/2005
My prayers are with those who perished in service to our country, and with their loved ones who mourn their passing.
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