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To: konaice

My nephew is in that group. My wife and her brother just got back from visiting him for two weeks.

This kid was busy going nowhere until he joined the Army out of high school. Now when he comes to visit, I gladly give him the keys to my truck. He's a damn good man and we are all very proud of him.

Get some, Strykers!


13 posted on 07/28/2005 4:38:43 AM PDT by islander-11 (Save Nantucket - Vote Republican!!!)
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To: All



A final farewell to troops

By MARGARET FRIEDENAUER

, Staff Writer

Officials touted Thursday's deployment ceremony for the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team at the Fort Wainwright Army Post as the final farewell for the 3,800 soldiers who will begin leaving this weekend for a yearlong tour in Iraq.

But for some, the ceremony was a turning point after 18 months of preparation and worry. In 12 months, the brigade should begin returning to family and friends.

"We don't have to talk about him leaving anymore," Jacqueline Moore said of her husband, a staff sergeant with the brigade. "Now we can talk about him coming home."

Moore was among 2,000 to 3,000 family, friends, dignitaries, community leaders and members of the public who ringed the brigade as its members stood in formation for the ceremony. In all, more than 6,000 people were on hand to mark Alaska's largest deployment since the Vietnam War.



Moore and her three children are moving to Nashville, Tenn., to be near her mother. The move is partly for support while her husband is gone, but also because Moore is a member of the Army Reserves and anticipates being deployed in the next year.

"I just know I have to be prepared and get my family settled," she said.

Moore's husband was stationed in Korea for a year, so the family has been apart before. But Moore said the severity of military operations in Iraq makes this deployment more stressful.

"This is a little different," she said. "A little harder."

Many of the military families found the ceremony bittersweet, steeling themselves against the solemnity of the ceremony but maintaining a strong front in the face of the soldiers' departure.

Sandra Mitchell brought her two young children and four others she baby-sits whose fathers are part of the Stryker Brigade. The children each wore a shirt with the handwritten words, "Keep my daddy safe."

This is the first deployment for the Mitchell family, although Sandra Mitchell said she is keeping her composure about the absence of her husband, Staff Sgt. John Mitchell.

"It'll be OK, it'll be fine," she said with a deep breath. "I got faith."

For the troops, the ceremony marked a mental readiness. Capt. Michael Blankartz said the ceremony provides closure to the buildup toward deployment for soldiers and families. But he said for the Strykers, the extensive training and preparations have given them a confidence that they are ready for whatever awaits.

"I've been in the Army for 18 years," Blankartz said. "I've never felt more prepared. Never."

During the ceremony, each battalion cased its colors, a tradition of sleeving the flag representing each battalion. The flags will not be uncased until the troops arrive in Iraq. Brigade commander Col. Michael Shields was also presented with an Alaska flag from city of Fairbanks Mayor Steve Thompson and Fairbanks North Star Borough Mayor Jim Whitaker.

Commanders reviewed the troops using modern means: Shields, U.S. Army Alaska Commander Maj. Gen. Charles Jacoby and commander of troops Lt. Col. Shawn Reed rode in a Stryker vehicle to circle the troops during inspection.

Commanders, including Jacoby, Shields and commander of U.S. Pacific Command Admiral William J. Fallon addressed the troops, warning the enemy they will face will be persistent but asserting U.S. troops will persevere.

"Your enemy is tough, committed, not just a one-dimensional picture on TV," Jacoby said. "He is absolutely beatable. Don't underestimate him, but remember he bleeds and your values ... and skills are better than his."

Jacoby also gave a nod to the veterans in the crowd like 84-year-old Morris Morgan, who served in World War II and the Korean War. Morgan attended to honor family friend Lt. Col. Tom Lyngholm, who is deploying with the Strykers. Morgan said he served 31 months in the Southwest Pacific theater and knows, even generations later, what the troops and families are facing. Jacoby also recognized that.

"Today's soldiers stand on your strong, broad soldiers," Jacoby said.

As the ceremony ended, troops fell out of formation and families converged on the airfield to greet them. It was similar to the scene the troops and families are now looking forward to in about a year when the brigade returns.

In Shields' closing remarks, he commented on the appropriateness of the brigade's mascot name--The Arctic Wolves. He said it is a symbol that applies to soldiers, the brigades and their families in many similar ways.

"The strength of the pack is in the wolf," Shields said. "The strength of the wolf is the pack."

Staff writer Margaret Friedenauer can be reached at 459-7545 or mfriedenauer@newsminer.com .


14 posted on 07/29/2005 9:45:38 AM PDT by Jet Jaguar
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To: islander-11
Please thank your nephew for his service to America.


18 posted on 07/31/2005 4:52:27 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (~ www.ProudPatriots.org ~ coming soon ~Operation Semper Fi ~a field hospital~)
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