Posted on 05/31/2006 9:11:08 AM PDT by LSUfan
To family and friends and all those back home who support the fight for freedom,
I just sealed the envelope on what I hope to be the last condolence letter I ever have to write. As I addressed the envelope to the mother of my most recent fallen Marine, I inscribed FREE on the upper right corner - to denote the lack of postage due to its origin being a combat zone. As I wrote that word, I felt the pen - and my heart - become heavy. Four simple letters, written to denote the cost, or lack thereof, of sending a letter to home from combat. Four simple letters that sum up everything written inside of that envelope. The postage is free; liberty is not. All of the Marines who we evacuated after the horrible IED attack on the night of 01 May have fallen, each at his own time. Yesterday was their memorial service - Memorial Day weekend was an appropriate time for such a service. Moving units around at the last minute to get as many Marines back inside the wire just for the few hours they needed to pay their last respects to their fallen brothers is the type of Memorial Day weekend one experiences during war. I have received quite a few emails from family and those friends who I consider family, wishing us the best during this Memorial Day weekend and thanking us for the sacrifices made. Those people who should be thanked are the ones that wont come home and those families they wont come home to.
(Excerpt) Read more at worldtribune.com ...
Any reason this has to be exerpted? Had to read in the original
I don't know how to post a photo and I thought that the accompanying photo really added to the story. That's why I excerpted it.
Ping = later ref
Bump for latere if no one else does it.
SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Monday, May 29, 2006
To family and friends and all those back home who support the fight for freedom,
I just sealed the envelope on what I hope to be the last condolence letter I ever have to write. As I addressed the envelope to the mother of my most recent fallen Marine, I inscribed FREE on the upper right corner - to denote the lack of postage due to its origin being a combat zone. As I wrote that word, I felt the pen - and my heart - become heavy. Four simple letters, written to denote the cost, or lack thereof, of sending a letter to home from combat. Four simple letters that sum up everything written inside of that envelope. The postage is free; liberty is not. All of the Marines who we evacuated after the horrible IED attack on the night of 01 May have fallen, each at his own time. Yesterday was their memorial service - Memorial Day weekend was an appropriate time for such a service. Moving units around at the last minute to get as many Marines back inside the wire just for the few hours they needed to pay their last respects to their fallen brothers is the type of Memorial Day weekend one experiences during war. I have received quite a few emails from family and those friends who I consider family, wishing us the best during this Memorial Day weekend and thanking us for the sacrifices made. Those people who should be thanked are the ones that wont come home and those families they wont come home to.
Lance Corporal Robert Moscillo - Combat Engineer, man of God, brother to five and son. Robert was killed on the night of 01 May.
Robert spent many years growing up trying to figure out what his path in life was going to be. When he felt called to religious service, he decided to join the Marine Corps first to serve his country and to earn the money he needed to attend the religious education he sought. He was attached to my platoon for about a month before he died in the IED attack on 01 May. A source of entertainment, motivation, and spiritual outreach among the Marines in the platoon, he will be sorely missed.
Corporal Cory Palmer - Recon Marine, Sniper, Marine Combatant Diver, Son and Brother. Cory Palmer wanted to hike the entire Appalachian Trail. He loved surfing and lived for having fun. He was one of the finest Marines Ive ever served with. He died on 06 May as a result of the burns he sustained on the night of 01 May - four days before his 23rd birthday.
Enthusiasm - intense feeling for a subject or cause, eagerness, zeal something inspiring. Corporal Cory Palmer personified enthusiasm enthusiasm for the Marine Corps, for having fun, and more importantly, for his family and his brother Marines. Indeed, Cory was something inspiring. A specimen of physical greatness and mental ingenuity, he was a natural leader. Though he didnt hold a leadership billet during most of his time in the platoon, Cory led Marines. Every Marine in the platoon would follow Cory, myself included. He was a man who had the courage to speak his mind, and the courage to take the enemy face on. Paddling against the waves to find the one he wanted was the way that Cory operated in all that he did. Whether surfing, or wading through the tides of war to find the best way to destroy his adversary, Cory always maintained his composure and followed through on every occasion. Cory and his enthusiasm will be missed.
Corporal William Brad Fulks - Recon Marine, Golden Glove Boxing State Champion, Son, Brother, and Boyfriend. Brad Fulks was a quiet professional who was deeply respected by every man in the platoon. He died on 18 May 2006, 15 days after his 23rd birthday.
Toughness - so strong and resilient as to withstand great strain without breaking. Corporal William Bradley Fulks was tough. A quiet professional, he was humble, yet had every reason not to be. A golden glove boxing state champion, he could put a man on his face in a second, yet never once let that quality show, unless he needed to. It was easy for me to tell that the men in the platoon felt comfortable around Brad whether out in town or outside the wire - they felt protected. I know that if I had to survive a bar fight, or a gun fight, hed be the one Id want right by my side and I know that the rest of the platoon feels the exact same way. Brad and his toughness and quiet dependability will be missed.
Sergeant Alessandro Carbonaro - Recon Marine, Recon Team Leader, Husband and only Son. Today is the one-year anniversary of the marriage of Sergeant Alessandro Carbonaro and his wife Gilly. A year ago he was married in Washington D.C. Days ago, he was buried a few miles south, in Arlington Cemetary.
Wisdom insightful understanding of what is true, right, or enduring a native good judgment. Sergeant Alessandro Carbonaro personified wisdom. Refined in his ability to communicate, Alex quietly commanded the attention of the platoon at times. His words and opinion were valued among every man and his good judgment was often sought from those both above him and below him. Many times, I went to Alex for ideas and advice on how to accomplish a task, never walking away without a better plan than the one I had started with. It was easy to tell from my first days with the platoon that he cared greatly for his Marines and their welfare. After the horrible IED attack, as his fellow Marines treated his wounds, he continued to ask about his team members, ignoring the pain he himself was experiencing. He truly cared for others more than himself - the mark of a great man and a true leader. Alex and his caring nature and wisdom will be missed.
The four great Marines listed above are only those from my platoon. Our battalion has lost two more and there are others who are still in naval medical facilities beginning their healing process. Some have been killed in the enemys cowardly but effective IED attacks. Others have died and been wounded in close range firefights with determined and fanatical foreign fighters, members of well known terrorist organizations like the one responsible for September 11th. One of these men is Petty Officer 3rd Class Lee H. Deal, a Special Amphibious Reconnaissance Corpsman whose funeral was Friday in Baton Rouge, LA. A former student of West Monroe High School, he was to be married upon his return from this deployment to his wonderful fiancé.
All of these Marines are those who should be remembered this Memorial Day weekend, along with all those who have paid the ultimate price in every war before ours.
I have been fortunate to have such a great family and such great friends to know that everything we do here is supported from those back home. Ive received numerous care packages - some which have been gestures of extreme generosity (thanks Mr. Art!). Ive taken these care packages and massed them together, then separated all the things inside to make sniper resupply packages to drop off to my recon teams and sniper teams when we replenish them with water and ammunition. The men greatly appreciate your generosity.
Have no doubt that as the American people grow wearier and more impatient during this war, that our resolve grows even stronger. The enemy knows that his greatest friends are those in America who can work to demoralize the country and to break our will to fight. He has learned from history and knows the impact of the media and the influence of famous people who have no idea what freedom means or its real cost. Todays Jane Fondas still exist and all those factors that made it so difficult to achieve a strategic victory in Vietnam are the same factors that exist today. We won the tactical fight every time in Vietnam. We continue to win the tactical fights today. It is at the strategic level that America is so vulnerable because of the influence of the masses - the most often times uneducated masses, those that are swayed easily by the media and by famous people who are out of touch with reality. The evil we face today in this world in fanatical Islamic Fundamentalism is as bad or worse than the evil faced by communism or even nazism during WWII. Many people agree that our participation in WWII is what prevents us from speaking German today. To stand by and idly watch whole portions of the world succumb to the demands of Islamic Fundamentalists is as bad an appeasement as Europe in the late 1930s. The men who fight and kill these evil people every day in this war understand this. I can only hope that those back home, the masses who affect foreign policy decisions, can look at history and come to understand this. The war we are fighting is a just war and a necessary war. During this Memorial Day weekend, let us not forget those who have paid the ultimate price fighting it.
Robert Moscillo, Cory Palmer, Brad Fulks, Alessandro Carbonaro
Strong physically powerful, robust, healthy, difficult to break, durable, intense, violent, persuasive, and forceful. Robert, Cory, Brad, and Alessandro were strong Marines and strong men. All were intense and violent against the enemy. They protected their fellow Marines. In his own way, each was persuasive. Each was robust, healthy, and difficult to break. We must not look at their passing as them having broken, or given in. We must look at it as their passage to a place where their strength, their toughness, wisdom, and enthusiasm will be used for a much greater cause, that of the Lord. They remain among us, watching over the platoon and using their talents to protect us against evil - a much greater foe than anything well face on earths battlefields.
Thank you for your constant prayers. Please pray for the souls of these Marines and for their families this Memorial Day Weekend.
Semper Fidelis,
Tommy Waller
1st Lieutenant, USMC
Recon Platoon Commander
Al Anbar Province, Iraq
Below are links to information and articles on the Marines described above.
Robert Moscillo:
Below is are links to articles about Robert Moscillo.
http://forums.military.com/groupee/forums/a/tpc/f/954191642/m/2590089660001/r/ 9230017860001
http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/04/ nh_man_killed_by_land_mine_in_iraq/
http://www.unionleader.com/ article.aspx?headline=Salem+Marine+dies+in+Iraq+blast&articleId=a6485158- 9186-4fce-b8bb-844a29b70301
Cory Palmer:
Here is a link to an article about Cory Palmers funeral:
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/clpalmer.htm
Brad Fulks:
This website, which I did not discover until just the other day, was created to help provide assistance to Corporal Fulks and his family during his recovery. As far as I know, the funds donated to the bank listed on this website continue to help the Fulks family with the expenses endured during travel to be at Brads bedside until his last hours.
http://www.forbrad.com/: Alessandro Carbonaro:
Alexs father has created a webpage dedicated to him, with links to charitable organizations to which patriots can donate money to help the families of wounded and fallen Marines. There is a link for donations that brings you to a page where you can choose between various legitimate organizations that truly help families in need. The Fischer house is one of the best places to donate.
http://www.alessandrocarbonaro.blogspot.com/
This website will let you see the face of this great Marine and all those who will most dearly miss him.
I hope to be over there in a couple of years, fighting with my SEAL Team.
Brothers in arms is an almost impossible bond to break, and also probably the strongest bond any person can have with another.
You are absolutely right. They all look so young, and yet so determined - we are indeed blessed as a nation to have a military with such strength, courage, and honor. God bless and protect our military, and God save and keep the souls of those who have sacrificed for our freedom.
Amen
I have just GOT to learn not to read things like this at work. My Kimberly-Clark (makers of Kleenex) stock just went up a bunch.
Thanks so very much for posting this, as well as the picture. The love of these Marines for each other pours from the words.
Beautiful letter. While I certainly do not rejoice at the deaths/injuries of the CBS crew, I don't see why the press couldn't pay at least as much attention to these Marines as they are devoting to their own.
Double Amen to that!
SEMPER FI!
Read every word
God bless these amazing men and all our fighting men and women. I sometimes despair over the direction our country is taking, and then I read something like this that reminds me that we still are producing heroes and patriots.
I'm speechless.
May God bless them all and all of those who serve.
Thank you for this post.
Canteen ping, and bring your kleenex. Thank God for our heroes.
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