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USO Canteen FReeper Style....Night Stalkers Don't Quit.. ..October 9,2002
FRiends of the USO Canteen FReeper Style and Snow Bunny

Posted on 10/09/2002 4:04:55 AM PDT by Snow Bunny

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The USO Canteen FReeper Style
Delivering a Touch of Home

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A Touch of Home

.


This is how I think of the USO Canteen 
Freeper Style. It is like a cottage down a road,
a place where a weary veteran can spend the night. 


Since it opened, it is magical how so many
Freepers who post here, feel it too. 
It has been so dear how the Freepers
kept making it a cottage - a home-type of 
place that had a huge living room
for them to visit in and a dance floor, 
a library, etc. 


Many Veterans have written to me, 
saying that the Canteen is like home
to them for the first time since they 
served. 


This is your Canteen -
a respite from our busy 
and sometimes troubling world. 
Make yourself at home.

Snow Bunny

.



If you know a Veteran, someone in your family, 
friend of the family, neighbor, who served their  
country, take a brief moment of your day to thank 
them. 


Thank them for the sacrifice they made
for the better good of their country.


We at Free Republic, and the USO Canteen FReeper 
Style, are thankful for every service member 
in our military, who has served our great nation.


So, to the men and women who answered the call,
in both times of war and peace, thank you.


Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields. 

John McCrae 


Night Stalkers

160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne)
"Night Stalkers Don't Quit"
Regiment motto

Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying,
 whom shall I send, and who will go for us?
 Then said I, here am I; send me.
 Isaiah 6:8

The 160th SOAR (Airborne) provides helicopter
support to Special Operations Forces worldwide.
The members are experts at night missions.

Operation Enduring Freedom
"They and all who are participating in
Operation Enduring Freedom are heroes.
They put their lives on the line on behalf
of freedom and on behalf of America,
and they do it each and every day. I’m
so very proud of them and their
comrades in arms."
General Richard B. Myers

Night Stalkers:The Army's 160th Special
Operations Aviation Regiment ,whose motto
is "Death waits in the dark" gets its nickname
from its focus on operations requiring nighttime,
low-level flying. The Night Stalkers fly aircraft such
as a version of the Army's Blackhawk helicopter,
customized with infrared imaging gear and high-tech
weaponry.

The Army owes its modern night fighting
aviation capabilities to the
160th Special Operations Aviation
Regiment (Airborne) who pioneered
night flight techniques, shared in
the development of equipment,
and proved that…….
"Night Stalkers Don't Quit"
a motto the Regiment lives by.

The unit originally was formed from
attachments from the 101st Aviation
Battalion, 158th Aviation Battalion,
229th Aviation Battalion and the
159th Aviation Battalion, immediately
entered into a period of intensive night
flying and quickly became the Army's
premier night fighting aviation force
and the Army's only Special Operations
Aviation force.

Task Force 160 was officially recognized
as a Unit on 16 October 1981 when it
was designated as the 160th Aviation
Battalion. Since that time, the 160th
has become known as the
"Night Stalkers," because of their
capability to strike undetected
during darkness, and their
distinguished performance around the world.

It is often difficult to describe the many varied
reasons why certain individuals elect to join in
military service to their country. Life in the United
States Army can be arduous and demanding.

It is a lifestyle in which much, often beyond
comprehension, is asked. Rewards, for the most part,
can be no more than a feeling of have done a good days
job, all the while finding yourself sleeping alone in a cold,
dark, dreary foreign land with no more to eat than a 5 year
old dried out MRE (Meal, Ready to Eat), and the fleeting
memory of your wife and kids. Why a handful of select
individuals would desire this life time pursuit is inexplicable.

However, the following photograph may shed some light.

Ceremony marks return of wings

A pair of well-traveled wings found its
final destination Tuesday after serving
a role in America's war on terrorism. The
wings represented the spirit of American
Airlines flight attendant Sara Low, who lost
her life on Sept. 11 when Flight 11 crashed
into the World Trade Center.

The flight attendant wings were given to
Sara's father, Mike Low, by Karyn Ramsey,
Sara's friend and co-worker, as a remembrance
of his daughter. The same wingspan medallion
took flight on more than 20 combat missions with
a 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment
flight crew in Afghanistan. A Tuesday ceremony,
attended by about 500 people, embodied a father's
fight to keep his daughter's memory alive in the hearts
of family, friends and American aviators.

The event to return the symbolic memento was the
first time a large number of media and television
cameras were allowed onto the heavily guarded
special ops compound at Fort Campbell.

"As Americans we are so thankful
for what you have done for us,"
Mike Low told the flight crew. "
After 9/11 my family and I struggled
to focus on positive things. You are heroes
in the purest definition of the word. You
have given us a great gift of brightness in
very dark times."

The 160th SOAR (Airborne) provides helicopter
support to Special Operations Forces worldwide. <>br>
The members are experts at night missions. Flight
engineer Staff Sgt. Mark Baker, 27, volunteered to
wear the gold-colored wings above his heart during
every mission when he heard about the father's request.

He and the MH-47E Chinook helicopter flight crew
returned from their mission about mid-March.

"If my daughter died that way,
I would want someone to step up
and do the same thing," said Baker
who's been with the "Night Stalkers"
for six years.

The look of gratitude was sincere in Low's eyes
as he transferred a necklace with Sara's photo
and an Army coin to Baker. The ceremony also>br>
solemnly reflected on the nine 160th soldiers
who lost their lives fighting terrorists since
Sept. 11.

"This is a great healing process for everyone,"
said 160th commander Col. Richard L. Polczynski.
"We had this ceremony because we want to show
that U.S. soldiers are doing something good. I've
got 1,600 people that are Night Stalkers and every
one is proud to have done this
~ to have payback for the nation."


Thursday, 7 March 2002, soldiers hurry to load
ammunition onto a waiting CH-47D Chinook
helicopter at Bagram Air Base.


The tarmac at Bagram Air Base, 65 km (40 miles) north
of Kabul, Friday, 8 March 2002, near CH-47D Chinook
helicopters belonging to A Company, 7th Battalion, 101st
Airborne Division from Fort Campbell, Kentucky, that are
ready to take off for Gardez to participate in the campaign to
flush out Taliban and al-Qaeda holdouts in the mountains
of eastern Afghanistan


At least 9 people, 7 of which were
U.S. troops, were killed 4 March 2002
when an American Army special forces
MH-47E helicopter was shot down in
Afghanistan as Afghan and Western
forces pressed their biggest attack of the
war against regrouping al-Qaeda and
Taliban fighters. The map shows a
perspective view of the area of eastern
Afghanistan where the offensive was concentrated.

The nine people were killed in ferocious
exchanges with al-Qaeda and Taliban
fighters in the mountains of eastern
Afghanistan


10th Mountain Division load into a Chinook helicopter
as they prepare to return to Bagram Air Base on Sunday,
10 March 2002, from fighting near the villages of Sherkhankheyl,
Marzak and Bobelkiel, Afghanistan. The towns were an al-Qaeda
and Taliban stronghold which came under intense bombing and
firefights as the coalition forces battled to root them out. As there
we not enough seats available, soldiers climbed aboard and sat
down anywhere they could.


Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry Battalion
prepare to get on a Chinook helicopter Sunday, 17 March 2002,
in the Shahikot valley region of eastern Afghanistan. The helicopter
is one of the many operated by B Company - "Hercules", 159th
Aviation Regiment, from Hunter Army Airfield, near Savannah, Georgia.


A lone U.S. Army MH-47E Chinook, assigned to the
160th Special Operation Aviation Regiment
(SOAR) – "Nightstalkers", Fort Campbell,
Kentucky, patiently
awaits the next assignment in the back
country of Afghanistan
while ground crews check the security
of the camp perimeter.


A CH-47 Chinook prepares to land for the extraction
of Canadian ground security forces from 1st Platoon, A
Company3rd Battalion Princess Patrichas Canadian Light
Infantry, as well as U.S. personnel on 11 April 11 2002.



TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: usocanteen
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To: Snow Bunny; SAMWolf; MistyCA; Victoria Delsoul; radu; AntiJen; Kathy in Alaska; WVNan; SassyMom; ...
POP Quiz:

1. What president was Florida's Cape Canaveral renamed for?

2. What is the only state with a one-syllable name?

3. The oldest city in the U.S. is in what state?

4. What San Francisco-based company is the world's largest apparel manufacturer?

5. What patriotic songwriter, known as the Yankee Doodle Dandy, wrote more than five hundred songs?

Answers later...............
41 posted on 10/09/2002 5:42:21 AM PDT by tomkow6
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To: Snow Bunny; Victoria Delsoul; coteblanche; SpookBrat; MistyCA; SassyMom; LindaSOG; souris; ...
When it's mission impossible, they call in the Night Stalkers, the flying commandos of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment.

BY FRANK COLUCCI

The sailors wrestling the massive spiked mine across the deck of the Iran Ajr had no idea they were being watched. But hovering a stone's throw above them in the dark, a U.S. Army warrant officer followed their every move through a thermal imager. Like a baseball announcer, he gave a running description of the events unfolding below him to a U.S. Navy admiral aboard the command ship LaSalle, steaming miles away, over the horizon. When the warrant officer reported the mine was about to be dropped overboard, the admiral decided he had heard enough. "Stop the mining," he ordered. Within seconds the deck of the Iran Ajr exploded as a pair of armed AH-6 Little Bird helicopters swept down and raked the Japanese-built cargo ship with 7.62mm Miniguns.

"They didn't know what was happening," recalls one airborne observer. "They couldn't see or hear the helicopters. They would run in the corner and try to hide." But after a quiet half-hour, the Iranians went back to work, and the admiral, with permission from Washington, told the helicopters to stop the mining and immobilize the ship. The AH-6s opened fire with their Miniguns and Hydra 70mm rocket systems. One helicopter strafed the wheelhouse and killed a man firing a weapon from the bridge. The other shot a rocket into the stern that killed a sailor in the engine room. The crew abandoned the minelayer, and one AH-6 left to track down an inflatable motorboat that had run off during the attack. With night vision goggles, the two aviators found the boat apparently adrift. Suddenly, a pile of rags in the boat turned into a man firing a gun. The Gatling gun on the AH-6 quickly ended the fight. The AH-6 rejoined the other, first around the Iran Ajr and then on the small deck of the frigate USS Jarrett from which the flight had been launched.

For the men of Task Force 160, Operation Earnest Will was just another day at the office, albeit a more exciting day than most. For strategists those fateful moments on Sept. 21, 1987, meant oil tankers could keep moving despite the ongoing war between Iran and Iraq. More important, the attack gave the world hard evidence that Iran was engaged in mine warfare.

The operation also provided a glimpse of the Pentagon's most elite asset--the U.S. Army's special operations aviation unit--the Night Stalkers. Composed of specially trained Army aviators who take their orders from the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Now designated the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR) and headquartered at Fort Campbell, Ky., the Night Stalkers have about 1800 people and fly the world's most sophisticated helicopters. The 160th keeps aircraft ready to deploy on 4 hours' notice from Fort Campbell, Hunter Army Airfield near Savannah, Ga., and Howard Air Force Base in Panama, and it routinely fields training detachments of four to 12 aircraft around the world.

The AH-6 and MH-6 Little Birds, MH-60 Black Hawks, and MH-47 Chinooks of the Night Stalkers insert, extract and support special operations forces deep in hostile territory. U.S. Army Rangers and Navy SEAL teams are the chief customers for the 160th's express delivery service, which can put troops in or take them out of harm's way within 30 seconds of the scheduled time. Night Stalkers saw action in Grenada during Operation Urgent Fury in 1983 and Panama during Just Cause in 1989, and took commandos to hidden sites in Kuwait and Iraq during Desert Storm in 1991.

It's dangerous work. The Night Stalkers lost two Black Hawks and five aircrew in the disastrous daylight firefight in Mogadishu, Somalia, in October 1993--but were back in action in Haiti during Operation Restore Democracy in 1994.

Best Of The Best
Night Stalkers are volunteers, specially selected, trained and equipped for missions with high personal risk and high operational or strategic payoff. "It's typically a no-fail mission," says a former Night Stalker. While a conventional unit might legitimately abort a mission due to bad weather, equipment failure or heavy resistance, special ops generally have no alternatives. "It's a one-shot. It has to be first-time." The motto of the 160th is simply, "Anytime, Anywhere, Night Stalkers Don't Quit."

Commissioned and warrant officer aviators come to the Night Stalkers with a minimum of 1000 flight hours including 100 hours on night vision goggles. The initial assessment process includes written and physical exams, a psychological interview, and a pressured night check ride. It eliminates 50 percent to 60 percent of the applicants. The Green Platoon, or Selection and Training Detachment, then puts its students through three weeks of grueling survival, escape, resistance and evasion school, plus three weeks of academic training, two weeks of intensive navigation training on the cheap-to-fly MH-6C, and six weeks of training on the Little Bird, Black Hawk or Chinook.

The "basic mission qualified" aviator can be a copilot on operational missions or pilot-in-command for training flights, and continues training in one of the four operational battalions. In 12 to 18 months, a pilot is "fully mission qualified" to command an aircraft on an operational mission. Flight lead status is conveyed on only the most experienced aviators. The commissioned air mission commander with abort authority would typically be in another helicopter.

Black Ops
Most of what the Night Stalkers do is secret, and the tricks and tools of their trade are ingenious. Infrared aiming lasers project spots invisible to unaided eyes but clear through night vision goggles, making common aircraft guns very accurate.

Rubber raiding boats can sit fully loaded in the cabin of an MH-47 to float out seconds after a water landing. The same boat can be tied to the belly of an MH-60 or pitched out partially inflated to deploy teams in other situations. Special operations troops fast-rope to the ground in seconds for quick insertions in obstructed landing areas. The Night Stalkers have their own systems integration and maintenance office to develop and field new equipment.

The AH-6 gives the Night Stalkers a fast, quiet weapons platform. Its fraternal twin MH-6 fitted with external bench seats can haul six troops. AH-6s were the first Army helicopters in combat in Grenada in October 1983. Six of the secret Little Birds were rolled from Air Force C-130s at the Port Salines Airfield and were promptly photographed by wire services. One gunship was shot down supporting U.S. troops in daylight during the invasion of Grenada. Another, hit during the attack on the Panamanian command headquarters, crashed to the street and skidded through the entrance where the sentry immediately surrendered to the two crewmen--all three were evacuated by an armored personnel carrier. AH-6s and MH-6s supposedly prowled the streets of Baghdad during Desert Storm. They remain a versatile, deployable asset. The weapons plank on the AH-6G, for example, can carry Hellfire laser-guided missiles.

The rugged, powerful Black Hawk is the Army's standard utility helicopter and typically provides cabin seating for 15. It can shoot Hellfire rockets from its detachable "wings," and the Night Stalkers have configured some with rocket pods and one or two forward-firing 30mm Chain Guns.

The MH-47D routinely flies 6-hour missions. It can seat 33 or 44 troops. The new MH-47E adds another thousand gallons of fuel and has the same "glass cockpit" as the special ops Black Hawk. Unlike ordinary Army lift battalions, the Night Stalkers use the big MH-47 as an assault helicopter just like the MH-60, flying low to fast-land or fast-rope troops on target. SEAL teams and Marine Corps expeditionary units deploy from carrier-capable HH-60G Seahawks and CH-53E Super Stallions. However they fly, the Night Stalkers represent the best America has to offer, and they remain a critical national asset in an unstable world.

42 posted on 10/09/2002 5:43:05 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: tomkow6
John Kennedy

Maine

Florida

Levi Strauss

George Gerschwin (sp)
43 posted on 10/09/2002 5:49:20 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Snow Bunny; tomkow6; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub; All
Kuwait Makes Arrests in Attack on U.S. Marines

KUWAIT (Reuters) - Kuwait said on Wednesday it had arrested a number of people suspected of aiding two Kuwaitis who killed a U.S. Marine and wounded another this week in what the Gulf state called a terrorist attack.

"The numbers are changing by the minute," Kuwaiti Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammad al-Salem al-Sabah said. "There are numerous (people under arrest), some only for questioning and others will be held for a longer period of time pending clarifications."

Two Kuwaitis approached the Marines in a pick-up truck on Tuesday, stepped out of the vehicle and opened fire on troops during a military exercise on a Kuwaiti island in the Gulf.

Marines killed the two assailants after they had sped away in the truck, in which investigators found three AK-47 assault rifles and ammunition.

Kuwait has named the dead attackers as Anas Ahmad Ibrahim Abdel-Rehim al-Kandari, born in 1981, and Jassem Hamad Mubarak Salem al-Hajri, born in 1976.

The island was sealed off after the attack but a U.S. embassy official told Reuters on Wednesday the Marines' annual Eager Mace two-week exercise "will continue and is ongoing."

U.S. ground forces are involved in another exercise at a desert site just south of the border with Iraq. There are about 10,000 U.S. soldiers in Kuwait and 8,000 U.S. civilians.

"FIGHTING AMERICANS PRIORITY"

Kuwaiti writer Mohammad al-Mulafi told Reuters he knew the men who attacked the Marines and believed they were motivated by opposition to a new U.S. law requiring government documents to state that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.

Mulafi said one of the attackers called him after President Bush signed the law this month and said: "I believe that fighting the Americans is more of a priority than fighting the Israelis."

A Western diplomat said the apparent motive "is credible."

The Interior Ministry did not say if Tuesday's attackers were Islamic militants, but security sources told Reuters they were probably linked to anti-American Islamic groups.

The Kuwaiti attackers had fought with Afghan Mujahideen in Afghanistan, Mulafi said.

Scores of Kuwaitis participated in the fight against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. Others then went on to aid Muslims fighting in other parts of the world.

Some of Kuwait's so-called Afghan Arabs were rounded up following the September 11 attacks in the United States, which Washington blames on Saudi-born fugitive Osama bin Laden. Bin Laden also fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan and made that country the base for his al Qaeda organization.

Tuesday's attack has raised concern in Kuwait, home to 1.4 million foreigners. Westerners in Kuwait were already on heightened alert for fear of an Iraqi chemical weapons attack if the United States leads a military campaign against Baghdad.

Iraq invaded its southern neighbor Kuwait in 1990 and was driven out in 1991 by a U.S.-led international coalition. Washington is seeking support for a new U.N. resolution demanding Iraq submit to stringent U.N. inspections for weapons of mass destruction -- which Baghdad denies having -- or face military action.

EVACUATION POSTPONED

"This is a premeditated attack and also appears to be a vendetta attack which makes things more difficult for Westerners here," one diplomat in Kuwait said.

The U.S. Embassy in Kuwait said an annual mock evacuation of 100 Americans on Friday had been postponed due to the attack. The exercise is part of a U.S. evacuation plan involving some 20,000 Westerners residing in Kuwait.

"The evacuation drill has been postponed in light of the events on Tuesday. It is the same MEU (Marine Expeditionary Unit) which was going to carryout the drill with their helicopter units. They are very busy now and we shall do it another time," an embassy official told Reuters of the lifting of the 100 people to U.S. warships off the Kuwaiti coast.

Other Western embassies have their own evacuation plans for thousands of citizens in case of a chemical weapons attack by Iraq if the U.S. launched a military campaign against it.

44 posted on 10/09/2002 5:56:24 AM PDT by tmprincesa
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To: SAMWolf
Um,........What was the question???????? LOL!

Too easy for you, I guess!
45 posted on 10/09/2002 5:56:27 AM PDT by tomkow6
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To: SAMWolf
Want to try another answer for the last question?
46 posted on 10/09/2002 5:57:51 AM PDT by tomkow6
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To: tomkow6
LOL! Just got lucky on the questions. See ya later, I'm off to work
47 posted on 10/09/2002 5:58:32 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: tomkow6
John Phillip Sousa?
48 posted on 10/09/2002 5:58:55 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: SAMWolf
Have a good day, Sam!
49 posted on 10/09/2002 5:59:29 AM PDT by tomkow6
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To: tomkow6
Hiya Tomkow, you ole hound dog! It's about time for me to go to bed after I clean my turtles tank. I hate night shift!
50 posted on 10/09/2002 6:01:58 AM PDT by kneezles
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To: tomkow6
Want to try another answer for the last question?

Jimmy Cagney??? :-)

51 posted on 10/09/2002 6:07:19 AM PDT by LBGA
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To: All
Hi all! Hope you have a wonderful day :-)
52 posted on 10/09/2002 6:14:14 AM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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To: LBGA
Wanna try again?
53 posted on 10/09/2002 6:25:41 AM PDT by tomkow6
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To: tomkow6
Cohan
54 posted on 10/09/2002 6:26:55 AM PDT by Radix
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To: tomkow6
Wanna try again?

LOL... I could picture Cagney in the movie, but couldn't remember Cohen's name. ;-)

Now that another poster got it, I still can't remember his first name! Senior moments abound this morning.

55 posted on 10/09/2002 6:29:46 AM PDT by LBGA
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To: Snow Bunny
Hoooyah for the Night Stalkers

Just my kind of unit. Go get 'em boyz!


56 posted on 10/09/2002 6:30:00 AM PDT by Johnny Gage
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To: Johnny Gage
A little late with this, but:

CNO Sends Birthday Message To The Navy

Navy News Service
October 8, 2002

WASHINGTON (NNS) -- Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. Vern Clark, released the following message for the Navy's 227th birthday:

As we celebrate our 227th birthday, it is a good time to reflect on where the Navy is and where we are going. This is an incredible time to serve. Now more than ever, the Navy needs you and the nation needs the Navy.

First and foremost, we are at war. During the past year, all of us have either served in or supported the global war on terrorism. We are taking the fight to the enemy. That is what our Navy/Marine Corps team does best.

Eight carrier battle groups, five amphibious ready groups, numerous other ships, and thousands of SEALS, Seabees and Marines have seen combat in Operation Enduring Freedom. Yet, this war is not isolated to one country or one theater. The threat of terrorism is borderless.

You have carried out your global missions on, under, and above the seas, as well as ashore, without complaint. You have provided critical intelligence, uninterrupted deterrence and built support from allies through exercises and engagements. Your persistent projection of decisive combat capabilities has deterred terrorists around the world, while at home and at bases around the globe you have steadfastly provided the training and support required to keep our Navy at its peak.

We will never know what terrorist strikes have been averted because of our service, but we know we are winning this war and we know our fellow citizens support and appreciate us.

Second, we are serving at a time of record retention. We continue to make great progress in personnel programs and training initiatives. From Task Force EXCEL and the Revolution in Training to Project SAIL and the Revolution in Personnel Distribution, we are seeing a tremendous cultural improvement in the way we grow and develop our people.

Third, we are experiencing record-setting readiness rates. With the fleet's initiative, the ships and squadrons are ready to take the fight to the enemy. With the help of the Congress, the Navy has committed the right amount of resources to maintenance, spare parts and fuel to ensure we have the tools to fight and win.

The future is bright. Sea Power 21, the vision that will guide our Navy, gives us cause to be optimistic. The nation recognizes and is committed to the value of our Navy. And most importantly, we are the greatest Navy in the world because of our people. Our future shines like a beacon of excellence for the world to follow.

America needs your service today like few other times in our history. Make no mistake, your service matters. Our Navy needs talented young Americans who want to serve their nation and make a difference. From the most junior to the most senior, we all have a role to play now and in the future. So Happy Birthday Navy. Your service is appreciated.


57 posted on 10/09/2002 6:35:05 AM PDT by tomkow6
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To: LBGA
Jimmy Cagney??? :-)

believe you mean George M. Cohen

58 posted on 10/09/2002 6:37:54 AM PDT by where's_the_Outrage?
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To: xzins
Thanks for joining us at the USO,Chaplain.
59 posted on 10/09/2002 6:52:47 AM PDT by larryjohnson
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To: xzins
Thanks for your service and for dropping by the Canteen.
60 posted on 10/09/2002 6:56:16 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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