Good morning, Snippy and everyone at the Freeper Foxhole.
BASHUR AIRFIELD, Iraq When Tech. Sgt. Ken Joy went to Iraq, he took his prized possession the American flag his father gave him 14 years ago.
The flags from another time, another war and has its own distinct history. Yet it has come to symbolize everything Joy believes Old Glory stands for duty, honor, country and more.
To me, the red stripes represent the blood of all the military men and women who died serving our country, Joy said. Its why I fly it as high as possible.
Joys an unabashed, flag-waving patriot who joined the Air Force to serve his country. A security forces fire team leader with the 786th Security Forces Squadron from Sembach Annex, Germany, he doesnt deploy without his flag. Like at other places, Joy hoped to fly the flag over his tent at Bashur Airfield.
But Iraq was another matter. Flying the Stars and Stripes there is a no-no. So the sergeant from Pasadena, Calif., flew his beloved flag in the only place he could inside his tent.
No matter where it flies, its still the symbol of our country, of our resolve, he said.
Joys proud of his flag because of what it means to his father, Darryl. He was a Navy assault coxswain aboard the USS Talladega during the Vietnam War.
The flag flew over Darryls landing craft during an operation in 1965, when he dropped 50 Marines onto a beach in South Vietnam. It was one of the first beach landings of the war, and the Americans came under fire.
Two weeks later in Da Nang, a Marine Darryl left on the beach approached him and asked if he remembered him. The sailors smart-alecky reply was something like, No, not really. All you Marines look alike to me.
Then the leatherneck told him he was the only survivor of the boatload of Marines.
Thats when my dad realized and relayed to me later that being in the military isnt a game, Joy said. Its serious business, and people die doing it.
Darryl took the flag from his boat, folded it and stuck it in his sea bag. It stayed there through his three years in Vietnam and until just before his son left to join the Air Force.
Darryl didnt talk about Vietnam until Joy headed for basic training. He told his son the story of the flag before giving it to him. Darryl told him to take care of it as the symbol of the nation and to honor the Marines who died on that beach in South Vietnam 38 years ago.
At Bashur, Joy led a team safeguarding the airfield. He was often on foot or vehicle patrol or pulling convoy security duty. The days stretched from sunup to sundown.
No matter, Joy loves what he does. But back at Sembach, his wife, Mary Grace, and the couples two children, Darryl and Jasmine, were worried. But unlike other separations theyve endured, this time Joys wife was behind his deployment 100 percent. In a letter to her husband, Mary Grace said she was proud of what he was doing.
The big cop got a bit misty-eyed when talking about his family. No doubt he wanted to be with them. But he had a key job to do. He stayed focused by looking at the flag in his tent.
Our flag looks different in a war zone, he said. It makes what we do more meaningful.
When the time comes, Joy plans to tell his son the story of the flag. And one day hell pass it to his son, if he decides to join the military.
God willing, my son wont have to go to war, Joy said. But if he does, I want him to take this flag with him and fly it proudly.
Louis A. Arana-Barradas
Forerunner of the modern infantry fighting vehicle, the M3 Half-Track was of half-French origin.
Does this mean it was a bastard?
I noticed there are a number of variations to the half-track. Question (uh-oh, here he goes again). In the movie "Saving Private Ryan" towards the end when they were preparing for the Germans to enter the town and utilize the last bridge, our guys used what they called a "rabbit" to go out on point and draw fire. It looked like a "mini-half track" that could carry only two people. What purpose did it serve?