Marines from Cpl. Joshua Dumaw’s platoon gather for a final prayer in front of his memorial stand, July 11. Dumaw, a squad leader with the Police Mentoring Team, was killed while conducting operations against insurgents in the city of Delaram, June 22, 2010. Fellow PMT Marines used today’s ceremony as an opportunity to reflect on Dumaw’s life and share personal memories of him with the rest of the unit and other Marines and sailors in attendance.
Jonathan E. Marsh born February 10, 1976, he is a fitness instructor, volunteer, and small business owner in Oklahoma City.
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We all know that soldiers live a hard and demanding life, but do we really know what goes on in the life of a soldier? From grueling day to day schedules, to
U.S. Marine Corps scout sniper candidate Lance Cpl. Garrett Dimattei with Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, poses for a photograph during a live-fire exercise at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms, Calif., March 6, 2019. The exercise acted as the culminating event of a three week screening process every scout sniper candidate must complete before attending scout sniper school. (U.S. Marine Corps Photograph by Pfc. Cedar Barnes)
When looking at the majority of historical photos, it might seem that the world was black-and-white and all we had were wars and disease.
Friday marks the tenth anniversary of the US-led invasion which ousted the militant Islamist Taliban from power.
Bussum, The Netherlands 2010
Marine Kyle Carpenter is the youngest living recipient of the Medal of Honor
Quisiéramos que Bruce Willis y Ben Affleck nos llevaran a la Luna como los guapos astronautas de la cinta Armageddon.
I stood at the top of the incline, looking toward the long, black wall, with the more than 58,000 names just a blur. I watched people moving slowly along the wall…from those too young to have any memory of the Vietnam war, to those people whose hair had been bleached white by the passing of too many years. Sometimes there would be a couple of men staring at the wall, engaged in quiet conversation. “I don’t believe Smitty ever bought a cigarette of his own.” “No, but he was a good man. You needed somethin’ done, you could always count on Smitty.” “Problem with him, he couldn’t keep his mouth shut. He was always talkin’ himself into trouble.” “He only had three weeks ‘till his drop date when he was killed. Can you believe that? Three weeks.” Ruth had gone to check in the book to help me locate some of my friends. They aren’t listed alphabetically, they are on the wall chronologically, according to when they were killed. She came back with the names. The first name was Dan Lambdin. Dan and I were friends from Germany, in Vietnam at the same time, but not serving together. I found his name on the wall, and, as dramatically as if it were a scene change in a movie…the wall, the people around me, tone and tint, disappeared. I could hear the sound of rotor blades, I could smell jet exhaust, I could feel the oppressive heat of the flight line at Phu Loi, Vietnam. Dan was in Vung Tau, and I had flown over from Phu Loi to deliver a helicopter. Dan’s roommate was gone, so he invited me to stay with him. We lay there that night, talking across the dark space between our bunks, remembering funny incidents from Germany, talking about what we had encountered in Vietnam. “The first thing you have to do is to learn not to be afraid you’re going to be killed every time you go out,” Dan said. “You need to stop worrying about your mortality and think only about the momentary reality.” But we wondered what it would be like to be killed. Are you aware beyond death? Where does your soul go? “Ha! You better believe, I won’t be staying here,” Dan said with a chuckle. The next day we went down to the airfield together. I was going to fly back to Phu Loi, and Dan was going to deliver a generator to a Special Forces “A-Team” unit near Binh Khat. We exchanged some off-color remark by way of goodbye, and went our separate way. When I landed at Phu Loi, the line-chief, who had served with Dan and me in Germany, came over to tie down the aircraft. “Chief, did you hear about Mr. Lambdin?” “What do you mean, hear about him? I just left him. Hear what?” “He was just shot down and killed near Binh Khat. He was delivering a generator.” “No,” I said. “That’s not possible!” I spoke those words while standing at the wall, but they reached back across the almost forty years that separated then from now in an instant. Then, with my throat choked, and my eyes dimmed by tears, I continued my sojourn down the wall, putting my hands on 22 more names, feeling each of them, seeing them as the young, vibrant men I remembered. Looking around I saw that I wasn’t the only one traveling through time and that day. To me, my fellow time travelers were no longer old men with gray hair and drawn skin. They were young, and they were wearing jungle fatigues and flak vests, and they had M-16s slung over their shoulders, or .45 pistols strapped to their sides. Their eyes weren’t filled with tears…they were set in the ‘thousand yard stare’ that we all wore then. VIETNAM REFLECTIONS by LEE TETER http://www.art.com/gallery/id--b19052/vietnam-veterans-memorials-posters.htm I said one more goodbye to all my friends that day, then I walked away, leaving the wall behind me, but not the ghosts and memories. They will be with me until I cross that great divide. Vietnam was but three years out of my 76 years of life...but the impact those three years made on me is incalculable. On this approaching Veterans Day I think not only of my Vietnam and Cold War peers, but of all 40 million who have served this country since its birth. We are one long line stretching through the battles that mark our history; Bunker Hill, New Orleans, Matamoros, Shiloh, Little Big Horn, San Juan Hill, The Marne, Iwo Jima, Chosin Reservoir, Ia Drang, Baghdad, and Fallujah, and I am proud to say that I am a brother to all of them. Robert Vaughan - CW3 - US Army (ret) All of us gave some…some gave all. SOLDIER SEES DAUGHTER FOR THE FIRST TIME
America’s best pics and videos is fun of your life. Images, GIFs and videos featured seven ti...
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Derrick Riggs is a lieutenant colonel serving in the US Army as deputy commander, chaplain in the US European command.
A look at American soldiers at war in Vietnam, during the 1960s and 70s.
Read story No Matter What The Cost, I Will Prove You Wrong by BloodFighter (Keely Pettigrew) with 5,472 reads. gijoe, l...
Love Her or leave
A soldier's life isn't filled with fun. The pressures of doing one's job versus previous life's lessons conflict daily. Yet, the soldier does as he must do.
There are a number of theories, including ones that involve dust and clay.
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soldiers
They're part of the Greatest Generation for a reason.
Jonathan E. Marsh born February 10, 1976, he is a fitness instructor, volunteer, and small business owner in Oklahoma City.
American Revolution Freedom From Governmental Tyranny
Learning about the past is far from dull when you have access to social media. There are so many fantastic internet resources out there that can help make history even more interesting than it already is: some pages use memes, create witty threads, and share intriguing pics to make education truly entertaining.
The devoted military dogs who are killed in action while protecting our troops deserve to be honored along with the human soldiers on Memorial Day.