The Toll Grows Higher

The friendliest place on the web for anyone that follows U2.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.
STING: VertigoGal is new to the forums. I don't think one needs to be quite so harsh.

Vertigo Gal: STING is indeed right, however, that this thread has been reserved for updates on military casualties and honoring those individuals who have died in this war. Your views are welcome, but please post them elsewhere in the forum.
 
Two U.S. Soldiers Killed in Iraq Bombings

Published: 10/7/04




BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Two American soldiers were killed and two others were wounded in separate bombings that occurred within hours, the U.S. military said Thursday.

The attacks also injured an Iraqi translator.

The first attack happened at about 9:45 p.m. Wednesday near rebel-held Fallujah, 40 miles west of the capital, a military statement said.

Three soldiers from the 13th Corps Support Command were wounded when their convoy was attacked with an unidentified explosive device, the statement said. One later died of his injuries at a military hospital in the capital, Baghdad.

The other two remained at the hospital, where one was listed in serious condition and the other stable.

At about midnight, a U.S. patrol was hit by an improvised bomb near Beiji, 155 miles north of Baghdad, said military spokeswoman Sharon Walker. One soldier from the 1st Infantry Division was killed and a translator wounded, she said. He was being treated at a military medical facility.

The names of the dead soldiers were withheld pending notification of their families.

As of Wednesday, 1,064 members of the U.S. military had died since the war began in March 2003, according to the U.S. Defense Department. Of those, 809 died in hostile action. The figures include three military civilians.




Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Separate roadside bomb attacks killed four American soldiers in Baghdad, as American troops and Iraqi soldiers stepped up pressure on Sunni insurgents before the start of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan this week.

Last year, insurgents sharply increased their attacks against U.S. and coalition forces at the start of the holy month.

One soldier was killed in an explosion about 4:50 a.m. Wednesday in western Baghdad, the U.S. command said. The three others died in a roadside attack at about 10 p.m. Tuesday in eastern Baghdad, a separate military statement said. The names of the soldiers were withheld pending notification of their families.

It wasn't immediately clear if the soldiers were part of Tuesday's offensive, which stretched from Baghdad to the Syrian border.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there are concerns within the U.S. government about a possible rise in insurgent violence around Ramadan, because of an upswing last year — when bombings and rocket attacks accelerated significantly in Baghdad and other areas at the beginning of the holy month.
 
GHDAD, Iraq - U.S. forces battled insurgents around the rebel stronghold of Fallujah on Sunday after two American soldiers died when their helicopters crashed south of Baghdad. Many Iraqi Christians skipped Mass following bombings at churches in the capital.

Fierce clashes between U.S. troops and insurgents broke out on a highway east of Fallujah and in the southern part of the city, witnesses said. The road, which leads to Baghdad, has been completely blocked. Residents reported fresh aerial and artillery attacks as explosions boomed across the city.

Plumes of smoke were seen rising from the Askari and Shuhada neighborhoods in eastern and southern Fallujah as families began to flee the area, residents reported. They said a Humvee was seen burning in the eastern edge of the city. Hospital officials said three civilians were injured in the clashes.

Fallujah, 40 miles west of the capital, is considered the toughest stronghold of insurgents. Commanders have been speaking of a possible new offensive to wrest it out and other cities of militants' control, and the Marines said Saturday they had tightened their cordon around the city to keep suspected terrorists from fleeing the area. Still, officials have said that intensified airstrikes and fighting over the past week don't mark the start of a new operation.

South of Baghdad, two Army OH-58 helicopters went down about 8:30 p.m. Saturday, the 1st Cavalry Division said. The deaths of their pilots brought to six the number of American troops killed in two days, following car bombings on Friday that killed four servicemembers.

The division said the cause of the crashes had not been determined.
 
BAGHDAD, Iraq, Oct. 30 - Eight marines were killed and nine others wounded west of the capital on Saturday when a suicide car bomb rammed into their convoy, military officials said, resulting in the deadliest day for the American forces in half a year.

[The Marines later reported a ninth combat death on Saturday, The Associated Press reported, but did not say whether it was in the car bombing or another action. Efforts to contact the Marines for clarification were unsuccessful.]

In the heart of Baghdad, insurgents staged their first major assault on a news media organization by detonating a car bomb outside the offices of a popular Arab news network, killing at least 7 people and wounding 19 others, police and hospital officials said.

The marines were attacked near Abu Ghraib, the prison 15 miles west of Baghdad used by the Americans to hold detainees, said Capt. Bradley Gordon, a spokesman for the First Marine Division.

The military said in a terse statement that those killed were conducting "increased security operations."
 
Thursday, November 4, 2004

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Unknown attackers have killed three British soldiers serving with the Black Watch Regiment in Iraq, the British government announced Thursday.

The victims were among some 850 Black Watch soldiers redeployed from Basra to an area south of Baghdad.

A translator also died in the attack and several other people were injured, the British Defense Ministry said.
 
November 8, 2004

NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq -- Two Marines were killed early Monday in Fallujah, the U.S. military said, making them the first casualties in the American-led offensive to retake the insurgent-held city.

The two Marines drowned when their bulldozer flipped over into the Euphrates River, the military said.

Their bodies were discovered at 8 a.m. in the river, the U.S. military said.

Their names were being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

U.S. forces stormed into the western outskirts of Fallujah early Monday, seizing the main city hospital and securing two key bridges over the Euphrates river in what appeared to be the first stage of the long-expected assault on the insurgent stronghold, 40 miles west of Baghdad.
 
Tuesday, November 9, 2004

FALLUJAH, Iraq (CNN) -- U.S. and Iraqi troops reached the heart of Fallujah on Tuesday as the second day of battles continued in the militant-controlled city west of Baghdad.

The Pentagon reported six U.S. troops died in Fallujah fighting and 10 were wounded.
 
Eighteen U.S. troops and five Iraqi soldiers have died in the Falluja operation, Marine commander Maj. Gen. Richard Natonski said Thursday. In addition, the Combined Press Information Center said 178 U.S. service members and 34 Iraqis have been wounded in the operation.
 
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/11/12/friends.killed.ap/index.html

story.1.friends.killed.ap.jpg
 
Bedford Marine killed in Iraq

By Associated Press | November 16, 2004

WASHINGTON -- A 19-year-old Marine from Bedford was killed Monday during fighting in Fallujah, Iraq, where coalition forces have been fighting insurgents for more than week.

Lance Cpl. Travis Desiato's death was announced by U.S. Rep. John Tierney's office on Tuesday, after notification by the Department of Defense.

Desiato's father, Joseph Desiato, said his son joined the service soon after graduating from Bedford High School in 2003 and had been serving in Iraq since June.

"He did his job," Joseph Desiato said.

Desiato turned down safer assignments "because he felt he was most needed and could best serve by going to Iraq," said family friend Sam Mendales, who read a statement from the family outside the Desiato home on Tuesday.

"He came from a small town, but he had a big heart and loved his family," Mendales said.

Desiato was a standout athlete in baseball and football, but he also had a gentle side, working with kids in a nursery school program and summer camp, Bedford High School Principal Jon Sills said.

After joining the Marines, Desiato returned to school in uniform to talk with students about the importance of commitment, he said.

"He was really very well loved and highly respected, a very interesting kid who marched to the beat of his own drum," Sills said. "He was a unique kid and a compelling young man. We will miss him dearly."

(Desiato also leaves his wife, Tracey. The pair, who were high school sweethearts, married five months ago.)

Tierney, D-Mass., sent his condolences to the family, saying, "Our thoughts and prayers are with them during this difficult time. I hope that their son's heroic service to our country is a comfort to them during this sad time."

Desiato is the 31st serviceman with Massachusetts ties to be killed in Iraq, officials said, and the second from Bedford, a town of about 13,000 people 15 miles northwest of Boston.

Army Pfc. John D. Hart, 20, was killed Oct. 18, 2003 in Taza when his patrol came under fire from rocket propelled grenades and small arms fire.

The family of Lance Corporal Travis Desiato listen as a statement is read by a family friend.From left: Travis's father, Dr. Joseph Desiato, his step-mother Laurie, his sister Alli, his wife Tracey, and his sister Vanessa, 10

1100643314_6643.jpg
 
20041117AH101.jpg




Marine Killed Hours After Son's Birth

By JOE RUFF

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Marine Lance Cpl. Shane Kielion was killed in action in Iraq not knowing that his first child had been born just hours before.

April Kielion, the Marine's widow and high school sweetheart, gave birth to a boy in Omaha on Monday, said Kielion's old high school football coach, Jay Ball.

``She's hanging in there,'' Ball said. ``She's a strong woman. She's got a terrific family and lots of supportive friends.''

The baby was named Shane Kielion Jr., said April Kielion's father, Don Armstrong. He said his daughter was ``doing as well as to be expected under the pressure.''

Shane Kielion, a rifleman in the 1st Marine Division of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, was killed Monday in Al Anbar Province, the military said.

Officials at Camp Pendleton, Calif., where he was stationed, refused to comment on how he was killed. Anbar Province includes Fallujah - which American forces now control after a lengthy offensive - as well as other guerrilla strongholds.

The family is numb, said Ball. ``It's time for them to do some healing,'' Ball said.

Kielion joined the Marines on Dec. 3, 2002, and this was his second tour in Iraq.

Ball said Kielion had come home to visit in August, and bragged about his family.

``He was excited about his baby on the way and he always told me how beautiful his wife was,'' Ball told KMTV News in Omaha.

He started at quarterback for Omaha South High School in 1997 and 1998. He went to Peru State College for a short time on a football scholarship, but when that didn't work out he returned to Omaha to work and joined the Marines, Ball said.

``He wanted to improve his life for his family,'' Ball said.
 
He sounds like someone I sure wish I had known..


Lance Corporal Dimitrios Gavriel


1101209891_7662.jpg


Wall St. analyst, Iraq casualty
Haverhill Marine dies in Fallujah combat

By Megan Tench and Brian MacQuarrie, Globe Staff | November 23, 2004

HAVERHILL -- Called by a sense of duty following the World Trade Center attacks, Dimitrios Gavriel left behind his career as a Wall Street analyst, joined the Marines, and shipped out to Iraq. There he went to the front lines as a lance corporal a decade older than most of his comrades.


Last week, Gavriel, 29, was killed in fierce fighting in Fallujah.

Two weeks before his death on Nov. 18, the Haverhill man told reporters he was ''locked, cocked, and ready to rock" for the coming urban battle. Today, he is mourned, a former New Hampshire high school wrestling champion and a Brown University graduate who wrote poetry and coached children in New York.

Gavriel's death in combat was the tragedy his family feared, but a sacrifice he was willing to make.

''He knew there was more to life than getting a job and making a living," his father, Chris, said yesterday, sobbing on the living room couch. ''Our only consolation is that he went for a noble cause."

Surrounded by photographs, poems, and a journal their son left behind, the Gavriels described him as a thoughtful and responsible man whose unwavering obligation to what he believed was right had overwhelmed their pleas for him to stay home, safe.

His mother, Penelope, recalled that she picked up the local newspapers and read aloud the names of fallen soldiers.

''Look at these kids. Do you want to end up like them?" she told her son. ''He would say: 'Mom, look at the odds. How many went, and how many got killed?' "

So, he went, she said.

Before joining the Marines in October 2003, Gavriel was an ambitious Wall Street analyst, working at major companies such as J.P. Morgan and Bank of America. He spent his weekends in the Bronx, volunteering as a wrestling coach at high schools.

But when Gavriel attended the memorial services of at least two friends who had died in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, ''it really affected him emotionally," Chris Gavriel said.

''My son wasn't seeking vengeance," his father said. ''He wanted to prove himself."

Gavriel, a state wrestling champion and honor student from Timberlane Regional High School in Plaistow, N.H., had the college credentials to go to the Marines' Officer Candidates School. But instead, his family said, Gavriel was determined to go to boot camp with the rank and file and dropped his weight from 270 to 225 pounds.

''He knew better than all of us what he wanted, and he knew the risks," his father said. ''I'm afraid to say it, but I could not fill his shoes. He was beyond me."

Gavriel, who had been based at Camp Lejeune, N.C., was serving with the First Battalion, Eighth Marine Regiment, Second Marine Division, Second Marine Expeditionary Force. The Marine units spearheaded the assault on Fallujah.

His family learned that Gavriel was on the front lines only three weeks ago. ''He was worried about getting his parents upset, so he never told them he was a rifleman," Maria Synodinos said of her cousin. ''He wanted to spare them the pain."

On Friday evening, four uniformed military officers knocked on the family's flag-draped door. As soon as she saw them, Penelope Gavriel said, she knew.

''Is he gone?" the mother whispered.

''Yes, ma'am," an officer responded.

Penelope and Chris Gavriel have nothing but pride for their son, whose body arrived in Dover, Del., yesterday afternoon. Gavriel is expected to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. Plans for a memorial service in Haverhill have not been completed, family members said.


A lover of books, the soft-spoken Gavriel kept a series of journals and poems. They are now sitting on his parents' coffee table. With each flip of the page, family members said, they learn something new and powerful about him. They said they are waiting for the scores of journals and poetry Dimitrios kept in Iraq.

''This is the first journal I ever kept," Gavriel wrote in one entry in block letters. ''I heard great men kept journals. . . . I'd like to be great."

Nervously gripping a small piece of paper with one of his son's poems, Chris Gavriel read it aloud:

''Hope lives among so few, yet strong it is I know," he said, forcing out the words through tears. ''For I am still a dreamer, along the track I go."


1101208857_2774.jpg
 
NEW YORK (AP) - A New York City firefighter who had responded to the World Trade Center attack was killed in Iraq while serving with the Army National Guard, city officials said.

Sgt. Christian P. Engeldrum, 39, is the first FDNY firefighter to die in Iraq since the U.S.-led war began, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. Engeldrum was killed Monday when his vehicle came under attack outside Baghdad.

``I join all New Yorkers in mourning his loss and pray that his family finds comfort in the innumerable ways he touched so many lives,'' Bloomberg said in a statement.

Another New York firefighter, Daniel J. Swift, 24, was riding in the same vehicle and suffered shrapnel wounds, Bloomberg said. Swift was in Germany for treatment and was expected to recover.

Both Engeldrum and Swift spent months digging through the rubble of the World Trade Center after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Engeldrum was a five-year fire veteran who previously served as a police officer. He was on active duty in the Army from 1986 to 1991.

``He was a great fireman,'' fire Lt. Brian Horton said at the Bronx firehouse where Engeldrum served. ``He was 100 percent soldier. He loved his country, and he loved being a fireman. He was a lucky man - he got to do what he loved.''

Engeldrum is survived by a wife and two sons.
 
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - The number of U.S. troops killed in action in Iraq hit 1,000 Tuesday when the military said a soldier had been shot dead on patrol in Baghdad.

"One Task Force Baghdad soldier died of wounds received at about 11:30 a.m. on Dec. 7. The soldier was on patrol when the unit came under small arms fire," the military in Iraq said in a typically brief routine statement.

"The name of the soldier killed is being withheld pending notification of next of kin."

Earlier in the day, the Pentagon had issued a revised combat casualty toll of 999, a figure which had risen sharply last month during the U.S. assault on Sunni Muslim insurgents in the city of Falluja. At least 71 Americans were killed there.

In all, 1,275 U.S. service personnel have died during the Iraq operation, launched with the invasion on March 20 last year. This figure includes accidents, suicides and other deaths not classed as being killed in action.

A total of 9,765 U.S. troops have been wounded.

No official figures are available for the numbers of Iraqi dead. Estimates have ranged from some 14,000 to tens of thousands of civilians and around 5,000 troops in the war.
 
he Associated Press
Updated: 10:12 a.m. ET Dec. 13, 2004

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A suicide car bomber linked to al-Qaida killed 13 people in Baghdad on Monday, the first anniversary of Saddam Hussein’s capture, and clashes resumed in Fallujah, a one-time insurgent stronghold that American forces believed they had conquered.

Meantime, U.S. officials said that seven U.S. Marines died in combat in western Iraq on Sunday.

The violence underlines the difficulties U.S.-led forces have encountered in the year since Saddam’s ouster in trying to end a rampant insurgency. U.S. military commanders acknowledge they initially underestimated the strength of the insurgent backlash and say Iraqi security forces are not yet up to secure the country.

The fighting in Anbar, a vast province including Fallujah and Ramadi, was the deadliest for U.S. forces since eight Marines were killed by a car bomb outside Fallujah on Oct. 30. The deaths brought to nearly 1,300 the number of American troops killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003.

In Baghdad, a militant in an explosives-laden car waiting in line to enter the western Harthiyah gate of the heavily fortified Green Zone, which houses the U.S. Embassy and Iraq’s interim government, detonated the vehicle as he drove toward the checkpoint, Iraqi police said.

Dr. Mohammed Abdel Satar of Baghdad’s Yarmouk said 13 people were killed and at least 15 wounded in the suicide blast. The U.S. military said there were no injuries among its troops.
 
vert.rund.ap.jpg


LITTLETON, Colorado (AP) -- A Marine who was a freshman at Columbine High School when two students killed 13 people there was killed in action in Iraq, his family said.

Lance Cpl. Greg Rund, 21, was on his second tour of duty in Iraq when he was killed Saturday, his family said in a statement released Monday. He had talked about joining the Marines throughout high school and enlisted shortly after graduating in 2002.

Rund was a freshman when Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris shot 12 students, a teacher, and then themselves on April 20, 1999.

"Greg made us so proud, but he never wanted to be recognized for his actions," said the statement from his family. "Neither Columbine nor Iraq was to define him."

Rund was on the 2000 state championship football team, and his younger brother, Doug, now plays football at Columbine as a sophomore.

"It seems so unfortunate that you get through some things, but it catches up with you," Ken Holden, Rund's former high school counselor, told the Denver Post.

Rund's family described him as "reckless, smart, off-key and wonderful."

"He never did anything like everyone else did," the statement said. "He did everything to the extreme and always knew that somehow with his humor and a little luck, he would make it through."
 
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Rockets and mortar rounds struck a U.S. base in the northern city of Mosul on Tuesday, killing at least 22 people and wounding 50, a Pentagon official said. A radical Muslim group, the Ansar al-Sunnah Army, claimed responsibility for the noontime attack, which the Pentagon official said was believed to have struck a dining hall at the base.

Witnesses said the shelling occurred at the al-Ghizlani military camp, about three miles south of the city, which is 220 miles north of Baghdad.

The forward operating base is used by both U.S. troops and the interim Iraqi government's security forces, and the identities of the casualties were not known, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
 
There have been 1,473 coalition deaths, 1,324 Americans, 74 Britons, seven Bulgarians, one Dane, two Dutch, two Estonians, one Hungarian, 19 Italians, one Latvian, 16 Poles, one Salvadoran, three Slovaks, 11 Spaniards, two Thai and nine Ukrainians in the war in Iraq as of December 21, 2004. (Graphical breakdown of casualties). The list below is the names of the soldiers, Marines, airmen, sailors and Coast Guardsmen whose families have been notified of their deaths by each country's government. At least 9,765 U.S. troops have been wounded in action, according to the Pentagon. The Pentagon does not report the number of non-hostile wounded. This list is updated regularly. For a historical look at U.S. war casualties, click here, and to view a list of casualties in the war in Afghanistan, click here.



link here
 
Please don't take this as a partisan report. So much has been made of the lost soldiers. Here are some stories of the wounded
and returning soldiers. They are to be applauded and I pray for them all.

Battle scars

BY DALTON NARINE

Knight Ridder Newspapers
12/20/04 -- MIAMI - (KRT) - "When I saw the stumps, I thought, `Damn, both of them?' Then I looked at my leg and I was trying to figure how to put a tourniquet on it because I didn't have any hands."

The rocket-propelled grenade that ripped off James Eddie Wright's hands and tore into his left leg ended the war for him and changed his life forever.

In a way, Wright, 29, personifies the new veteran coming home from Iraq. Many hundreds are amputees and, according to The New England Journal of Medicine, one in six suffers from a stress-related disorder. More often than not, today's veteran has that thousand-yard stare that soldiers have been carrying home for years - a mask for the gnawing confusion and anguish that can blow apart a smooth return to civilian life.

Unlike the young draftees of earlier wars, many of these men and women are older, with families. For them, this morphing from a fighting machine ducking bullets into a mommy or daddy packing school lunches presents a special challenge. This time the government tapped the National Guard and the Reserve to augment regular forces. Some returnees - proportionately many more than in Vietnam - have left limbs and slices of sanity on an urban battlefield as strange as the Iraq war itself. Improved body armor kept many troops out of body bags in Iraq after they were ravaged by roadside bombs and shoulder-mounted rocket launchers.

A varied lot, these returnees. Among them: A freshly retired soldier struggling with anger and guilt as she desperately tries to fit back into the lives of her husband and three kids. An ex-soldier who shuns humans in favor of his dogs. A star basketball player who lost her shooting hand. A lifer from North Miami who can't spit out the smell of death. A guy with a John Wayne fantasy. A seven-year Marine fighting to keep his shattered arm.

---

JOHN DALE

No prosthesis for me, says John Dale, 29, of Coconut Creek, Fla. So far, his left arm is still his. He's had eight surgeries to save it. The next one's due in three months.

"It felt like someone hit me with a baseball bat," he recalls. It was April 4, 2003. His unit, the 2nd Tank Battalion, assigned to the 1st Marine Division, was taking heavy fire on the way to Baghdad on the first day of action during the invasion.

The battleground was surreal, like an arthouse war flick: oil burning in roadside ditches, smoke blotting out the sun and screening the enemy, the Marines moving forward in their Humvees.

The Iraqis would pop up and shoot. Dale would machine-gun their hideout from his seagull view in the turret. Such a sweet target. An AK-47 round shattered the humerus, the long bone of the upper arm.

His arm was left dangling, blood seeping through his chemical suit and flak jacket and racing down to his fingertips, forming large claret pools on the Humvee floor. A corpsman lifted him into an ambulance. But he had to give up his space to a Marine who had been shot in the face.

"I had to crouch behind a tank until a Humvee drove by. I hitched a ride with them," Dale says.

The firefight fanned out as he sank helplessly in the back of the vehicle. He didn't panic and he didn't pray. Everything was gonna be all right, he thought, but it would be an hour and a half until a medevac chopper arrived. Dale counted three friends among the severely wounded. Nearby, a corpsman was pushing to save a tank commander. But the officer's body was already adapting to meet death.

Dale's arm is now held together by a metal plate that travels from shoulder to elbow and is attached to the bone by 13 metal screws.

He sleeps as if time is rationed. Nightmares mess with his mind. The doctors call it post-combat trauma. He and two other Iraq war veterans meet weekly at Dale's home with Patrick Murphy, a team leader at the Vet Center, a government counseling service.

Three weeks in combat changed him forever, the sergeant says. He no longer puts things off. Like furthering his education. The South Broward High grad says he's going back to school. He likes the medical field.

---

VALENCIA KNOX-DAVIS

Valencia Knox-Davis' voice is soft but her delivery is halting. Her eyes wander, never stopping on other eyes.

Knox-Davis, 46, had an eight-month stint in Afghanistan. Then, after five months at home, she was shipped out to Iraq. She came home in March to her husband, Jack Davis, 49, and their three kids in Richmond Heights, a Miami-Dade neighborhood.

A Florida State University graduate, she's a social worker at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. She joined the Army Reserve in 1983 as an administrative specialist and helped set up and run postal services.

In 2002, when she was in Bagram, Afghanistan, son Bryan, then 14, fired off questions: Why are you there? What's the war about? And from Faith, 11: When are you coming home? James, 4, didn't grasp what was going on. Her husband, who works for U.S. Precast, a construction company, tried his best to pick up the slack. It was hard.

He's struck by the life-after-Iraq personality of a wife who, in off moments, still hears the ever-closer thumps of distant mortar rounds. She's got a precise way of doing things now, constantly checking the time, and clinging to the family. Other times, she doesn't want them around. She explains it in clinical terms: the guilt of being gone so long; missing out on so much of their lives; not being able to replace the time. "After I came home from Iraq, I used to internalize my anger. And I had no patience, no tolerance. I was curt with the kids and I was distant."

Knox-Davis, who retired as a sergeant first class in September, is being treated for post-traumatic stress at the Veterans Administration in Miami. "They want you to talk, but it's hard to open up because I mistrust people. The administration tells you the war is over and when you get there it's not. Being over there was just so stressful. And yet my mind still wanders back to Iraq and I worry about the troops. I hope these issues aren't permanent."

---

MARCO HERNANDEZ

On Oct. 5, Marco Hernandez of Homestead, Fla., mourned his oldest, Nellie Bablushuka. She was 15, a toy poodle. Now he dotes on his two younger dogs, Charlie, a Lhasa apso, and Shortie Hernandez, a Shih Tzu. "He lives for them," says Vet Center team leader Patrick Murphy, who counsels Hernandez for post-combat stress. "They give him a sense of being able to count on something." They also are helping him glue himself back together.

Before his deployment to the Middle East, Hernandez, 37, a Guatemala native, lived a far different life. He had an associate's degree in business administration, a wife and big plans to go up the ladder in the U.S. Army.

Today he has no job, no wife, no plans, no social life. He suffers from depression, mood swings, panic attacks, nightmares, mind-blowing headaches and a welter of pains he attributes to a truck accident in Kuwait.

In January 2003, Hernandez, a specialist 4th class with the 25th Aviation Regiment, was assigned to Camp Udairi, a barren desert compound in Kuwait. He was there to repair radar on helicopters. But there was little work, "no mail, no news, either," he says. They were camped behind God's back.

Eventually, he went into Baghdad, riding through enemy wreckage with limbs and flesh "like shredded paper" everywhere. The detritus of the fall of Baghdad included shards of his mind.

His tour over, Hernandez eagerly flew home to his wife. She was waiting for him - with divorce papers.

He can't even get a job - overqualified, they say. There are nights when he dreams he picks up a rifle during a chat with someone "and when I'm about to pull the trigger I wake up."

His "children" are his salvation. They "are helping me get out of this feeling of emptiness. I am forcing myself to walk with them. My feet, legs, hips, back and head hurt all the time, plus the fact that I do not want to see anybody or do anything, but because of my children I am pushing myself to go back to an almost normal life.

"I walked them last night. It took about 95 minutes and I was tired and in pain. But Shortie and Charlie were running and jumping. That tells me that they are happy and I feel good about myself."

---

LUIS ROBLES

Luis Robles, 27, of Pembroke Pines, Fla., stashed in his helmet a line from the Bible: No weapon that is formed against thee he wrote "me" shall prosper (Isaiah 54:17).

"You have your battle buddies, but you also need spiritual upliftment," Robles says from his desk as a supply sergeant at the National Guard armory in downtown Miami. "Every time I went into battle, I became spiritually inspired."

If mom Irene Bustamante had known that, she might not have fingered the worry beads when he called her home in Tijuana, Mexico, around Mother's Day 2003 to say he was going into combat. Born in San Diego and reared in Tijuana, Robles had enlisted in the Army at 19 despite her objections. Now she's telling him, as he's about to leave for Iraq with the 53rd Infantry Brigade: "I can't believe you're fighting a war that's not yours."

"I'm a soldier," he reminded her.

On Nov. 23, Robles was in charge of perimeter security at an observation post in Ramadi when he and a buddy thought they heard a car with a bad muffler. It was incoming mortars. Shrapnel fractured his skull.

When he came to, he worried that someone would call his mom and tell her. Someone had. His speech was so blurred that he had to practice saying, "It's just a scratch, Mom."

He was at Walter Reed Medical Center for 2-1/2 months.

For a while, Robles had a short fuse. He still has migraines and poor concentration. He continues to see a neurologist and the combat stress is in remission. Just don't come by with any firecrackers - or a bad muffler.

When he's off duty, Robles takes business administration classes at Broward Community College.

That quotation from Isaiah has worked. He and God are real tight now.

---

DANIELLE GREEN

In the desert, the heat's overpowering - especially if you pull security duty on the roof of a police station in Baghdad.

Danielle Green, 27, of Chicago, remembers that heat as she lies in a ward at Walter Reed. That sun. That rocket. That burning sensation.

It's May 25, 2004, five months after the 571st Military Police Co. arrived at the Al-Sadoon police station to train Iraqi volunteers. Green, a specialist 4th class, and a buddy are stuck with rooftop guard duty in temperatures well above 100 degrees. It's the buddy's turn to find a spot of shade. Green's alone.

Maybe it was a yen for adventure that made her quit her teaching job and join the Army in January 2003. She had been an ace basketball player at Notre Dame, where she earned a psychology degree.

Now she's on the roof, surrounded by sandbags, unaware that her post has become a target. The first rocket-propelled grenade hits a nearby building. She grabs her rifle, but her body goes numb. The second rocket has hit home. "I thought I was going to die," she says. "I could see that my left thigh was busted open."

Green speed-dials God: "If you can get me out of this situation, I'll change my ways."

Within seconds, Green, a lefty, realizes her left hand is missing. The limb is found later - with her wedding band still shining - under seven inches of sand.

The next day, she learns the leg can be saved, and calls her husband, Willie Byrd, 59, a retired teacher in Chicago. "She told me, `I need you to be strong. Don't cry,' " he recalls. "So I knew something was wrong."

It's still wrong.

"There are more questions than answers" about the future, she says bitterly. "It's tough on me mentally, so I'm still trying to figure what's important. Maybe I'll attend grad school and return to education. Maybe when kids tell me they can't do it, I'd pull off my prosthetic arm and say, `If I can do it, you can do it.' "

Last June, Green and 21 other Walter Reed amputees were invited to the Disabled Sports USA clinic in Long Beach, Calif., where she impressed Bryan Hoddle, head track and field coach of the 2004 U.S. Paralympian team.

"Danielle definitely has that drive and potential to be a great Paralympian," Hoddle says.

"But I have to figure out how to juggle school, train and also make money," she says brightly. "Maybe, at the 2008 Beijing Paralympics, the headline could read `Notre Dame student-athlete, American hero, makes Paralympian team.'

---

BRIAN WILHELM

The infantry is not a place for the ordinary Joe. It is where heroes go beyond their pain, where character is ultimately defined. Brian Wilhelm, 22, of Manchester, Iowa, found himself in that zone.

It was 2:30 in the afternoon on Oct. 7, 2003. When he awoke that morning "stuff didn't seem right," he says now. The kind of stuff that causes nerves to wobble. You get a vibe like that, you'd better keep it to yourself. The Iraqis were playing it close to the chest, too. They were about to ambush his mechanized unit, a three-vehicle convoy from the 4th Infantry Division. His unit was en route to RPG Alley (a rocket-propelled grenade hellhole) on a beat-up road in Balad. A patrol was depending on them for security and replenishments.

"They opened up with a volley of RPGs. I got hit in my left calf. There was a big hole in my leg, but I wasn't feeling pain."

Adrenaline, the Army sergeant says, sparked his next move. "I got out of the truck and started firing. I'm in the middle of the road and my gunner is on the truck backing me up on the 50-cal machine gun."

Wilhelm is in no man's land for 20 minutes, blood draining the leg of color. He's firing clip after clip of ammo. Because there was no initial pain, "I thought I was dead, so I figured I better have some fun to keep my buddies alive," he says. Eventually, the gunner got him back on the truck and applied a tourniquet.

Doctors at Walter Reed tried to save the leg. He waved them away. "It was either that or a couple of years of surgery," he says. "I wanted to get on with my life."

A prosthesis got him walking two weeks after the amputation.

Wilhelm now chauffeurs a general and helps with reenlistments at Fort Carson, Colo.

After work, he goes home to his wife, Jennifer, an Army MP, and their 14-month-old daughter, Alison, in Fountain, Colo.

Does the war intrude? Does he have psychological scars?

"None," he shoots back. "Losing a leg is no big deal. People who feel sorry for themselves need to grow up."

He's counting on his new family, his own family back in Iowa, and the counsel of Vietnam veterans to forestall post-combat problems. He has been allowed to re-enlist.

---

JAMES EDDIE WRIGHT

It happened about midday on April 7 in Fallujah, where hatred for Americans is stacked up like the rows of buildings that crowd the streets and alleys. Enemy mortar and rocket teams blended into the population, and that day the 1st Recon Battalion was trying to ferret them out.

Marine Cpl. James Eddie Wright, 29, of Seattle, rode point in a Humvee with four buddies. When he saw skittish motorists ahead of them spinning around and going the other way, he smelled an ambush. Gunfire raked the convoy, followed by mortars and rockets.

It felt like a knockout punch screaming off his jaw when a rocket-propelled grenade slammed into Wright's M-16 rifle. It blew off his helmet and goggles. His arms were cut down to smoldering stumps and his left foot had a gaping wound. "When I saw the stumps, I thought, `Damn, both of them?' I looked at my leg and wondered how I could apply a tourniquet because now I don't have any hands."

He almost died three times on the trip back home. They gave him 39 units of blood and doctors saved the leg. He's still in rehab at Walter Reed. "The experience has taught me to be thankful for what I have," he says. "My life, my family, my fiancee and support from patriotic Americans."

He plans to resume his education, but wedding bells are first. He and Donette Mathison, an Air Force staff sergeant, are to marry in May.

---

HUBERT LOUIZAIRE

Hubert Louizaire of North Miami tasted the exhilaration of victory on his first tour in Iraq in 1991. Now, after another war, the lingering smell of death is stronger - "like meat burning on a barbecue with no kind of spice at all."

Born in Haiti 48 years ago, he relocated to Brooklyn, N.Y., at age 15. He enlisted in the Army in 1980 and stayed on active duty for 12 years, then became a reservist. He joined the Veterans Administration police in Miami and was called back to Iraq in March 2003 with the Fort Lauderdale-based 724th MP Battalion.

Back in Desert Storm, he was a gun chief with the 31st Field Artillery, blowing up Iraqi tanks, 55 in all, burning many of the crewmen to death.

"He loves Army life," says his wife, Eveline, 47, a VA file clerk. Army life dragged him away from her and their two daughters twice, heaping an extra load on her.

Last year when she had to get the roof fixed and the house painted, "they contractors took advantage of me," Eveline says. "And they took their sweet time."

Meanwhile, Louizaire was supervising 7,000 POWs, including 300 generals, at a camp in Um Quasar. "The prisoners were treated so well, they ate better than us," he says. "We eventually released the generals, but they came back to thank us for the way we handled the whole prison population."

But the camp had a problem with escape artists and criminals. The battalion would shuttle the criminals to the overcrowded Abu Ghraib prison, where many were killed during Iraqi mortar attacks on the prison. He learned of the abuse there later. "Maybe that's why prisoners would beg us to take them back to Um Quasar."

In all of this, he's never taken a bullet or been bogged down by bad memories.

"If you think about what you did, it'll affect you," he says. "But if you don't think, it won't be on your mind."

---

ROB SARRA

Rob Sarra grew up on war movies in Chicago. He dropped out of college after two years and followed a fantasy to Iraq in March 2003. His armored unit, Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, had its first contact with the enemy in An Nasiriyah, running and gunning through the city in 15 minutes. It was exciting. Running the gauntlet, as the Marines call it, each Amtrac sheltering 18 Marines and gobbling up killing fields, town after town, four in a row.

Lethal air strikes, the gift of artillery, the choppers darting in and out of view, all the true sounds of combat that Hollywood has yet to perfect. "He," Marine Sgt. Rob Sarra, "not" John Wayne, was the hero now.

Things soured when 32-year-old Sarra and his buddies, on patrol in Ash Shatra, shot at civilians.

"I fired on a woman coming out of a building," he says. "She kept coming. She wouldn't stop."

The woman in black, her face covered, slumped to the ground. Sarra walked up to her. She was clutching a white flag. That moment, that death, upended Sarra's life, and turned him against the war.

He was discharged in April 2004 and joined the Philadelphia-based Iraq Veterans Against the War. Lifers in the military likely would say that Sarra has kidnapped and twisted patriotism. Sarra wouldn't care.

These days you can catch his drift on college campuses like Ithaca, Notre Dame, the University of Illinois, anywhere the public, students mostly, is willing to listen to his revelations about, in his words, "the occupation."

Sarra and all Iraq war veterans are defined by the unique theater in which they served - as are all veterans of all U.S. wars.

However, they are all connected by the personal war that follows all wars.

© 2004, The Miami Herald.
 
I am sick and tired of this thread being abused in such a way. This is supposed to be a strictly non-partisan thread to honor soldiers who have passed away in the conflict. There are to many area's in the above post where "politics" is shoved in, in a subtle way, which is something this thread is supposed to be devoid of.

If you want to post stuff like this, start another thread. If you have doubts about it being partisan, then please don't post it in this particular thread.
 
Last edited:
I don't think Scarletwine's post was abusive. I read it and all it seems to do is offer profiles of soldiers who have been wounded, and although they were not killed, they are casualties of the war nonetheless. I don't think her post intended any disrespect or argument.

Now, back to mourning the senseless, random, violent deaths of heroic and all-too-young men and women.
 
paxetaurora said:
I don't think Scarletwine's post was abusive. I read it and all it seems to do is offer profiles of soldiers who have been wounded, and although they were not killed, they are casualties of the war nonetheless. I don't think her post intended any disrespect or argument.

Now, back to mourning the senseless, random, violent deaths of heroic and all-too-young men and women.

It becomes political when some of the selected wounded go into their political thoughts about the war. This thread is supposed to be devoid of politics in any way. The Antiwar crowd often tries to exploit the wounded for their political purposes and I would hate for this thread to turn into a vehicle for that. The last wounded person, Rob Sarra, and the writers comments are indeed political.

Its also can be viewed as political when one describes the deaths of soldiers as senseless. Many of these men died saving other people's lives!

Please, there is a general theme to the vast majority of the post in here and that is that they are not seen as political or offensive to anyone in the forum! Why can't we stick with that formula since it has worked so well?
 
Last edited:
We can definitely stick with it. All I'm saying is that I don't feel that Scarletwine's post violated that spirit.

And, yes, I do believe that many, many of these deaths were senseless and preventable.

That said, this thread has historically been tightly monitored for political content and that will not change. I will brook no more discussion on the issue of Scarletwine's post. It's staying, I'm not yelling at her, and that is that.

Let's all move on now.
 
paxetaurora said:
Right on.

NOW can we all move on?

The spirit of this thread was that the post remained completely a-political, and were not to be offensive to anyone in any way! 99% of the post are like that. You may not find Scarletwines Post offensive or political in any way, but myself and potentially others disagree. That is why it goes against the spirit of this thread.
 
Back
Top Bottom