The Cellar

The Cellar (http://cellar.org/index.php)
-   Current Events (http://cellar.org/forumdisplay.php?f=4)
-   -   To the Troops (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=21688)

xoxoxoBruce 12-20-2009 10:16 AM

To the Troops
 
To the Troops, c/o Michael Yon, from Command Sergeant Major, Jeffrey J. Mellinger, US Army Materiel Command.
Quote:

I awoke this Saturday morning at PT time (0430), and looked at my surroundings. The worst winter storm in DC for a number of years had arrived in force. Snow, and lots of it. Roads are closed, planes are grounded, and people are huddled comfortably inside their homes or foolishly out trying to learn how to drive in snow.

Rather than roll over, I put some warm clothes on, leashed the dogs, and out we went for some exercise and introspection. As I walked, I was trying to imagine being in those winter camps and fights so long ago.
I thought of Washington's Christmas raid at Trenton, and his last, lonely winter camp. I thought of the soldiers at Fort Niagara. I thought of the bitter cold of the Argonne, the Huertgen Forest and Bastogne, the Aleutians, the Chosin Reservoir, the Sava River, and Tora Bora.

As I thought of those heroes of our past, those legendary Soldiers, Marines, Sailors and Airmen that we regularly honor and pay tribute to, I thought of those quiet professionals in current fights that we don't speak of often enough.

Look around on any forward operating base or outpost in Afghanistan, the Philippines or Iraq. Watch the Soldiers passing through our airports coming home on or returning from R&R. Listen to speeches during a deployment or redployment ceremony. Stand silently and render honors to one of our fallen (something which is hardly more sincere than on Disney Road and at that airfield!).

Modern American heroes (not our over-indulged athletes or actors) are hardly given their due. They walked or still pass quietly among us, never seeking acknowledgement or fame, but simply doing their duty as they have sworn oaths to do. We already know some of their names:

- Smith, Murphy, Monsoor, Dunham, McGinnis - Medal of Honor;
- Hollenbaugh, Cooper, Nein, Sanford, Coffman - Distinguished Service Cross;
- Hester, Birch, Roundtree, Kandarian, LaFrenz - Silver Star;
- Kopp, Shumney, Kuban, DeLeon, Gentry - Bronze Star for Valor;
- Biggs, Carbone, Turecheck, Rushing, Berwald - Army Commendation for Valor.

And, I submit, for every warrior we acknowledge in a ceremony, there are a hundred or a thousand more who are never acknowledged for the difference they make every day.

So as I finished my peaceful walk in the snow, I thought of the Soldiers, Marines, Airmen and Sailors that are carrying the fight away from home so that I could have this walk in peace, and I am forever grateful. I thought of those in MRAPs slowly searching roadways for hidden dangers, others working with local police to secure a village, and yet others moving quietly and quickly to eliminate or capture a hidden enemy, and I am filled with pride.

Wherever you are, and whatever you do or did to continue to guarantee my safety and freedom, I thank each of you in, headed to, returning from, or supporting the fight. You are my heroes, and I thank you.

CSM Jeff Mellinger
Heroes are measured in deeds, not in medals. Remember all the heroes this Christmas. Thank you.:f207::f205::f32::f9::f112:

TheMercenary 12-20-2009 10:18 AM

:thumb: God bless everyone of them. Protect them. Bring them all home safe. It is the least we can hope and wish for. Great post.

Sundae 12-20-2009 01:04 PM

I put two items in the box For Our Troops in the supermarket.
It's not much.
Toothpaste and hair gel.

It shames me that it's necessary, but for a small nation we are punching above our weight in this conflict.

I do remember those serving.
I'm not sure they are protecting me, but I am cogniscent that they are living in difficult conditions and in danger, and for that they have my admiration and respect.

busterb 12-20-2009 03:07 PM

Quote:

I do remember those serving.
I'm not sure they are protecting me, but I am cogniscent that they are living in difficult conditions and in danger, and for that they have my admiration and respect.
SG There's a bunch who wonder about that???

Sundae 12-20-2009 03:13 PM

I'm referring to wars fought which I do not think were necessary for the defence of this country or viable against a settled population. We are not at war against a predatory invading force (Nazi Germany for example).

I do not feel strongly enough to go on marches, but I do feel it is a situation my countrymen (& women) should not have been involved in. There are plenty of conflicts around the world that we are not involved in, where there is as much if not more civilian misery. I'm not into conspiracy theory at all, I just think some bad decisions and mis-calculations have been made.

None of this affetcs my opinion of people in the armed forces.

If that's not what you meant I'm sorry :)

tw 12-20-2009 06:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae Girl (Post 619472)
None of this affetcs my opinion of people in the armed forces.

They never decide to go to war. Only we make that decision. Which is why every WE must learn the lesson of history. Sending troops uselessly to death is a mistake directly traceable to citizens that did not do their job - learn. That was the lesson from Nam. That is the lesson from "Mission Accomplished". Only WE determine whether they put their lives on the line. WE are responsible for deploying them sensibly.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:05 AM.

Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.