Episode #115: Weekly News Roundup for Dec. 16

In “This Week in the DoD” for Dec. 16:

The war in Iraq has officially come to a close. Thursday, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta announced the completion of America’s military mission there and took part in a ceremony to case U.S. Forces-Iraq’s colors. President Barack Obama addressed troops at Fort Bragg, N.C.

The National Guard celebrated it’s 375th birthday on Tuesday. The organization we know as the National Guard began Dec. 13, 1636, when the Massachusetts General Court declared that all able-bodied men aged 16 to 60 were to join the militia.

Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy has resigned. She will remain in her position until February to ensure a smooth transition for her successor.

Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta has issued a holiday message for service members, DoD civilians and their families.

Listen to the podcast here.

After 41 Years, Vietnam Vet Still Flies

By Army Spc. Jennifer Andersson
159th Combat Aviation Brigade

KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan, Sept. 20, 2011 – Army Chief Warrant Officer 5 Roy Brown proved his mettle as a combat pilot in Vietnam. Now, 41 years later, he’s proving his stamina and love of the military with service in Afghanistan.

Brown, who also served in Operation Iraqi Freedom, began his career with the 101st Airborne Division, and is serving with the Screaming Eagles again as his career draws to a close. As the 159th Combat Aviation Brigade’s liaison officer to the Air Force’s 702nd Expeditionary Airlift Squadron, which supports Regional Command – South here, Brown is in no hurry to retire.

CW5 Roy Brown

Army Chief Warrant Officer 5 Roy Brown, now serving in Afghanistan, stands with his helicopter in the early 1970s when he was Cobra pilot serving in Vietnam. Then, and now, Brown served with the 101st Airborne Division. Courtesy photo

“Call it patriotism or call it my admiration of the Army’s principles — its organizational objectives and goals, its performance over the decades in areas not only of military success, but what I think of as social equity,” he said. “But your life’s works need to have a higher purpose.”

Explaining how his career began, the Oklahoma native said it was a $5 bill that transformed his boyhood dream into reality in 1971.

“My mother asked me how I knew I wanted to be a pilot if I’d never flown, so I went to the local airport, paid $5 and rode in a Piper 140 airplane for about 20 minutes,” he said. “Then I walked right into the Army recruiting office and said, ‘Send me to flight school.’”

The recruiter told then-19-year-old Brown about a program called “High School to Flight School.” Still in his first semester of college, he knew flight school was a good opportunity, so he took it. His mother had reservations about him going to war, but knew that flight school was something her son would never be afforded any other way.

“He always wanted to be a pilot, even when he was a little boy, playing with [toy] airplanes,” his mother, Betty S. Terry-Schmidt, said. “It did not surprise me that he chose to be a pilot.”

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The Art of Healing

A portrait, created by Andrew Washington, of Army 2nd Lt. Emily J.T. Perez, who died on Sept. 12, 2006 of injuries sustained in Al Kifl, Iraq.

By U.S. Air Force Maj. Nicholas J. Sabula, Defense Media Activity

What do you say to the parents of someone killed in action? This I pondered as I walked up to the doorway of a family whose daughter died in Iraq.

I was not there to provide next-of-kin notification—that happened four years ago. I was there to deliver a painting on behalf of a well-known artist living in Europe.

My journey to this point was happenstance. Originally, I’d planned to spend this day after Thanksgiving with family and engaging in some frenzied holiday shopping; some things I missed last year in Afghanistan.

But the day changed upon news of one more mission: A painter in a distant land copes with his own war wounds—Post Traumatic Stress Disorder—by capturing fallen servicemembers in portraiture, a gift he makes to the family. Somewhere nearby, the latest painting awaits delivery to the family of the young woman portrayed.

The portrait was created by Andrew Washington. Four years ago he was inspired to paint a special portrait of 2nd Lt. Emily J.T. Perez, who was killed when an improvised explosive device detonated near her HMMWV during combat operations in Al Kifl, Iraq. Washington  served for more than 24 years in the Army before  retiring at the rank of master sergeant in 2004. Apparently, he felt a soldier’s bond.

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Veterans’ Reflections: The Best Friendships are Formed in Battle

John Teetz, a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, discusses his time in service during an interview at the National Mall on July 1, 2010. Teetz served in the Army from 2001-2004, and started basic training on Sept. 1, just 10 days before the September 11th attacks. DoD photo by U.S. Navy Petty Officer Second Class William Selby.

By Ian Graham

Veterans’ Reflections is a collection of stories of men and women who served their country in World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam War, Desert Shield and Desert Storm and present-day conflicts. They will be posted throughout November in honor of Veteran’s Day.

There are a lot of things that are bad about war, but a good thing that comes out of war is you become really close with the people you work with.  John Teetz, who served in the U.S. Army from 2001-2004, certainly thinks so.

Teetz, now living in Philadelphia, Pa., originally looked to the service for guidance.  College wasn’t giving him what he wanted, and he had learned the merits of service from his family.

“I was in college, and I wanted something to do with my life,” he said. “My father was in, my grandfather was in … Navy both of them.  I’m not much on boats, and I wanted to do ground stuff, so I joined the Army.”

Teetz enlisted in August 2001 – his tenth day of basic combat training was Sept. 11. On that day, the attitude at basic training changed drastically.  For him, it meant a new drive.

“It made me train harder,” he said. “A lot of people got scared, a lot of people got more focused – I guess I was one of the ones that got more focused.”

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Medical Monday: Preparing our Corpsmen for Combat-Related Stress

By Dr. Jerry Larson, Ph.D., Chief Scientist for Behavioral Health, Behavioral Science and Epidemiology Department, Naval Health Research Center, San Diego.

Most of us have preconceptions of service members in various military occupations. A Marine infantryman, much like the emblematic “devil dog”, fights with courage and ferocity. Navy medical staff are perceived to have all the tools at their disposal to treat wounded Marines and sailors and keep them in the fight while remaining stoic.

While there is truth is these views, it’s not that simple.

In Iraq and Afghanistan, where traditional battle lines no longer exist, Navy medical staff increasingly find themselves in harm’s way and must be prepared at a moment’s notice switch from being a “Doc” to being a rifleman. Casualty figures bear this out – numerous corpsmen have been killed in action during the current wars. Moreover, surveys of sailors deployed in Iraq indicate that at the height of Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2007, corpsman were exposed to more intense combat than any other Navy component.
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    An United States Air Force C-130J Hercules cargo aircraft from the 146th Airlift Wing, California Air National Guard, conducts flare training off the Ventura County coast. The flares are used as tactical infrared countermeasures to confuse and redirect heat-seeking missiles.

    (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Dave Buttner)


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    Famed Yankees pitcher “Lefty Gomez” once remarked “I’d rather be lucky than good,” but for one Tuskegee Airman, luck and good combined to make him one of the most successful combat pilots of World War II.

    During the summer of 1944, 2nd Lt. Clarence D. “Lucky” Lester was flying the P-51 Mustang over the skies of Italy’s Po Valley providing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers with cover support on their way to attack airfields in southern Germany.

    Lester was assigned to the 100th Fighter Squadron, a part of the 332nd Fighter Group, and had earned the nickname “Lucky” “because of all the tight situations from which I had escaped without a scratch or even a bullet hole in my aircraft.”

    Read the story of a flight that helped Lester earn his nickname here.


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    The only African-American ace of World War II, and a former Tuskegee Airman, went on to have a career in the Air Force, as well as success in the business world.

    Lee A. Archer joined the Army in 1941 with high hopes of becoming a pilot, but was initially denied because of his race. When the Army’s policy changed about a year later, Archer was accepted to the training program for black aviators at the Tuskegee Army Airfield in Alabama.

    Archer is best known for a day in late 1944 when he was involved in a series of dogfights over German-occupied Hungary. Flying a P-51 Mustang fighter, Archer shot down three German fighters. He would go on to add two more German fighters to his credit to become the first and only African-American ace of the war.

    As a civilian, Archer enjoyed even greater success, serving as vice president for urban affairs with General Foods, as CEO of North Street Capital Corp. and chairman of Hudson Commercial Corp. He also served on the board of directors of Beatrice International Foods and the Institute for American Business.

    Read the rest of his story here.