Episode #65: Weekly News Roundup for Dec. 17

In the “DoD This Week” podcast for Dec. 17: President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, and members of his national security team gave an annual review of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Obama also thanked servicemembers for their service and sacrifice in Afghanistan; Defense leaders, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, mourned the passing of Richard Holbrooke; Gen. Roger A. Brady, the longest-serving Air Force officer currently on active duty, handed the reins of U.S. Air Forces in Europe to Gen. Mark A. Welsh III; and the National Guard celebrated in 374th anniversary, established on Dec. 13, 1636.

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Episode #60: Weekly News Roundup for Nov. 12

In the “DoD This Week” podcast for Nov. 12: Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. James Amos and Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps Carlton Kent deliver a special message on the U.S. Marine Corps 235th birthdaySecretary of Defense Robert Gates, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visit Australia; the U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy help guide a stranded cruise ship ashore; and Gates and a former Marine who served in World War II deliver Veterans Day messages.

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Secs. Gates and Clinton Visit Korean DMZ

A North Korean soldier looks in through the window of the T2 building as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates tour the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in Korea, July 21, 2010. Defense Department photo by Cherie Cullen (released) 

 Click ‘more’ to see a Pentagon Channel report from the Secretaries’ visit to the DMZ. 
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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.