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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Today’s Troops, Families Best Ever, Chairman Says

By Fred W. Baker III
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 25, 2009 – As the nation prepares to enjoy its Memorial Day holiday, the military’s top officer asked that U.S. troops and families be remembered for their sacrifices.
Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, made appearances this morning on the major network morning shows broadcasting from the Pentagon.

Mullen called today’s fighting force and its families the best he’s ever been associated with.

“I've been wearing the uniform for over 41 years. This is the best military we've ever had, and they are making a big difference in these two wars that we're fighting,” he said. “And we're in our eighth year of war, our sixth year of fighting two wars simultaneously, and they've just been incredible.”

The holiday serves as the unofficial start of summer with many community pools opening for the weekend. Many enjoy the typical three-day weekend boating, cooking out and in other outdoor recreational activities.

But Mullen asked that the nation take pause to remember the sacrifices of the troops and families, and to renew its commitment to supporting those in their communities who are serving.

“Today’s a day we need to remember their sacrifice -- those who’ve paid the ultimate sacrifice as well as the families of the fallen,” Mullen said.

Nearly 5,000 troops have died in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan since they began, Mullen said. More than 36,000 troops have been injured.

“We’ve got some 240,000 young men and women of the United States deployed around the world today … and many of them in harms way who we really need to take pause and remember their sacrifice,” the chairman said.

“They represent the best of America. They’re the best young people I have ever been associated with and they really do make a difference,” Mullen said.



Biographies:
Navy Adm. Mike Mullen

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Friday, October 31, 2008

A Plea from a Gold Star Father

As a native of Connecticut, and someone who was lucky enough to avoid the often severe consequences of Lyme Disease, this is a plea close to my heart. When I was bitten by a tick years ago, the classic "target mark" was clearly visible on my knee, and I was fortunate enough to have treatment during the first few days following the bite. I have few lasting effects, and those I do have are mild.

My stepfather was not so lucky, and has had a number of issues related to Lyme Disease. Pets can be victims, too - one of my best friends' dogs has Lyme Disease, and fortunately is responding well to treatment.

Each spring around here, we are reminded around this area of the dangers posed by the little critters we may not even see.

Robert Stokely is a Gold Star father familiar to many in the milblog community, and near and dear to our hearts. Please take a moment to assist this family and others like them - the Stokelys have already given so much for all of us.

The Stokelys need your help as do many many others around the country to get Congress to act - please see the links below to versions of the U.S. House and Senate bills for Lyme Disease Research below:

Lyme and Tick-Borne Disease Prevention, Education, and Research Act of 2007 (Introduced in House)[H.R.741.IH]

Lyme and Tick-Borne Disease Prevention, Education, and Research Act of 2007 (Introduced in Senate)[S.1708.IS]

Abbey Stokely was bitten by a tick about 20 months ago. We have been to doctors - the best we can find and she is very sick to this day and I fear she may even die. Yesterday, as a home health nurse came to treat her under the orders of an infectious disease doctor, she suddenly collapsed, stopped breathing and then responded again. I buried a son, SGT Mike Stokley KIA 16 AUG Yusufiyah Iraq and that nearly did it for me. I don't think I can bury a daughter, much less I know my wife Retta can't, for like Mike and I were best friends, Retta and Abbey are the closet mother / daughter I have ever known, and on top of that, they have the closet friendship I have ever seen in my life.

The other day, Abbey became so ill and fatigued at school that a friend had to bring her home from school. We, like many other families, are desparate. We nearly lost Abbey in a car wreck five months after Mike died when she and I were struck in her door, sheering it away, by another car running a stop sign. We rolled and then flipped end over end for 180 feet. We spent 18 months gettng Abbey well from that wreck.

It was during that recovery time that Abbey was bitten by the tick. Since then she has had to endure something no emerging teenager wants - to have your life taken away and unable to be with your friends. Going to church is a struggle, yet her faith and committment to God leads her to save up her strength to go to church for an hour. She went to school half days, not even going other days. Amazingly, she maintained the high straight A average she has had everyday of her entire school career, and moved from 15th in her class to 4th (and she is in a very competetive 2010 class).

We understood and accepted what we were in for when Mike went to Iraq. Yet, his death continues to be a heart break to us every day. While other thirteen year old girls might have attended their first funeral to bury a grandparent, Abbey attended her first to bury a treasured and loved brother in a most public setting, TV cameras and Reporters in her face at the State Capitol prayer service, and then again as over a thousand attended Mike's funeral. Instead of a simple graveside service and prayer to get through for a grandparent, Abbey said goodbye to her brother to the report of a 21 gun salute, watching the flag draping his casket be folded, and then the playing of taps.

There are a lot of unknowns about Lyme Disease and a lot of "blowing off" of patients like Abbey and our family by the medical community. Some doctors have even had their license taken away or suspended because traditional medical community views tend to discount Lyme even exists in many states or that the regimen of treatment is two weeks of an anitbiotic and the patient is cured, and if not, they are depressed and need a psychiatrist.

If what I describe above is not enough for Abbey to go through from age 13 - to 16, she has had to endure going through every known medical test and being told we don't know what you have, but it is not Lyme Disease because Lyme does not exist in GA and you are just depressed because of what has happened in your life. Such is how it goes for many others like Abbey Stokely - they are blamed for not getting better and told there is nothing wrong with them.

Abbey Stokely wants to get better, she wants to live a full life, and she wants to be happy. Yet, in the face of the the physical setback of Lyme Disease and only able to go to school half days, some days not at all, she carried a full advanced placement high school load, elected to be the President of her Student Government, doing homework on weekends when her friends are out having fun so she can maintain her lifelong high straight A average. She is in a very competetive academic class of 2010 at her high school and has managed to achieve being ranked 4th in her class. She continues a strong faith in God even given what has befallen her, continuing to read and study her bible and carry on a committed prayer life. She is respectful and considerate of the needs of others even to the point the other day when she was rear-ended by another driver, and hurt again, she was more worried about how they were than her own self, and now worries if the other driver will get in much trouble with their parents and insurance company. She is chaste and would not dare consider a drink or illegal drug. She saves her allowance for college and dreams of being a doctor or doing something to contribute to the betterment of life for others. She was trying to walk several miles a day and build up strength to walk in the three day breast cancer walk and had raised considerable money to donate to the Susan Komen Breast Cancer Foundation by making crafts to sell and holding late night dinners for the staff at her mom's hospital. Does that sound like someone who is depressed and needs a psychiatrist?

Abbey Stokely is sick and could die from Lyme Disease. Now, we as a family need your help.

Congress has two bills pending - one in the House and one in the Senate - links above and for a tenth straight year will die if not passed out of Congress in December. We need to look at this disease and study it with an open mind and not take the hasty and closed minded positions as those with a conflict of interest due to ties in the research and pharmacuetical field have. A video "Under Our Skin" which is gripping and compelling to ask questions why not study and learn more rather than misdiagnois or outright ignore the problem. A legitimate question exists why the medical community, including CDC, is not responding and families like us, and people like Abbey, are being left with no answers, even being shunned and blamed with "the problem". Please help us and the many many others like us around our country.I am not one who shows fear but I am really scarred for my daughter. Please guard your family from ticks, for Lyme Disease, while recognized as a disease in some states on the eastern seaboard from Maryland north, there are many states it exists in great numbers like Georgia but is ignored by health authorities. Remember, thirty years ago no one had heard of Lyme Disease until it was discovered by a doctor who studied the unusual onset of child hood arthritis in large numbrs of children in Lyme Conneticut. While the medical community blames the patient in many cases today, or misdiagnosis the patient altogether, we are very likely to look back one day and ask ourselves as a nation who we could have ignored it for so long and let so many suffer needlessly.

Thank you my friends for any contacts you can make and please share this with your friends if you like.

Robert Stokely
proud dad SGT Mike Stokely
KIA 16 Aug 05 near Yusufiyah Iraq
and proud but very concerned dad of Abbey Stokely, suffering from Lyme Disease

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Thursday, June 05, 2008

America Supports You: Mouse Click Closes Distance Between Troops, Families

From DefenseLink:


Kursten Byrne, holding a photo of her husband, Marine Capt. Patrick Byrne, and their four children use “Websites for Heroes” as a way to stay in touch. Captain Byrne is deployed in Iraq. Photo courtesy of Websites for Heroes


American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, June 4, 2008 – For deployed servicemembers and their loved ones, maintaining close family ties takes more than the occasional phone call or e-mail.

It happens through a free, personalized and password-protected Web site.

“Deployments are hard on families. When you’re away and you’re in harm’s way, … it’s a lonely place,” said Terry Gniffke, who founded “Websites for Heroes” with Mike Sawtell. “You miss home, and the greatest thing is to be connected in some way. ‘Websites for Heroes’ allows that to happen.”

Each site allows for unlimited photo uploads and can support two hours of streaming video so parents can see what the family is doing back home. Among other features, it also provides a message board and kids’ calendar, which helps Mom or Dad stay actively involved in their child’s life.

“They can be proactive in communicating, ‘Hey, how was your English test?’” Gniffke said.

“[That way], their son or daughter feels like Dad’s still connected or Mom’s still connected to their life.

“You’ve got all these elements that make for a great interactive social network for the family to communicate,” he added.

Websites for Heroes keeps military families connected, whether they’re deployed overseas or across the country, and it does so at no cost to the family. Each personalized, password-protected family Web site -- there are currently 1,200 -- is sponsored at a cost of $99 a year. The individual sites Websites for Heroes offers military families are sponsored by individuals and, in some cases, by corporations, including Gateway.

While the sponsorships are one-time donations, Gniffke said, he hopes donors will realize the benefit to the families and make it an ongoing part of their support for the troops.

“This is a mission for me,” he said. “This is near and dear to my heart.”

Gniffke knows from experience just how important something like Websites for Heroes can be. The former Marine served in Vietnam, and he said he remembers waiting up to three weeks for a single letter from home. As tough as that was on him, he said, it was tougher on his family when his base got hit and the letter he wrote to let them know he was all right hadn’t arrived before there was another attack.

“It’s tough on the home front, and it’s tough on the other side,” he said. “What a difference [Websites for Heroes] would have made.”

Gniffke didn’t have that luxury in Vietnam, but he and Mike Sawtell are going to make sure the gap between home and the front lines is much smaller for this generation of servicemembers.

Editor's Note: To find out about more individuals, groups and organizations that are helping support the troops, visit www.AmericaSupportsYou.mil. America Supports You directly connects military members to the support of the America people and offers a tool to the general public in their quest to find meaningful ways to support the military community.

Related Sites:
Websites for Heroes

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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Magazine Honors Military Spouse of the Year

By John J. Kruzel
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 6, 2008 – Military Spouse magazine honored Michelle McIntyre-Brewer as the 2008 Military Spouse of the Year here today.


The wife of an Army second lieutenant, McIntyre-Brewer somehow finds time to volunteer at the United Service Organizations, Soldier’s List, American Red Cross, American Heart Association, and March of Dimes, all while raising two young children, including a daughter born with a heart defect.

During the award ceremony today, McIntyre-Brewer, 29, said the award represents the idealized military spouse, one who supports the mission of an American military that aims to improve conditions in parts of the world less fortunate than the United States.

“As military spouses, we have a responsibility that we are humanitarians, that we are not war mongers. We are people who want to be able to bring and instill peace around the world,” she said receiving the first-ever award. “We want to show people that our hearts are made of gold.”

McIntyre-Brewer, who has been described as an “alpha mom,” told the audience she feels obligated to empower other military family members to make change the world for the better.

“It is my responsibility to give back and give forward, and to make sure that everybody else who’s risking the loss of their children, or their husbands or their community, are able to make a difference in this world,” she said.

Army Second Lt. Stephen Brewer said his wife wanted to accept the award, not to celebrate her own virtue, but for the honor it bestows on all military spouses.

“I think it’s time that the spouses and families are more recognized for the hard work and effort they put in,” he said. “As military people, we volunteer, but our families don’t, and yet they put forth so much effort with very little recognition. They like to give us medals and ribbons, but very rarely is a spouse given his or hers.”

The Army officer, who is pictured with “Chelle” on the cover of Military Spouse Magazine, said he generally avoids the limelight. “But to be on there with her is definitely something special,” he said.

Babette Maxwell, Military Spouse magazine co-founder and executive editor, called McIntyre-Brewer an inspiration.

“Chelle is a reminder that inside each of us is the same passionate and committed spirit that puts others before themselves, sees the need and fills it, and follows dreams,” Maxwell said. “Chelle’s relentless dedication to her family and others in need make her a most deserving candidate for military spouse of the year.”

Dave McIntyre, the president and chief executive officer of TriWest Healthcare Alliance -- which sponsored today’s ceremony -- donated a check to a non-profit group that is fulfilling Chelle’s call to action.

Thanks USA is a non-partisan charitable effort to mobilize Americans of all ages to thank the men and women of the United States armed forces by providing college, technical and vocational school scholarships for their children and spouses.

Accepting the donation on the group’s behalf was Robert Okun, who helped his daughters develop the Thanks USA concept in August 2005. To date, the program has awarded 1,350 scholarships, totaling almost $4 million.

“We, as a civilian family, wanted to do more to thank the troops, and the way we thanked the troops was by giving the gift of education to their families, and their families includes both their dependents as well as their spouses,” Okun said. “In terms of what the troops do every day and what the families do, particularly the military spouses, thank you so very much.”

In a video message to the audience, first lady Laura Bush said the award presented was a chance to pay tribute to the hard work and dedication of military spouses, as embodied by McIntyre-Brewer.

“I offer her my heartfelt congratulations on receiving this award,” Bush said of McIntyre-Brewer. “Chelle, you’re an inspiration. To all the military spouses: President Bush and I are proud of your service, and the American people are grateful to your sacrifice.”

Meanwhile, the president today addressed 1,100 military spouses who gathered for a Military Spouse Day celebration at the White House.

“Whether you signed up for military life at the recruiting station or at the altar rail, each person's a volunteer,” he said. “And when you married your soldier, sailor, airman, Marine or Coast Guardsman, you became more than just part of a family; you became part of our nation's military family.”


Related Articles:

Bush, Gates Honor Military Spouses at White House Ceremony

Military Spouses Earn Presidential Volunteer Service Award

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Gold Medal Ceremony

Capt. Bill Perry, master of ceremonies for the Gold Medal of Remembrance presentation, Oct. 29, 2007, reflects on the meaning of the medallion before the medals are awarded to the children of five servicemembers that were killed in Afghanistan or Iraq. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen was on hand for the presentation. Defense Dept. photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


Rev. Daniel P. Coughlin, Chaplain, U.S House of Representatives, Gen. James T. Conway, Commandant of the Marine Corps, and the family of U.S Army Sgt. 1st Class Randall T. Lamberson, his wife Dana, son Evan and daughter Kelsi, listen during the Gold Medal of Remembrance ceremony, Washington, D.C., Oct. 29, 2007. Defense Dept. photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen speaks to the children of fallen service members during the Gold Medal of Remembrance Ceremony , Oct. 29, 2007. Defense Dept. photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen removes the Gold Medal of Remembrance from its box prior to making the first presentation to the child of a service member, representing each of the branches of the armed services, that were killed in combat in Afghanistan or Iraq at a ceremony at the Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C., Oct. 29, 2007. Defense Dept. photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


Republican U.S. Sens. Thad Cochran and Trent Lott, both of Mississippi, congratulate Helena Edge, daughter of U.S. Marine Capt. James Edge, after presenting her with the Gold Medal of Remembrance in memory of her father, who was killed in combat operations in Iraq in 2005. Defense Dept. photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


After a Gold Medal of Remembrance Ceremony, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen and his wife, Deborah, laugh as Kelsi Lamberson shows them the picture she chose to put on the back of her sweatshirt in honor of her father, U.S Army Sgt. 1st Class Randall T. Lamberson, who was killed in Iraq. Defense Dept. photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen speaks with the Honorable Gordon T. Mansfield, Acting Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs during the Gold Medal of Remembrance ceremony, Oct. 29, 2007. Defense Dept. photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley


Left to right: Beth Downs and her children Bailey, 10, Elle, 11, and Chandler, 13, attend the White House Commission on Remembrance-sponsored ceremony in the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C., Oct. 29, 2007. Their father, Air Force Maj. William “Brian” Downs, 40, was killed on May 30, 2005, in eastern Diyala province, Iraq, in a crash of an Iraqi air force plane during a training mission. Defense Dept. photo by Gerry J. Gilmore


Beth Downs, left, talks with Deborah Mullen and her husband, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Michael G. Mullen, at a Gold Medal of Remembrance presentation ceremony at the Russell Senate Building in Washington, D.C., Oct. 29, 2007. Each of Downs’ three children received a gold medal at the ceremony. Defense Dept. Photo by Gerry J. Gilmore


Since 2006, more than 200 Goal Medals of Remembrance like these have been presented to children of fallen U.S. servicemembers who have died in Afghanistan or Iraq. Defense Dept. photo by Gerry J. Gilmore




More photo essays at DefenseLink

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Wives to Run Army Ten-Miler in Honor of Deployed Husbands

From Army.mil:


Gabrielle Winton and Elizabeth Mras run last year's Army Ten-Miler. Both spouses will run in this year's event on Oct. 7 in honor of their husbands, who are assigned to the 3rd Infantry Division and deployed to Iraq. Photo by Action Sports International



Sep 24, 2007
BY Roxana Hoveyda

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Army News Service, Sept. 24, 2007) - For the last few months, 37 wives from Georgia's Fort Stewart and Hunter Army Airfield have been training to run the 23rd annual Army Ten-Miler next month.

The women will run in honor of their husbands, who are assigned to the 3rd Infantry Division and deployed to Iraq - some of them for their third tour.

Camaraderie and the chance to positively represent Army wives have attracted most of the spouses to the Ten-Miler, according to group member Gabrielle Winton. Others want to prove to their husbands that they can run the distance.

"I believe we represent the Families of deployed Soldiers and the spirit of Army Families everywhere in that our running is one of the many ways we carry on and don't quit while our loved ones are gone," Mrs. Winton said. "Running the Army Ten-Miler as a group shows solidarity and a desire to keep physically healthy."

The women appreciate the physical benefits of running, but especially enjoy the emotional benefits.

"When we're running with friends, laughing and talking through problems, things just seem better. We have a saying that 'the longer I run, the smaller my problems become.' It is so true!" said Mrs. Winton, whose husband, Lt. Col. Doug Winton, is deployed in Iraq for the second time.

"I think it's important to have groups like ours out there so that people don't forget that for every Soldier serving, there is a Family he or she left behind. Those Families are making a huge sacrifice, too, and we're just as proud to do it."

This year's Ten-Miler will take place Oct. 7 in Washington, D.C., with the start and finish at the Pentagon. The route passes such national landmarks as the Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol. Sponsored by the Association of the United States Army and Kellogg, Brown and Root, the event attracts more than 26,000 runners.

For more information on the race, go to http://www.armytenmiler.com/.

(Roxana Hoveyda works for U.S. Northern Command's Joint Force Headquarters, National Capital Region.)

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Friday, June 22, 2007

Operation One Family

* * * MEDIA ADVISORY* * *



National Organizations are Joining FORCES TO FORM OPERATION ONE FAMILY SUPPORTING THE FAMILIES OF THE FALLEN

Costa Mesa, CA., June 20, 2007 - Numerous national organizations are joining forces with MilitaryConnection.com, TAPS, Homefront America, Soldiers Angels and ThanksUSA in a joint effort to support the families of the fallen by forming Operation One Family. Details of the program and registration information for families can be found at http://www.operationonefamily.org/

Operation One Family is a proud member organization of America Supports You.

Operation One Family endeavors to help families of the fallen cope with their loss, stabilize their present situation and secure their future. The mission is to help provide life skills, education and continuing support for the families of our fallen military heroes. The goal of Operation One Family is to create a national model that will be used by Rotary Clubs across America to provide ongoing support for these families in their own communities.

The efforts of Operation One Family will culminate in a regional convention-style weekend scheduled August 2 -5 for families in Southern California and Nevada . Vanguard University in Costa Mesa California will host the families and provide meeting venues. The first day will feature TAPS' Coping with Loss Camp Good Grief. Other events will include a Share Faire providing resources, information and workshops, a California beach party at the Dunes in Newport Beach , visits to Knotts Berry Farm and the Orange County Fair and a few surprises. Limited sponsorship opportunities are available for good corporate citizens.

Rotary International District 5320 has a qualified non-profit 501(c)(3) Charitable Foundation that supports the charitable activities of the clubs within the district including the collaborative effort of Operation One Family at http://www.operationonefamily.org/ Rotary is an organization that exemplifies "Service Above Self.

MilitaryConnection.com is a portal of all types of military resources and information connecting candidates from the military community with outstanding government and civilian employment opportunities and assisting numerous military non-profits at http://www.militaryconnection.com/.

TAPS (The Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors) is a national non-profit Veterans Service Organization providing peer based emotional support services to all those who have lost a loved one serving in the Armed Forces at http://www.taps.org/.

Homefront America is a 100% volunteer 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to supporting our troops and their families with meaningful assistance in times of need at http://www.homefrontamerica.org/.

Soldiers Angels is a national network of hundreds of thousands of volunteers dedicated to providing hands-on comfort to the members of the military and their families at http://www.soldiersangels.org/.

ThanksUSA is a non-partisan, charitable effort to mobilize Americans of all ages to "thank" the men and women of the United States Armed Forces by providing college, technical and vocational school scholarships for their children and spouses at http://www.thanksusa.org/

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Monday, May 28, 2007

A Memorial Day Tale of Two Warriors; One Tour of Duty Ends, One Begins

Memorial Day, USA. Parades, speeches, shows of support for the troops,
followed by backyard picnics, time with the family, perhaps even the beginning
of vacations and summer leisure.


Well, for some of us. On this Memorial Day the family of Deborah Johns
is celebrating and thanking God for the safe return from Iraq of her son
William. He has just finished his third tour there as a Marine and received a
well-deserved hero's welcome Saturday when he arrived in San
Francisco.


For my sister-in-law, my nieces, and our entire extended family, there
is a different mood, as this Memorial Day marks the end of my brother-in-law
David's first week in Iraq. His first tour as a U.S. Army pilot is just
beginning as is the long year of waiting and worrying...

Read the Rest at Winter's Soldier Story

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Friday, May 11, 2007

Military Spouse Appreciation Day!!

President Honors Military Spouses at White House

By John J. Kruzel
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 11, 2007 – President Bush today paid tribute to military spouses across the nation and presented the Presidential Volunteer Service Award to six military spouses who he said “represent the very best of what volunteering means.” (See Video)

“You cannot be a nation with a volunteer Army unless you honor the military families, and that's what we're doing today,” Bush told an audience in the White House’s East Room that included Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and more than 200 service members and their families.

“As one wife in this audience recently noted,” Bush told the group, “military spouses do not raise their right hands and take an oath of enlistment. Yet, their service begins as soon as they say two words, ‘I do.’”

Today’s ceremony marked Military Spouse Day, as proclaimed by the president yesterday to recognize spouses’ sacrifices particularly during deployments. Military guests marking the occasion at the White House included Marine General Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and his wife, Lynne; along with Mary Jo Meyers, wife of former chairman, Retired Air Force General Richard Meyers.

Other military leaders and civilian guests included Navy Admiral Michael Mullen, chief of Naval Operations, and his wife, Deborah; Marine General James Conway, U.S. Marine Corps commandant, and his wife, Annette; and Army General George Casey, U.S. Army chief of staff, and his wife, Sheila. Acting Secretary of the Army Peter Geren also attended, as did Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim Nicholson and his wife Suzanne.

In his remarks, the president praised both the troops who volunteer to protect the country in the face of grave danger and emphasized the important roles family members play in service members’ lives.

“Through many conflicts, America's war fighters have counted on their spouses for love and support,” he told the military families. “Our communities have depended on your energy and your leadership. Our nation has benefited from the sacrifices of our military families.”

The president said that during his term in office he and his wife Laura have met with many military families at bases around the world. They’ve visited the wounded and hugged the loved ones of troops lost in combat.

“In these meetings I have found that what motivates our service members most is their love for their families,” Bush said. “Oh, they love our country, but they really love their families. You're in their prayers every morning, their thoughts every day, and their dreams every night.”

He noted that the Bush family has also experienced what it’s like to have a loved one go off to war.

“Some time ago,” he said, “a Naval aviator about to deploy to war wrote a letter to his fiance. … His words back then were these: ‘For a long time I had anxiously looked forward to the day when we would go abroad ... but you have changed all that. I do want to go because it is my part, but now leaving presents itself not as an adventure but as a job.’

“That letter was mailed more than 60 years ago, addressed to my mother from my father,” Bush said. “Millions of similar letters have been written since that war. And most of you likely have one that is special to you that you keep close to your heart.

"I know that nothing can compensate for the sacrifices you endure while your spouse is away. And so do a lot of people in Washington understand that," Bush said. "But you also got to know that our entire country stands with you -- we love you and we respect you.

“America has seen and survived many wars over many generations,” Bush said. “What has remained constant is the love we have for each other, the nobility of duty, and the strength that our men and women in uniform find in their heroes who serve at home.”

In 2003, Bush created the President's Council on Service and Civic Participation to find ways to recognize the valuable contributions volunteers are making to our nation.

The council created the President's Volunteer Service Award program as a way to thank and honor Americans who inspire others to engage in volunteer service through their demonstrated commitment.

Today’s recipients were:

-- Cindy Beerky, co-chairwoman of the Patriot Family Readiness Group, which provides information and resources to about 500 military families of soldiers stationed on Fort Lewis, Wash.

-- Michele Langford, president of the Coast Guard East Bay Spouse Association. Langford plans fundraising events for the annual scholarship which benefits dependent children of military members from all services and branches.

-- Shannon Maxwell, co-founder of Hope for the Warriors, a non-profit organization dedicated to enhancing servicemembers’ and their families’ quality of life after her husband, Tim, a Marine, suffered a severe head injury in Iraq.

-- Linda Port, a Navy wife for nearly 21 years who mentors servicemember spouses through enlisted spouse support groups. During one of her husband’s deployments, she served as ombudsman for nearly 1,200 sailors and their spouses.

-- Denise Rampolla, who works for the 153rd Airlift Wing, Wyoming National Guard. Rampolla serves as a volunteer with the National Military Family Association, which strives to increase servicemembers’ and their families’ quality of life.

-- Michael Winton, the primary care-giver for his daughter while his wife serves in the Air Force, who also coaches sports teams, works with Habitat for Humanity and Fisher Nightingale Houses, visits veteran centers and volunteers to improve reading levels of at-risk children.

Related Stories:
Bush Proclaims May 11 Military Spouse Day
Transcript: Bush Commemorates Military Spouse Day
Chairman Recognizes Military Spouses
Marine Wife, Officials Reflect on Military Spouse Day
The President’s Volunteer Service Award
AFRTS Video Reports: Military Spouse Awards at the White House


Places to Visit:
Soldiers' Angels Operation Outreach

SpouseBUZZ

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

Take a Deep Breath, 'Cause This Will Tick You Off...

Deployed troops battle for child custody


By PAULINE ARRILLAGA,
AP National Writer
Sat May 5, 5:22 PM ET

She had raised her daughter for six years following the divorce, handled the shuttling to soccer practice and cheerleading, made sure schoolwork was done. Hardly a day went by when the two weren't together. Then Lt. Eva Crouch was mobilized with the Kentucky National Guard, and Sara went to stay with Dad.

A year and a half later, her assignment up, Crouch pulled into her driveway with one thing in mind — bringing home the little girl who shared her smile and blue eyes. She dialed her ex and said she'd be there the next day to pick Sara up, but his response sent her reeling.


"Not without a court order you won't."

Within a month, a judge would decide that Sara should stay with her dad. It was, he said, in "the best interests of the child."



Read the Rest

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Friday, April 27, 2007

Vote for a Hero!

My husband, Major Josh Lipschutz, is one of ten finalists for a Philadelphia contest called "Paging Dr. McDreamy". www.my1061.com

He served in Iraq in 2005 and has orders to redeploy to Afghanistan. I am his wife and we have two young children (5 and 3 1/2).

It would mean the world to me to have him win this contest prior to his deployment....His photo was shot in Iraq...vote by going to
www.my1061.com scrolling through all 10 finalists (he's the only military one), and then enter their email address. They'll then receive an automatic email from the radio station, and their vote won't count unless they click on the link.

Thank you,
Lisa

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007




HOMECOMING
A young girl awaits the arrival of the guided-missile cruiser USS Bunker Hill during a homecoming ceremony March 13, 2007, in San Diego, Calif. Bunker Hill returned from a regularly scheduled six-month deployment as part of Boxer Expeditionary Strike Group U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Roland Franklin

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Friday, March 09, 2007

Fort Rucker Hit By Tornado - Military Families Need Your Help!

Ft. Rucker, Alabama, was hit hard by the recent tornadoes and storms. The local area, military families have lost loved ones and homes have been destroyed.

Soldiers Angels is on the job and will be establishing funds to support Ft. Rucker soldiers and families.

On March 1, 2007 a band of severe thunderstorms swept across the South. The storms were accompanied by tornadoes which left a swath of destruction in their wake. The agricultural town of Enterprise, Alabama was hit especially hard. The town newspaper, The Enterprise Ledger, reports, " The tornado struck downtown Enterprise around 1 p.m. Thursday, destroying homes, flipping vehicles and collapsing the ceiling and walls in parts of Enterprise High School. Reports concerning the number of dead and injured vary wildly, with state officials reporting as many as 5 possible deaths in the city." Its high school sustained a direct hit and many students were injured when a wall collapsed. Several of the injured students are from families stationed at nearby Fort Rucker. There are reports of deaths among the students, but the school system has yet to provide confirmation of this tragic news. Fort Rucker is the home of the United States Army Aviation Warfighting Center and many of its families live in Enterprise and their children attend its schools. The governor of Alabama has declared a state of emergency, but in a situation like this, with so many people in need, the government cannot immediately help everyone. Soldiers' Angels is determined to make sure that none of our military personnel or their families are overlooked.

Soldiers' Angels has several members who are in the area and they have rallied to provide aid and comfort to the military families who are suffering. Additionally, in an effort to help these families, Soldiers' Angels has established the Fort Rucker Military Family Relief Fund. This fund is dedicated specifically to helping the members of the Fort Rucker who have lost family and their homes as a result of this terrible event. Soldiers' Angels will use the fund to provide emergency relief to the families. Items such as clothes, food, personal items and even shelter will be provided. Please help the families and our soldiers at Fort Rucker.

How can you help?


To volunteer time please contact Bonnie- BonnieInBama @ gmail.com


FT RUCKER FAMILY RELIEF FUND
Donations through PayPal (SA-FT. RUCKER FAMILY RELIEF - Item #20-0583415)

or send GIFT CARDS: WalMart, Amex CREDITS OR VOUCHERS: Holiday Inn, Days Inn, Comfort Inn to:

ARMY COMMUNITY SERVICE, Attn: Sue
BUILDING 5700
NOVOSEL, ROOM 390
FT. RUCKER AL 36362

This post stays towards the top for a while...


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UPDATE 3/3: If you need to get an idea of just how bad the damage is, NOTR has pictures posted here.

UPDATE 3/4: Fort Benning families have also been affected by the devastating storms:


I am writing on behalf of the military tornado victims of Thursday night's storm in Columbus, GA beside Fort Benning. The housing shortages and inadequate housing at Fort Benning causes many military families to look off base for housing. While the base did not receive much damage in this recent storm, many houses of military families off base were impacted.

These families are in desperate need of help and are falling between the cracks in the system. Inexplicably, they are not receiving requested help from the Red Cross, Military One Source, or United Way. Each of these organizations has suggested calling one of the others.

The Army has a relief organization, Army Emergency Relief (funded by the Red Cross) and families are being directed there, but funds dispersed by AER for tornado relief are a loan, not a grant. These families cannot afford to pay back the loan. AER has the ability to give grants, but is not doing so for this situation. One of the families affected is a soldier and a single mother. Her roof was completely blown off of her house. Army Emergency Relief told her none of the money being given to families for tornado relief will be in the form of a grant.

FEMA has also denied any help citing that this area was not labeled a disaster area. They should see the pictures.

These families are experiencing a lot of stress and possible mild shock and are having to pay nightly for meals and hotels as insurance companies decide what they are entitled to and as that stretches out, the immediate expenses they are not being helped with is putting them in a dire financial situation. The insurance companies are assessing paying for repairs and loss of possessions, but are not paying for the hotel rooms or meal expense. These families live paycheck to paycheck and this setback could be devastating.

I know of one street in particular, Cardinal Landing, Columbus, GA, where at least three military families have houses now unlivable and need help.

My great friends, Tony and Vicki D---- have three small children and the storm has left them homeless. They were in a lease renting a house managed by a real estate company. The real estate company did not put them into a hotel. They had to pay for it themselves. The Red Cross, through Army Emergency Relief, gave them a $1000 loan. Because the house they rented is now unlivable and needs major repair, they have asked the realtor if they are now free to just look for another house to live in. Day after day the realtor says she does not know and has no answer for them. They cannot afford to keep paying for a hotel night after night. And the whole family of five in a hotel room is not pleasant.

Many of the families on their street had just stocked the fridge and freezer and had no disposable income to pay for hotel and food in their checking account. And, of course, the storm damage and loss of power spoiled all the food they had just bought. Eating out every day is quickly depleting funds. And, the D----- family took the loan they received and immediately began feeding other families from the street with no money for food.

The D---- family had just moved into their house a few months ago when the Army relocated them from Fort Dix, NJ to Fort Benning, GA. They have a lot of unreimbursed expenses from the move. They were already barely surviving financially as the recouped from the move expense and now have this stress on top of that.

Please help me find help for these families for immediate relief and money to help pay back the Red Cross loans.

Christie F-----
(Army Spouse)



ADDITIONAL UPDATE 3/4: Be sure to check the commments for additional perspective / assistance suggestions. Americanmilitaryfamilies.org is also on the case and helping these families. Although I don't know them personally, Terri (see comments) does and can vouch for them. However you choose to help, please do so!

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Friday, March 02, 2007

Take that, Hippie!

Violators of Military Hoaxes Act Could Receive Fines, Prison Time

Feb 28, 2007
BY U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command

FORT BELVOIR, Va. (Army News Service, Feb. 28, 2007) - Persons making false or misleading statements to families about the death, injury, capture or disappearance of a servicemember during war could be fined, imprisoned or both.

According to the Stop Terrorist and Military Hoaxes Act of 2004, it's a criminal offense to convey false or misleading information about the status of a servicemember during a time of armed conflict. In addition to fines, violators can face up to five years in jail. When serious injury occurs as a result of a hoax, possible jail time increases to 20 years, and life imprisonment is possible if the hoax results in death.

Individuals in anti-war and anti-government groups may prey on family members as an act of rebellion to Soldiers actively engaged in conflict, said Capt. Anthony Adolph, judge advocate, Headquarters, 3d Military Police Group (Criminal Investigations Command).

"Soldiers and their family members are easy targets for such groups who tend to prey on individuals with loved ones serving in combat," Adolph said. "Victims of this scam should know that in the case of injury notifications, the Soldier will be asked to personally call the family. If unable to do so, the call will come from the Casualty and Mortuary Affairs Operations Center at the U.S. Army Human Resources Command or the hospital where the Soldier is recovering."

According to Col. Pat Gawkins, CMAOC director, if a Soldier dies in theater or while recovering in a medical facility, a casualty notification officer will make an in-person notification.

"Unfortunately, there have been circumstances beyond our control when we have had to make notifications by telephone," Gawkins said. "These calls are followed up immediately by a Soldier who will extend condolences.

"We have had issues of the Record of Emergency Data (DD93) not having current addresses or incomplete next-of-kin information, which have caused us to make telephonic notification," he added. "In these cases, by simply trying to verify an address, or one next-of-kin calling another while their casualty notification officer was present, we have made notification. Again, this happens in very few cases, but it does happen."

In addition to the personal visit, Adolph said a casualty assistance officer will provide immediate support for the family member whenever and wherever necessary to help the family through their crisis.

The 2004 Hoax Act is meant to not only protect the victims of a hoax, but responders as well.

"The civil action portion of the statute means that in addition to criminal penalties, a person who violates the statute may be required to pay for the cost of any expenses that an emergency response or investigative agency incurs while responding to their hoax," Stephens said. "Hoaxes distract federal, state and local law enforcement criminal investigators and emergency responders from a real crises and threats, resulting in a risk to public safety and national security."

CID special agents recommend that family members who receive calls concerning the medical status of loved ones deployed to a combat zone note the name and telephone number of the caller, if possible, and contact the local Casualty Office or the American Red Cross to confirm. If the call is determined to be a hoax, immediately report the crime to the local CID office.

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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Military Wives Go the Extra Distance

Spc.s Elaine and Adam Sandoval share their affections in the evening sun at Forward Operating Base Sykes near Tal Afar. Both are assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 4th U.S. Cavalry Regiment from Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.


By Staff Sgt. Samantha M. Stryker
5th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

TIKRIT, Iraq – Many women will do just about anything for their family. Soldiers will do just about anything to make the mission a success. For Soldiers who are wives, commitment is more than a wedding vow; it is a pledge to see a promise through, no matter where it takes them.

Two warrior wives talk about being deployed with their military spouse.

FOB SYKES
Spc. Elaine Angelica Sandoval never dreamed she would be celebrating her first wedding anniversary in a crowded dining facility in northern Iraq. But the 20-year-old Brawley, Calif., native and former cheerleader enjoyed every moment because sitting across from her was husband, Spc. Adam Sandoval. The automated logistical specialist and her husband are spending the next year living and working at Forward Operating Base Sykes just south of the city of Tal Afar. Both are assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 4th U.S. Cavalry Regiment out of Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

Before they were married, Adam was already serving in the military as a cavalry scout. In 2003 to 2004, he was serving in Iraq and was involved in the heavy fighting in both Najaf and Fallujah.

During this time, the young couple tried to stay in touch, but Adam could not call home very often.

“I was really scared and did not understand the Army before. He would call at different times and so I thought he was lying about what he was doing,” she said.

Before his tour in Iraq was over, Elaine made the decision to join the military.

She broke the news to Adam over the phone.

“I enlisted in November 2004, right out of high school. When I told him he did not like it,” she said.

After the shock of the news wore off, Adam did what any Soldier does for his buddy; he gave her advice and shared his knowledge and experience.

“He told me what it was like for him in the military. So I thought being with him I knew what the military was like,” she said.

Like so many family members who believe they are serving vicariously through their military spouse, Elaine assumed she was prepared for her service commitment.

“But I realized I did not know what the military was really like not like I do now that I am in the Army,” she said.

Elaine talked about the long hours and the hectic schedules and the rules and regulations that to her did not make much sense, but as a Soldier she had to follow. She said that even making time to spend with Adam was challenging.

After she graduated from training, the young couple was able to get stationed in Hawaii after Adam reenlisted for his fiancé’s first duty assignment. They later married on the beach in October 2005. Today the only sand the dual military couple walks along side-by-side is the sand of Iraq’s Nineveh province.

Elaine believes serving alongside her husband has strengthened their marriage.

“Now that I am in the Army and serving in Iraq, I understand a lot more of what he was and is going through with his career and during this and his last deployments,” she said.

During this deployment, Adam is the squadron commander’s driver. That job among other duties inherent to the position requires that he drive off the safety of the base almost everyday at a moment’s notice. Those types of missions have her worried about her husband’s well-being.

“I have not gotten used to it, but I don’t think about him out there, otherwise I will drive myself crazy,” she said.

Having her husband by her side has affected her job performance.

“I do a better job out here because I know that I will see him if he is not out on a mission,” she said.

Even though the newlyweds can spend their meals together, unit policy dictates they will not share their nights together. Under their commander’s policy, Soldiers of the opposite sex will not live together, married or not.

“We both enlisted, why can’t we live together? Why make life harder? We chose to be in the same unit so that when our turn came to deploy we could do it together,” she said.

At that moment Sandoval seemed to consider her last remark.

“We are blessed to be together. A lot of other couples are out here and are apart,” she said.

As for their future, Elaine said that for now they are concentrating on their financial future and planning for a family.

FOB MAREZ
Across a conference table sat Spc. Johnnette Smith, a small woman with a big smile. By her side sat Sgt. Andre Smith, who had just gotten off shift and a bit tired but shared his wife’s gift of a warm smile.

When she joined the military three years ago, Johnnette was 19 years old and a mother of two.

“I joined the Army to support my children,” she said. “When I did, I realized that I would have to leave my family back in Augusta, Ga., until I could be reunited with my children.”

The young matron said another reason she enlisted was to earn money to pay for college and provide a better future for her family.

Though she had hoped to reunite with her children after completing her initial training as information systems operator and analyst, Johnnette’s first duty stationed was an unaccompanied one-year tour at Camp Walker, Taegu, Korea. As fortune would have it, it was there in foreign country she met and married her husband Andre. Soon after their wedding, Johnnette learned she was pregnant with her third child, Arianna.

After their tour in Korea, the couple was stationed in Hawaii, with their children until both were deployed to Iraq at the end of 2006. Currently the Soldiers are assigned to Special Troops Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, operating at FOB Marez, just outside of Mosul.

Johnnette, now 21, is happy that she is with her spouse and makes every effort to spend as much time together as possible despite working in different jobs. Andre is a military policeman and most times his shift differs from her duty hours.

“When I see him I focus on him and our relationship and our family,” Smith said.

When they spend that precious time together, Johnnette said they talk about their children; A.J., 4, Angel, 3 and Arianna, almost a year old when the couple deployed in November. She says she is grateful to have her husband there to lean on when the separation from their children gets to be too much to handle.

“We try to talk to (the children) by webcam everyday,” she said. “We share photos and even dance with them. When we hang up we both share a big sigh and quietly walk back to our room holding onto one another.”

After a short pause, Smith looks up and said that being deployed together has strengthened their union. They talk about their future. They talk about their children. They do not talk about the stress of their jobs, they do not let themselves slip into compromising situations and they avoid talking about the camp gossip; unless she thinks it is really good.

“Being deployed together definitely had made our marriage strong. We have grown to trust and love one another even more. But more important we share an understanding civilians or non-deployed spouses may never find,” Smith said.


Spc. Adam Sandoval kisses his wife, Spc. Elaine Sandoval outside his room at Forward Operating Base Sykes. The dual military spouses are deployed to Iraq with the 3rd Squadron, 4th U.S. Cavalry Regiment, from Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.


Family photos of Spc.s Johnette and Andre Smith and their three children, AJ, age 4 Angel, age 3 and Arianna, age1 at the time of the family photo. The dual military couple is deployed to Iraq with the Special Troops Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, operating at FOB Marez, near Mosul.

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