Two very different hells on Earth, Guadalcanal and Iwo. I have the book, "I'm Staying with my Boys" and he is as inspiring and selfless as he was courageous.Here's the Only Marine to win a Medal of Honor and Navy Cross During WWII
Amid home-front honors, Guadalcanal's Gunnery Sgt. "Manila John" Basilone fought to return to the fight.www.military.com
LOCK THEM UP !
Huge American flag stolen from California veterans cemetery
Authorities said a huge American flag and several smaller flags were stolen from a Southern California veterans cemetery over the Memorial Day weekend. Les' Melnyk, a spokesperson for the Department of Veterans Affairs' National Cemetery Administration, said the garrison flag at Los Angeles...www.yahoo.com
Hope they find the assholes.
How about 1000 hours community service in that cemetery?LOCK THEM UP !
An hour per dollar of damage and repair.How about 1000 hours community service in that cemetery?
sans testiclesHow about 1000 hours community service in that cemetery?
Ultimate community service could be as a N sourcesans testicles
Bravo Zulu Colonel Campbell
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On April 7, 2003, Kim Campbell piloted her A-10 Warthog over Baghdad. She received an urgent call for air support from troops in contact. When she and her flight lead arrived overhead, they saw Iraqi troops firing RPGs at the friendly unit below. The two A-10s strafed the enemy with 30mm Gatling guns and rockets. As Campbell pulled out on her final run, an explosion rocked the tail of her aircraft, rolling the jet violently toward the earth. Campbell identified she'd lost all hydraulics and placed the aircraft into a backup manual control mode. With seconds to react, she used cranks and cables to recover out of the dive and get the aircraft back into the sky. Her flight lead came alongside and identified hundreds of small holes and a football-size one in her right horizontal stabilizer. Despite the damage, Campbell elected to risk the flight back to base rather than bail out over Baghdad.
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An hour later, she arrived over Kuwait with crash recovery teams and rescue helicopters standing by. Miraculously, Campbell brought the jet down without issue. The next day, she was back in the air in another A-10 flying a search and rescue mission. For her heroism supporting the friendly unit on the ground and magnificent skill recovering her aircraft and bringing it safely home, Campbell was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross with "V".
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Campbell later deployed a second time in support of OEF. She amassed 375 hours of combat flying between Iraq and Afghanistan. She is still on active duty after 23 years of service, now a full Colonel on faculty at the Air Force Academy.
This is a fantastic readToday In Military History:
On this day in 1942, the Battle of Midway–one of the most decisive U.S. victories against Japan during World War II–begins. During the four-day sea-and-air battle, the outnumbered U.S. Pacific Fleet succeeded in destroying four Japanese aircraft carriers while losing only one of its own, the Yorktown, to the previously invincible Japanese navy.
In six months of offensives prior to Midway, the Japanese had triumphed in lands throughout the Pacific, including Malaysia, Singapore, the Dutch East Indies, the Philippines and numerous island groups. The United States, however, was a growing threat, and Japanese Admiral Isoruku Yamamoto sought to destroy the U.S. Pacific Fleet before it was large enough to outmatch his own.
A thousand miles northwest of Honolulu, the strategic island of Midway became the focus of his scheme to smash U.S. resistance to Japan’s imperial designs. Yamamoto’s plan consisted of a feint toward Alaska followed by an invasion of Midway by a Japanese strike force. When the U.S. Pacific Fleet arrived at Midway to respond to the invasion, it would be destroyed by the superior Japanese fleet waiting unseen to the west. If successful, the plan would eliminate the U.S. Pacific Fleet and provide a forward outpost from which the Japanese could eliminate any future American threat in the Central Pacific. U.S. intelligence broke the Japanese naval code, however, and the Americans anticipated the surprise attack.
In the meantime, 200 miles to the northeast, two U.S. attack fleets caught the Japanese force entirely by surprise and destroyed three heavy Japanese carriers and one heavy cruiser. The only Japanese carrier that initially escaped destruction, the Hiryu, loosed all its aircraft against the American task force and managed to seriously damage the U.S. carrier Yorktown, forcing its abandonment. At about 5:00 p.m., dive-bombers from the U.S. carrier Enterprise returned the favor, mortally damaging the Hiryu. It was scuttled the next morning.
When the Battle of Midway ended, Japan had lost four carriers, a cruiser and 292 aircraft, and suffered an estimated 2,500 casualties. The U.S. lost the Yorktown, the destroyer USS Hammann, 145 aircraft and suffered approximately 300 casualties.
Japan’s losses hobbled its naval might–bringing Japanese and American sea power to approximate parity–and marked the turning point in the Pacific theater of World War II. In August 1942, the great U.S. counteroffensive began at Guadalcanal and did not cease until Japan’s surrender three years later
The Battle of Midway, 1942
Eyewitness account of the pivotal battle of World War II in the Pacific.www.eyewitnesstohistory.comThe Battle of Midway: The Complete Intelligence Story
The Battle of Midway in June of 1942 was one of the most important naval battles in world history and a turning point in the Second World War. Betweenwarontherocks.comThe Principle of the Objective
www.combinedfleet.com