Archive for the ‘US Army’ Category

The Legacy

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

    I ran across this article in Stars & Stripes today.  It’s nice to see Travis Patriquin’s famous slideshow being vindicated in al Anbar.  (The link is to another page of this blog where you can click to view the presentation). 

    The Ready First Combat Team will be rotate out of Anbar before too long.  The next brigade in will have large shoes to fill.

    I hope this trend continues.  All the way to Baghdad. 

    It’ll still take a couple years.  Diplomacy with the Sunnis means winning the locals one local leader at a time.  There are a lot of locals still there.

    There are also still Shi’ite militias and foreign fighters to deal with.  And there’s only one way to deal with them.  We’ve tried diplomacy with al Sadr before.  We’re crazy to try again.  The Jaysh al Medhi knows only one thing:  When defeated, sue for peace, and regroup later.  It’s time to smash it (and it’s leader) once and for all.  We won’t need to do diplomacy with an organization that doesn’t exist anymore. 

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Click here for info on how to make a donation to Travis’ kids’ trust fund.  

You Know You’re Truly Successful When. . .

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

    . . . your name is on the building.  It’s the last part of an old adage, you’re least successful when your name is on your shirt, moderately successful when your name is on a parking space, and truly successful when your name is on the building.

     The Iraqi Police in Ramadi named one of their police stations after Travis Patriquin. 

Honoring the Fallen

Friday, January 5th, 2007

    Tomorrow (Sat, 6 Jan 2007), the State of Illinois will fly flags at half-staff in honor of Travis Patriquin.  

    Thanks! 

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Click here for info on how to make a donation to Travis’ kids’ trust fund.   

The Fabled PowerPoint Presentation

Saturday, December 30th, 2006

    Travis’ PowerPoint Presentation, for those of you who missed it at the more popular blogs. . . .
How to Win in Anbar

    Thanks again, Jim! 

The Travis Patriquin Family Trust Fund

Saturday, December 30th, 2006

    I have a mailing address for the trust fund for Travis Patriquin’s family established by Travis’ father Gary Patriquin:

Travis Patriquin Family Memorial Trust Fund
Harris Bank
111 West Monroe-111/1C
Chicago, IL 60603

    Mr Patriquin is also trying to put a book together for Travis’ kids.  If anyone would like to share anything else with me, please give me specific permission to pass your thoughts along.  For those of you who have already posted thoughts, please also let me know if it’s okay with you to pass those comments along.  If possible, I’ll contact the folks downrange and see if I can get any specifics, if they haven’t already done that. 

    Thanks in advance for your prayers, thoughts, and donations. 

    Click here for the virtual cemetery.   

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10 Jan 2007 Update:   Travis’ father has set up a link to PayPal (PayPal account required).  You can donate to the trust fund.  Click the ‘Send Money’ link, and use his e-mail address, gary112251 – at – America Online – dot – com.  Thank you!

Jason M West, RIP

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

    I was passing along the bad news about Travis Patriquin to a mutual friend, and he told me another of our mutual friends, Capt Jason West, had also been killed in Ramadi.  This happened on 24 July this year.  Somehow I missed hearing about it, probably because I was on the way home from Okinawa from a TDY.  

    Jason was the S1A, the personnel adjutant, if I remember my office symbols correctly.  Our paths crossed fairly regularly.  He was always busy, but never too busy to at least say "Hi," and was always in a good mood.  We went on countless exercises together, and like Travis, I can’t remember how many meals at the chow hall we shared.   

    Related posts can be found here, here, and here.  

    Rest in peace, my brother.   

An Addition to the Memorial

Saturday, December 16th, 2006

    SPC Vincent Pomante was the driver of the HMMWV that was hit by the IED that killed Maj Megan McClung and CPT Travis Patriquin.  I caught the video memorial to Maj McClung on Hot Air, and when a picture of SPC Pomante, I recognized him as one of the guys who always helped out around the TOC.  He could always be counted on to get you what you needed and always seemed to be in a fairly good mood, no matter what was going on around him, which made life easy for the rest of us.  

    I dealt with Travis on a pretty regular basis, including some social settings, and I knew him fairly well.  SPC Pomante was from among the bigger list of people I didn’t know well, but contributed more to the physical aspects of making a headquarters function than any of the officers. 

    One more brother in arms we miss.  Rest well, soldier!

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19 Dec 2006 UpdateDefenseLinkPatriot Guard Riders, thanks again, thanks always! Columbus Dispatch, again here

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Continual Updates

Friday, December 15th, 2006

    Most of my attention this past week has been dominated by the news of Travis Patriquin’s death, and more importantly, what many of us are doing about it.  

    I was contacted by one of Travis’ friends, Matthew, and we discussed the need to make sure there was a trust set up for Amy Patriquin and the kids.  It looks like the Patriquin family may be taking care of that themselves.  I plan to make sure we get the word out how everyone else can help as soon as Matthew and I find out.

 

A Short Memorial to Two Fallen Brothers

Friday, December 8th, 2006

     This has been a rough couple of weeks.  A week ago Tuesday, we got word that an F-16CG had crashed in Iraq, and the pilot, Maj Troy Gilbert, was officially listed as "Duty Status – Whereabouts Unknown."  As I checked the news this morning, I saw that they’d finally listed him as KIA.  I didn’t know Troy very well, I only ran into him a handful of times this past summer at Luke AFB when I was in the TX course.  He was Gen Rand’s executive officer or director of staff, something like that.  I had to coordinate with him the one time I flew with the General.  He was a decent guy and a brother Viper driver, and for those reasons alone we in the F-16 community will miss him.  He is survived by his wife and five children. 

    The big, bad surprise was when I phoned home this morning and my Mom asked "Did you know CPT Travis Patriquin?" I immediately knew what had to have happened.  Travis was killed a day and a half ago fighting in Operation IRAQI FREEDOM, he was in a HMMWV that was hit by an IED.  He is survived by his wife and three children.  I confirmed the news via a friend who was close to the scene. 

    Travis and I were stationed in Friedberg, Germany together, he was S-3 (Operations Plans) and I was the Air Liaison Officer for the 1st Brigade, 1st Armored Division.  Travis had just left Special Forces, and had participated in Operation ANACONDA in Afghanistan in 2002.  When I found that out, I mentioned a couple of my buddies had flown missions there; he told me that if I pointed them out to him, they’d never buy drinks as long as he was around. 

    Travis and I went through several pre-deployment exercises together, including at least one at Hohenfels and one at Grafenwoehr.  After talking with him for awhile, we learned that we grew up about two miles away from one another, so there we were in the middle of the training areas in Germany, 5,000 miles from St Louis, talking about our adjoining school districts’ rivalries.  He moved over from the S-3 shop before the Hohenfels rotation to take over S-5 (Civil Affairs) from my other buddy Paul M.  He stuck with that job downrange.  I’ll include some links to various articles about him at the end of the post. 

    I don’t meet very many people who impress me very much anymore.  Travis was one of those few. 

    Shortly before the brigade departed for Iraq, Travis and I spoke to one another for awhile.  The thing I’ll remember most is when he explained that having been special forces, he could ‘Stare down’ almost any other Army officer, especially in an armored unit.  He apparently was making it a point to size up everyone else around him when he arrived in Friedberg.  He wouldn’t tell everyone what he’d been doing before arriving in Germany, he just liked to keep it his own private secret that he had been special forces, while all the other folks around him were ordinary "Ground-pounders."  He said he remembered introducing himself to my deputy "Tank" and me, and asking what we did.  He said his ego quickly deflated when he found out Tank and I were fighter pilots! 

    Travis may not have been a fighter pilot, but he was a warrior of another sort.  He may not have had the eyes of a hawk and the reflexes of a cat.  But like a fighter pilot, he had the moxie to look for a career path that would intentionally put him into harms’ way a long way from home with only a handful of his buddies to fight their way in and fight their way out, the guts to do it, and the patriotism to love doing it. 

    Rest well, brothers! You’ve done everything you could for us.  I hope to carry the torch as well as you did. 

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    Links to relevant articles:  An Army of Run (by Benjamin Cheever in Runners’ World), Return to Ramadi (by Michael Fumento in The Weekly Standard), and Kuwaittimes.net

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11 Dec 2006 Update:   I deleted a link to a news clip from the Chicago Sun and replaced it with one from Stars & Stripes.  For any visitors after this date, it will be transparent.  New LinksSTLtoday.com, good writeup, interview with the family.  KSDK, shorter writeup.  Randuwa, superb words, thanks! Chicago Tribune, decent writeup. 

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13 Dec 2006 Update:  More for Travis:  BLACKFIVE (recommend you scroll down and check out Travis’ PowerPoint show about Ramadi).  Michael Fumento (contains some detail of the IED attack).  Michelle Malkin (quick photo of Travis’ Desk)  See the comments section for this entry, too.  Thanks, Daniel and Matthew; you have company in your grief, from Ramadi to Germany to Japan to St Louis; the Good Lord only knows where else!

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14 Dec 2006 Update:  More on Travis:  Cop The Truth, thanks!  Shreveport Times (Great city, a bunch of us went there after flying into Barksdale on our T-37 cross-country flight).  Patterico’s Pontifications, great stuff, with links to other good milblogs.  American Heroes’ Memorial post.  DefenseLinkUSA Today

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16 Dec 2006 Update:  Still more on Travis, it looks like his PowerPoint presentation is catching on in the Blogosphere.  There are a lot of track-backs to Patterico and Fumento.  One of the sources I read suggested Travis’ vehicle was escorting Lt C
ol (ret) Olliver North and a FoxNews crew.  ON Point Blog.   MilitaryCity.com.  There’s a thread going for him on Lightfighter.net

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16 Dec 2006, 2nd Update:  Finally, the MSM takes notice! Thanks go out to ABC’s Martha Raddatz and David Kerley (great entries here and here)!  

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17 Dec 2006 UpdateThe arrival in St LouisWashington Post.   I’m trying to upload the now-famous PowerPoint presentation on this page.  More from Michelle Malkin‘s blog, plus Hot Air (mostly a tribute to Maj McClung, but contains some footage of SPC Pomante and Travis.

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19 Dec 2006 UpdatePatriot Guard Riders:  Thanks, true Americans!  Never Yet Melted, thanks! Iraq/Afghanistan War Heroes.  COL Peter Mansoor (Ready 6 "Ancient") just weighed in on BLACKFIVE, his comment says everything you need to know, and praise from him is indeed high praise. 

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