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Military News
Face
of Defense: Sailor to
Meet Bone Marrow
Donation’s Recipient
American
Forces Press Service
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WASHINGTON,
May 2008 – When
he’s in Cincinnati
to receive an award
from the Leukemia and
Lymphoma Society, a
senior enlisted sailor
will meet the girl
whose life he saved
with a bone marrow
donation.
Navy
Chief Petty Officer
Willie H. Corey, a
submarine fire control
technician, will be
recognized for his
participation in the
National Marrow Donor
Program.
Corey, a native of
Newport News, Va., has
been a donor on the
NMDP’s registry
since fall 2006.
"When I found out
that the potential
recipient was a little
girl, it was a
no-brainer to donate;
I have a daughter
myself," Corey
said. "The NMDP
really respects the
privacy of the
recipient. They
wouldn't tell me her
name, but they told me
her age. If both
parties agree,
identities are
exchanged after 12
months."
For a successful
transplant, the tissue
type of a bone marrow
donor or a cord blood
unit needs to match
the patient's as
closely as possible.
The closer the match,
the better it is for
the patient.
The NMDP is a
nonprofit organization
that facilitates
marrow and cord blood
transplants between
unrelated people as a
single point of
access. It connects
doctors, donors and
researchers to the
resources they need to
help more people live
longer and healthier
lives. A collaborative
network of leading
national and
international medical
facilities is involved
in the marrow and cord
blood transplantation
process.
"Every day we
have 6,000 men, women
and children worldwide
that search the NMDP
registry for a
life-saving match.
These patients have
leukemia, lymphoma and
other life-threatening
diseases,"
Kristen Spargo, NMDP
spokeswoman, said.
Earlier this year
Corey and the bone
marrow recipient were
introduced over the
phone. "I talked
to her and her aunt.
They sent me before
and after photos from
the operation. The
positive changes in
her were
incredible."
(From a Naval Sea
Systems Command news
release.)
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Chairman
Still Motivated, Inspired by Troops
By
Linda D. Kozaryn
American Forces Press Service
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CHICAGO,
May 2007 – What keeps a military man
like Marine Gen. Peter Pace,
motivated? For the Vietnam veteran
with nearly 40 years service who now
serves as the military’s
highest-ranking officer, the answer to
such a question is simple: talking to
the troops.
“Serving the nation’s men and
women in uniform is not a burden;
it’s an honor, and I’m proud to
have the opportunity to do it,” Pace
told about 1,000 students and alumni
here today attending the 55th annual
management conference of the
University of Chicago Graduate School
of Business.
Following his speech on leadership,
Pace answered questions from the
audience. He talked about how he keeps
his balance, his mentors, ways the
public can support the troops and how
he makes himself available to the
American people.
Since being commissioned in June 1967
after graduating from the U.S. Naval
Academy, Pace has served at every
level of military command. In
September 2005, he became the first
Marine to be appointed as chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In this
position, he serves as the principal
military advisor to the president, the
defense secretary and the National
Security Council.
Asked how he balances the daily
pressures of his duties in Washington,
Pace said he turns to two pictures
under the glass on his desk.
One is of Marine Lance Cpl. Guido
Farinaro, who died in Vietnam in July
1968 while following the orders of 2nd
Lt. Peter Pace. The other is Pfc.
Keith Matthew Maupin, declared missing
after an April 9, 2004, convoy attack
near Baghdad, who up until last week,
was the only unaccounted-for soldier
in Iraq. Three other soldiers have
been missing since a May 12 ambush.
“I keep my balance by remembering my
responsibilities,” he said. “We
work with some incredible young men
and women. If I ever start feeling
down for any reason, all I’ve got to
do is get up from behind my desk, walk
out into the corridor, stop the first
person walking by and just talk to
him, and that boosts me incredibly.”
Asked who his mentors have been, Pace
replied that there have been many, so
he would only name a few. The first he
chose to mention were the young men
like Farinaro who served under him in
combat and died.
“It is their sacrifice for this
country that has kept me on active
duty,” he said. “When I question
how I serve or whether I should serve,
the memory of what I owe them is very
strong in what I decide to do next.”
Pace said a Marine captain named Chuck
Meadows taught him to make decisions.
He also noted that he’d worked for
former Army Chief of Staff Gen. Dennis
Reimer when Reimer was a two-star
general in Korea.
“He invested his leadership time in
helping me understand my potential,”
Pace said. “Every chance he has had
a chance to say something nice about
me, to be supportive of me, to point
people in my direction, he has
done.”
Pace said he tries to give back in
return the help and guidance he’s
been given by Meadows, Reimer and
others to the young people coming up
in the military today.
When a woman asked how people could
best support the troops, Pace replied,
“You just did.”
“Whenever I travel to see the
troops,” he explained, “they ask,
‘Are the American people still with
us?’ Not, ‘What do the people
think about the war we’re in?’
But, ‘Do they still value our
service as military men and women?’
“And it’s questions like (yours)
and other comments of support that
I’ve gotten here so far today, that
allows me to tell them,
‘Absolutely.’”
There are many ways to show support
for the troops, he added. When people
thank troops they see at the airports,
it resonates. When people send
packages, when school children send
notes and letters, that word gets out.
For specific ways to show support, he
told the audience to go to
www.AmericaSupportsYou.com, a Defense
Department Web site that lists
home-front groups that help support
the troops. In Chicago, for example,
he said, people can help the Marine
Corps Law Enforcement Foundation,
which gives the children of fallen
servicemembers scholarships.
“Thank you for asking that
question,” Pace told the woman.
“Retention and recruiting in the
armed forces right now is solid, but
it is fragile.” He said the troops
believe in the mission they’ve got,
and “they believe the American
people appreciate their service even
if they don’t agree on the specifics
of the conflict.”
When one member of the audience asked
Pace if he wouldn’t be better off
back in Washington dealing with the
war than here talking with business
leaders, the slightly stunned audience
broke out in chatter. But the chairman
wasn’t taken aback.
“I’ve already learned a couple of
things today that, had I not come
here, I would not know,” he replied.
Prior to giving his speech, he noted
that he’d met first with a small
group of military veterans now
associated with the school and then
with a group of student leaders. In
both of those forums, he said, he had
question-and-answer periods that
helped him better understand some
issues.
“Each of us have to divide our time
in ways that we feel are
beneficial,” Pace said. “I need to
determine how best to spend my time,
to include how much of my time I
should make myself available to the
citizens of the United States to be
able to ask me their questions in
forums like this outside of
Washington, D.C.
“For me, this is time well spent,
because I am learning and I’m also
making myself available to the
American people, as I believe our
senior leadership should do,” he
concluded.
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Bush
to realign overseas troops
American Forces Press Service
Stuttgart, Germany — President Bush unveiled a historic
realignment of U.S. troops overseas Monday, a move he said
would create a more agile, lethal fighting force while
easing burdens on military families.
Bush said the plan, the most comprehensive U.S. troop shift
since the end of the Cold War, would make U.S. forces quicker
to respond to threats in the war on terrorism. As many as
70,000 troops and 100,000 family members and civilian workers
would return from bases in Europe and Asia.
"The world has changed a great deal, and our posture must change with
it," Bush told the Veterans of Foreign Wars, "for the sake of our
military families, for the sake of our taxpayers and so we can be more effective
in projecting our strength and spreading freedom."
The global realignment includes plans to close some unspecified bases and use
others in Eastern Europe as transit points to send forces quickly from the
United States to trouble spots.
The president's announcement, coming amid Republican criticism of Democrat John
Kerry's fitness to be commander in chief, also served a political purpose,
particularly given that the VFW's 105th annual convention took place in a hotly
contested state. Kerry addresses the VFW on Wednesday.
Bush has been making regular campaign appearances that emphasize his credentials
as commander in chief and leader of the war on terrorism. A week ago, Bush
nominated Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla., to head the CIA. On Aug. 2, he endorsed some
of the recommendations of the commission that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks.
Retired Army general Wesley Clark, a Kerry supporter who once headed NATO forces
in Europe, called Bush's proposal "pure politics." He called it
"a slap in the face of the Europeans" and "more unilateralism on
the part of the administration."
Bush said the troop realignment would alleviate some hardships that servicemembers suffer from frequent transfers and time away from families.
Kerry and his aides have criticized the administration for what they see as
over reliance on National Guard and reserve troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, where many are on extended tours that have created problems for families.
"Our servicemembers will have more time on the home front and more predictability more time for their kids and to spend time with their families at home," Bush said.
The plan, to be implemented over 10 years, would not affect the 172,500 troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Bush dismissed Kerry's pledge to bring an unspecified number of troops home from Iraq in his first six months in office. Bush said it "sends the wrong signal to the enemy, who can easily wait six months and one day. Sends the wrong message to our troops, that completing the mission may not be necessary. Sends the wrong message to the Iraqi people, who wonder whether America means what it says."
The Kerry camp says Bush is mischaracterizing the pledge by leaving out Kerry's conditions.
The realignment plan would affect many of the 200,000 U.S. troops abroad. About half are in Europe, including 70,000 in Germany. The Pentagon told German officials this year that it was thinking about replacing two Army divisions there with smaller, more mobile units. Sophisticated weaponry would be sent to some bases to make up for troop reductions.
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A
Nation in
Mourning
"Columbia's lost. There are no survivors," a
grim-faced President Bush later said in an address to the
American people. "These astronauts knew the dangers and
they faced them willingly, knowing they had a high and noble
purpose in life." (Full
story)
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