January 22, 2003
Dear American Soldier
By
Michelle Malkin
Dear American soldier,
You don't know me, but I
know who you are, and I will not forget.
You are deploying from
Fort Carson and Fort Hood and Fort Bliss and Fort
Stewart. You hail from Middletown and Middleboro and
Greenville and Redding and Thousand Oaks and Maple Tree.
You are white, black, brown and yellow—but
always Americans first.
You are with the
3rd Brigade Combat Team and the
10th Combat Support Hospital and the 571st Air
Ambulance Medical Evacuation Company. You are with the
1st Cavalry Division and the
3rd Infantry Division and the
"Iron Horse" 4th Infantry Division. You are Black
Knights with the
2nd Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment. You are
engineers, drivers and medics in the
13th Corps Support Command.
Your motto is "We Will," "Steadfast
and Loyal,"
"Swift and Deadly," "Always Prepared,"
"First to Fight," and
"No Task Too Tough."
You will be joined
overseas by thousands of sailors and Marines on the
USS Boxer and USS Bonhomme Richard and USS
Cleveland and USS Dubuque and USS Anchorage
and USS Comstock and USS Pearl Harbor. You
will get support in the Gulf from an airborne infantry
brigade, a squadron of F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighters,
and two squadrons of F-16CJ radar-jamming fighters.
You have friends on the
USS Constellation in the Persian Gulf, and the
USS Harry S. Truman in the Mediterranean Sea, and
the carrier USS Abraham Lincoln stationed at
Perth, Australia, and the USNS Yano en route to
the Red Sea, and the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson
on its way to a training mission in the Pacific.
You have classmates and
colleagues and cousins who died at the Pentagon and in
the
Twin Towers on
September 11. You have buddies who took bullets over
the past year in Afghanistan and Kuwait and the
Philippines during
Operation Enduring Freedom. You have uncles and
brothers and fathers and grandfathers who sacrificed
their lives in past wars.
Their deaths haunt you.
Their heroism inspires you. Their footsteps beckon and
you cannot resist.
You have wives who are
tough as nails and husbands who are enormously proud.
You have toddlers who know the colors of the American
flag and grade-schoolers who have memorized
Army verses like these:
The hardest job, the dirtiest
job
Since ever war began
Is picking 'em up and laying 'em down
The job of an infantryman
No mission too difficult
No sacrifice too great
Our duty to the nation
Is the first we're here to state
Our doughboys come from
Brooklyn
Our gunners from Vermont
Our signals from Fort Monmouth
Our engineers DuPont
Against the foes of freedom
We fight for liberty
We make no peace with tyrants
On land or on the sea
As you pack your green
Army duffel bags, press your desert camouflage fatigues,
polish your boots and kiss your families goodbye, please
take these words with you:
Thank you. Thank you for
answering the call to arms. Thank you for being fit and
young and brave and willing. Thank you for loving
freedom enough to put your own life on the line to
defend it.
Pay no attention to
Sean Penn and
Sheryl Crow and
Baghdad Babs. Tune out the half-naked loonies and
Flower Power leftovers. Stand tall. Fight hard. And know
that there are legions of Americans who are boundlessly
grateful for what you have volunteered to do.
We know who you are. We
will not forget. And we will pray every day for your
safe return.
Hoo-ah!
(The Department of
Defense's online thank-you note to the men and women of
the U.S. military can be signed at
http://www.defendamerica.mil/nmam.html.)
Michelle Malkin is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click here
for Peter Brimelow’s review.
Click here
for Michelle Malkin's website.
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CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.