Sunday, July 26, 2009
FORT HOOD SOLDIERS on 2nd TRIP TO IRAQ
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Letters from 3/11 India Btry Afghanistan
Friday, July 17, 2009
Thanks from 2/23 Golf Company, IRAQ



Well, we have officially reached the half way point of our deployment and the Marines here are glad to know it is all downhill from here. Our 4th of July was somewhat uneventful. Those Marines that did not have official duties had a "day off" and we got together to play a game of softball. We all had fun even though we were in the middle of a sand storm. We have been getting sand storms about every other day. Not sure which is better, a sand storm day that is a bit cooler but sand everywhere or a clear day with temperatures blazing.
Many packages continue to arrive and we are so grateful for the support. A few folks that I would like to acknowledge:
- Momma Jodi, Dennis O'Bryant and the folks at "Supporting Our Heroes- Thank you for all the goodies, games and the Beanie Babies. The Farkle game was the first thing to be grabbed by the Marines. As usual the freezer pops did not last long and was very noticeable that the Marines can never get enough of them. Thanks you.
- Peggy Kane- I do remember you seeing us off at our training center a few days before we left. Thank you for your generosity and support. The Marines enjoyed all the snacks, treats and hygiene supplies.
- Laura Kirk, Health to Soldiers and Betty Lou's Inc- once again the treats are very appreciated. The granola bars and the peanut butter balls were devoured by our health nuts, and we have plenty of them here. Thank you!
- James Spliedt and the folks at Agruim U.S. Inc.- Thank you all for your never ending support. It was apparent that the snacks and the jerky were very much appreciated by the Marines by the way they disappeared as soon as the box was opened.
Enclosed are a few pictures of our Marines in action and some of us not in action. We have also updated our website and more pictures can be seen on 2/23 G Co
Thank you all once again,
From the Marines and Sailors of Golf Company 2nd BN 23rd Mar.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Mindful Of Civilians, Pilots In Afghanistan Alter Tactics
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Updates from USMC AR 2/23 G Co. Iraq
Been sitting on your letters for a while now and I am finally able to make some time to thank you and all the folks at Supporting Our Heroes for your time and support. Please pass on to Dennis O. for the beanie babies. We appreciate all that you have done for us. It is very surprising how a Marine's attitude can change when they receive a package in the mail. You my dear have brought quite a few smiles to our Marines here. Thank you. The support that we have been receiving from all back home is unbelievable and heartwarming. There is just not enough thank yous to express how much we appreciate your generosity. We did received the freezer pops in one piece, they did not explode thank goodness. These are the treats that disappear once they get cool. The Marines cannot even wait for them to freeze.
So far we have been here over 3 months and our jobs are slowly coming to an end. With the implementation of the US/Iraqi agreement, our involvement in the cities is winding down. That is what we have named the "responsible draw down." All we would like to know is if this responsible draw down will advance our timeline of going home?
Our duty here has not been too rough for us. As a company we occupied three different Combat Out-Post "COPs" with the living conditions not too bad. With our draw down, we have closed our COPs and returned to our larger camp. We have dubbed this camp "Camp Cup Cake" since it has all the amenities that we lacked at our COPs and we are seeing the Marines getting a bit spoiled even though they deserve every bit of it.
Now that we have a bit more time on our hands, we are getting ready to start a company softball tournament. We have been talking about getting t-shirts made. Enclosed is a logo that was presented. If we are able to find a good local printer to get them done we will be sure to send you one.
Once again Thank you for your support.
From the Marines and Sailors of Golf Company 2nd Battalion 23rd Marines.
1st Sgt Erazmo Ornelas
Monday, July 6, 2009
AFGHANISTAN WAR PHOTOS
Friday, July 3, 2009
I AM A MARINE'S MOM
Letter from HMLA-169
Thursday, July 2, 2009
MONDAY, JUNE 22, 2009

CAMP LEATHERNECK, Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, June 22, 2009 -- Marines with 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, and elements of 5th Battalion, 14th Marine Regiment, arrived in Afghanistan in late April and early May 2009 ready to send a booming message to the enemy.
3rd Bn., 11th Marines out of Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif., is the first artillery battalion to be deployed in their primary mission set since Operation Iraqi Freedom I in March 2003. Task organized for the Afghanistan mission, this battalion brings something extra to the fight. They are the first Marine Corps artillery battalion to deploy with a High-Mobility Air Rocket System, M777A2 howitzers, Q-46A counter-battery radars and a light counter-mortar radar system consolidated under a single composite headquarters.
In years past, artillery battalions deployed with only 155mm howitzers and had to rely on other units to provide the breadth of capabilities available to 3rd Bn., 11th Marines today. "The systems are newer, more accurate and effective than we used to use," said Lt. Col. James C. Lewis, 3rd Bn., 11th Marines battalion commander. "We move quicker, and have a much more tailorable capability for the COIN [Counter Insurgency] fight."
Advances in technology such as the HIMARS, a multiple-launch guided rocket system, and laser range finders that make use of global positioning satellites help the artillery men make precision strikes on enemy targets.
"This isn't your granddaddy's artillery," Lewis said.
"What 3rd Bn., 11th Marines brings is indirect fire support for the close and deep fight," said Maj. Waco Lane, operations officer. "Somebody needs help? We'll shoot."
If an infantry unit calls for indirect fire support, there are a few things to be considered before rounds are sent downrange. Is the target near a sensitive or protected landmark, friendly forces or an innocent civilian population? What type of ammunition will accomplish the mission most effectively? How will weather or climatic conditions effect the flight of the round? And how do all these things figure into the mathematical computations that can put a howitzer round within meters of the desired target from up to 18 miles away.
After these calculations are determined, Marines like Lance Cpl. Fredy A. Villalta, 21, and Lance Cpl. Ernest L. Mastel, 22, field cannoneers with Battery N, 5th Bn., 14th Marines, will be ready to bring the steel rain.
"I look forward to getting on those cannons," said Villalta, a Los Angeles native and Van Nuys High School graduate. That's what I signed on and trained for, he explained.
"I can't wait to do what we trained to do," said Mastel, a Los Angeles Woodrow Wilson High School graduate and professional video gamer for G4-TV. Normally, we fill roles outside our occupational specialties such as military police, base security and convoy operations.
Even with technology and motivated Marines, there are still challenges to overcome. Most of those challenges stem from one primary obstacle – distance.
The farther one is away from a location, the more difficult it is to maintain clear communication and provide logistical support. Even facing challenges like these, the leathernecks of 3rd Bn., 11th Marines exhibit confidence in their unit's ability to be successful.
"We have enough assets to accomplish the mission right now," said Lane, a Southeast Missouri State University graduate and Yucca Valley, Calif., native.
We're here to provide close supporting fires and responsive counter fires in support of Regimental Combat Team 3 within the full spectrum of counter insurgency operations, said Lewis, a University of Nebraska graduate and Lincoln, Neb. native.
To ensure the battalion's mission is successful, the Marines at the guns have to be accurate and quick, he explained. A gun team is normally made up of 10 Marines, working in rotation to support 24-hour operations. Each team is responsible for their gun's maintenance, its accuracy and its own perimeter security.
"Accuracy is number one; getting a good gunnery solution. Number two is quickness; procedurally correct," said Lewis. "If we don't do it, we fail."
The non-commissioned officers on the ground ensure the unit achieves success. Whether it is an active duty Marine or a reservist, the Marines say they know what they have to do to have a successful fire mission.
Reserve artillery Marines don't usually have many opportunity to practice their military occupational skill set, due to their infrequent full-scale training evolutions while stateside in addition to being forward deployed to Iraq in recent years as a provisional rifle company, according to Sgt. Alfredo M. Solis, 25, a 5th Bn., 14th Marines, section leader and Santa Barbara, Calif. native. "It's time for us to shine, and the Marine Corps will see that."
(Report by Sgt. Scott Whittington, Regimental Combat Team 3.)
Friday, June 19, 2009
From HMLA-169 Afghanistan
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Pennsylvania National Guard in Tarmiyah, Iraq

C Co. 1/111 INF 56 SBCT
BEANIE BABIES DONATED TO HEROES

Friday, April 10, 2009
Marines working in Afghanistan
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
HALF BOY, HALF MAN
He's a recent High School graduate; he was probably an average student, pursued some form of sport activities, drives a ten year old jalopy, and has a steady girlfriend that either broke up with him when he left, or swears to be waiting when he returns from half a world away. He listens to rock and roll or hip-hop or rap or jazz or swing and a 155mm howitzer.
He digs foxholes and latrines and can apply first aid like a professional.
He can march until he is told to stop, or stop until he is told to march.
He obeys orders instantly and without hesitation, but he is not without spirit or individual dignity. He is self-sufficient.
He has two sets of fatigues: he washes one and wears the other. He keeps his canteens full and his feet dry.
He sometimes forgets to brush his teeth, but never to clean his rifle. He can cook his own meals, mend his own clothes, and fix his own hurts.
If you're thirsty, he'll share his water with you; if you are hungry, his food. He'll even split his ammunition with you in the midst of battle when you run low.
He has learned to use his hands like weapons and weapons like they were his hands.
He can save your life - or take it, because that is his job.
He will often do twice the work of a civilian, draw half the pay, and still find ironic humor in it all.
He has seen more suffering and death than he should have in his short lifetime.
He has wept in public and in private, for friends who have fallen in combat and is unashamed.
He feels every note of the National Anthem vibrate through his body while at rigid attention, while tempering the burning desire to 'square-away ' those around him who haven't bothered to stand, remove their hat, or even stop talking.
In an odd twist, day in and day out, far from home, he defends their right to be disrespectful.
Just as did his Father, Grandfather, and Great-grandfather, he is paying the price for our freedom. Beardless or not, he is not a boy. He is the American Fighting Man that has kept this country free for over 200 years.
He has asked nothing in return, except our friendship and understanding. Remember him, always, for he has earned our respect and admiration with his blood.
And now we even have women over there in danger, doing their part in this tradition of going to War when our nation calls us to do so.
A short lull, a little shade and a picture of loved ones in their helmets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Keep Them In Your Prayers
Monday, February 9, 2009
More from SgtMaj Lewallen
The SgtMaj also sent his USMC Challenge Coin. These coins are collected by the men and used in oh so many ways..... there are stories connected to each and every one collected and I'd love to hear your story if you'd care to share it. This coin is very special to this Momma and it will be treasured for a long, long time..... Oorah! 
Thank you from the 1/3 Marines in Iraq
e. Their mail is being forwarded to their home duty station and we have sent out our last Support Boxes to them in Iraq. This morning the mail carrier left quite a surprise in our mail box. It was a box FROM Iraq. The SgtMaj sent an American Flag that had been flown over their Camp in Iraq and a Certificate of Authenticity. He also sent a letter of appreciation and an USMC Challenge Coin.Tuesday, January 27, 2009
05 Jan 2009:
To the Friends and Supporters of 3/7,
Once again, I'm guilty of being tardy with my update; hopefully you'll forgive me--we've been extremely engaged with our operations over here.
We were completely blessed with the overwhelming show of affection and care during the holidays; I can't say enough to express our appreciation and gratitude. Our lives here have most definitely been touched by your warmhearted generosity. 1stSgt Elvis Tate has done an outstanding job with getting care packages to the Marines of our unit and will continue to do so. I'll be withdrawing myself as a collection point for other Marines as this duty is currently under good hands.

I've attached a picture of us so you can see how handsome we are :) I'm the fourth in from the left, the most handsome one. Also, after several months of receiving packages, I'd like to relay some of my observations on what items are most needed and used. I've been told that this is very useful information, so I hope it helps:
-Candy: sometimes boxes break and loose pieces of candy will spill out. If you send candy, choose the kind that comes individually wrapped and are contained within a bigger bag. This way, there is less chance of spillage and contamination and a Marine can take a bag with him and pass out individual pieces to his buddies; and since the pieces are individually wrapped, they can be stuffed inside cargo pockets or packs. This is a good time to send chocolates because the weather is cold. Chocolate is not a good item in the summertime.
-Beef jerky: this is a big favorite; all Marines love beef jerky.
-Canned foods (fruits/vegetables/soup): not in demand because we don't carry can openers or Tupperware or all have access to microwaves. If you send fruit, send dried fruits. If you send soup, send the type where the container is heatable.
-Socks: Marines are authorized to wear two types of socks; boot socks and physical training (PT) socks. Boot socks must be black or brown, and need to be longer than the height of the boot top. PT socks should be white and be low-cut around the ankles.
-Hygiene items: this is a tricky one since every Marine has his own preferences of brands and products. My suggestion is to send hygiene items after you've corresponded with a Marine and have learned what he prefers. Now this will be difficult because most Marines are humble and won't ask for anything or admit that they want anything, so you might have to be persistent. What I've noticed is that a higher quality product will get ooh's and ahh's while the more obscure items are usually the last to be plucked from a box.
-Magazines/Movies/CDs: recognizable magazines are picked up and read because they're familiar. The more unique "hometown" publications are not as popular. I've noticed that CDs in general are not very popular because it is hard for Marines to carry discs around and have a device to play the CDs. With DVDs, I suggest sending a movie that is requested versus sending the latest popular release. Or send a rare movie that is not likely to be already floating around.
-Closed-toe shower shoes: we recently received several pairs of rubber shoes designed with holes in them. These are great but the sizes were too small. For footwear, most Marines wear sizes 10-12.
-Protein powder: Marines exercise a lot and consume a lot of protein powder. If protein powder/bars/weight gainers are sent, I suggest finding products that are lactose free for those Marines who are allergic to dairy.
This is all that I can recall at the moment. Feel free to contact me anytime for input on any questions you may have.
I want to thank the following individuals for their continued support and kindness:
Angel E., Kathleen S., Sandy D., Mama Jodi, Mary Jo F., James S., Jennifer C., Rosalie G., Darrell and Carol H., Cindy C., Carolyn B., Boyle, Barbara W., Peggy V., Nancy J., Prayer Angels for the Military, MOMS for the Military, St. Mary Magdalena School, and Cub Scout Pack 362. I apologize if I left anyone out...I'll make it up to you next time! Thanks so much!
Humbly Yours,
Lenny Tran
Friday, January 9, 2009
THANKS! From Task Force 1/3
I wanted to pass on the sincere appreciation from all the Marines and Sailors of 1st Battalion 3rd Marines for all the thoughtful care packages. Many of my men are on their first deployment, let alone first combat deployment, so it can be a difficult adjustment, but with all your support it makes it easier. It is good to know that there are so many caring Americans that continue to support the men and women fighting this war on terrorism.
We only have a little time left now and I ask that is you had plans on sending more care packages, please do so in the next couple of days so it makes it to us prior to getting forwarded back to
Thanks again for all the great support, take care
Semper Fidelis!
R/S
Sergeant Major Richard Lewallen
Task Force 1/3
3445-325
HERO SUPPORTERS,
THANK YOU for all your help in sending Support Boxes to this Task Force Unit. Since mail cut off is early February and it takes 1 to 2 weeks for mail to arrive, we'll be sending out this week and all next week to this Unit. If you have anything you'd like to send, please call or email. 806.898.0356 or Jodi@SupportingOurHeroes.com. From what I've heard, the last month of deployment is one of the hardest, so we'll be sending a lot to our guys to try to help them through that mail-less last month.
Semper Fi
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
From our 2ndLt Lenny Tran
Sorry for not writing sooner; I just returned back from a mission that kept me out for a little while. As it turns out, after weeks of planning and coordination for the move to our current position, we've just received orders to move right back to where we were originally. Needless to say, not many people in my unit are happy about this. So now we have to pack up everything again and do this all over. My address won't be affected, though.
Oh, I forgot to tell you; it was my birthday last week. It's been so
hectic that I haven't really told anyone--I nearly forgot myself, haha. Believe it or not, it was on Christmas. And Christmas itself was good; we hardly noticed anything different, though. It was pretty much business as usual. New Year's came and went the same way. My fellow Lieutenant friends and I spent a couple of hours commiserating together about what we'd be doing if we weren't over here. We pitied ourselves for a little bit, but realized that we're here because we're needed here. And I realized that I'd probably never get to know you or about your family if I wasn't over here, so I'm actually glad for the deployment.
I have been trying to play Mattie's guitar every chance I get. My buddy snapped a couple photos of me playing it, so I'll send them to you and Mattie when I retrieve them from his camera. I haven't been able to use the vacuum much because of all my missions and because my living space is just a transient one right now. But the next move should be (hopefully) permanent for the rest of the deployment. It's worked out so far though; thanks so much for it!
Once again, thanks so much for everything. You've been so wonderful to me. Let me know what your New Year's resolutions are. Talk to you soon!
Always,
Lenny
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Retired Marine LtGen Victor H. Krulak, dies at 95
Retired Marine Lt. Gen. Victor H. "Brute" Krulak, celebrated for his leadership in World War II, Korea and Vietnam and for his authoritative book on the Marines, "First to Fight," died Monday at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla. He was 95 and had been in declining health for several years.
Born in Denver on Jan. 7, 1913, Krulak was a 1934 graduate of the Naval Academy -- where he picked up his nick name, a jest on the fact he was 5 foot 4. As a junior officer he served in Marine actions in Central America, where his views on counterinsurgency were formed.
In World War II, as a lieutenant colonel, he led a battalion in a weeklong battle as a diversionary raid to cover the invasion of Bougainville. Although wounded, he refused to be evacuated. For his bravery he was awarded the Navy Cross. Under heavy fire from the Japanese, the Navy sent patrol boats to evacuate wounded Marines. Krulak befriended one of the young commanders, John F. Kennedy. Decades later the two shared a drink of whiskey in the Oval Office after Kennedy was elected president.
After World War II, Krulak held several key jobs, including commander of the 5th Marine Regiment and later chief of staff for the 1st Marine Division during the war in Korea. Later he served as commander of the Marine boot camp in San Diego and, from 1962 to 1964, as special assistant for counterinsurgency to the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
As commanding general of Fleet Marine Force Pacific he made 54 trips to Vietnam. His ideas about mining Haiphong Harbor and relying on small unit actions in South Vietnam to win the support of the populace clashed with the strategy of Army Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of all U.S. troops from 1964 to 1968. He opposed Westmoreland's decision to establish an outpost at Khe Sanh, which resulted in one of the bloodiest sieges of the war.
Krulak had hoped to become Marine Corps commandant, but President Johnson in 1968 nominated Gen. Leonard Chapman Jr. Krulak retired and began a second career as an executive for Copley newspapers and as a columnist. He retired as an executive in 1977 but continued to write. In 1984, his book "First to Fight: An Inside View of the U.S. Marine Corps" was published, examining the history and culture of the Marine Corps. It remains on the official reading list for Marines and has been said to carry the DNA of the organization that prides itself on being the worst enemy that a foe of the United States can imagine.
"The Marines are an assemblage of warriors, nothing more," Krulak wrote. He called on Marines to maintain a "religious dedication" to being ready to "go and win -- and then come back alive." He disdained Pentagon bureaucracy and, even as he celebrated the Corps' history, he called for Marines to "remain on the cutting edge of the technology that will keep its specialty effective."
Bing West, former assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan administration and author of books on Marines in Vietnam and Iraq, said Krulak "was legendary for the depth of his intelligence."
In a 2007 speech to the Marine Corps Assn., Defense Secretary Robert Gates praised Krulak for "overcoming conventional wisdom and bureaucratic obstacles thrown in one's path." Among other things, Krulak advocated that the Marines form a special forces unit when other Marine leaders opposed the idea.
All three of Krulak's sons served in Vietnam: Charles and William as Marine infantry officers, Victor Jr. as a Navy chaplain. After retiring from the Marines, William followed his brother into the Episcopal clergy. Charles, as a general, served as Marine commandant from 1995 to 1999, and followed in his father's footsteps as an innovator and champion of the enlisted man. Along with his sons, Krulak is survived by four grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.
Krulak's wife, Amy, died in 2001. Funeral services are set for 2 p.m. Jan. 8 at the chapel at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.
Friday, January 2, 2009
Is it safe here?
Sent in by Lisa Turnbull with AmericInn International Lodge and Suites. (Pampa Texas is about 26 miles east of Borger, the hometown of Supporting Our Heroes.)
Well I thought you might get a kick out of what happened to me when I was in Pampa, TX a couple of years ago. I work for AmericInn International, a hotel chain based in the Midwest. One of my jobs is to do sales and marketing for new hotels coming on line and visit the area BEFORE the hotel opens. Since the Pampa hotel wasn’t opened yet, I had to look for a room outside of our chain and one of our company’s policies is that we can NOT stay in hotels that have exterior corridor entrances, meaning you can access the door from the outside of the building and that they don’t have an interior hallway. When I was on line looking to book a hotel room in Pampa for the pre-opening, I didn’t have much of a choice and had to book a room at a hotel that only had exterior entrances. My only other choice at the time was to stay in a hole in the wall hotel or drive 2 hours round trip everyday to Amarillo, which I really didn’t want to do.
So I load up my bags, hopped on a plane from Minneapolis and off to Pampa, TX I go. Pampa is a relatively small town, about an hour outside of Amarillo and the AmericInn, when completed, was the first new hotel there in over 20 years.
Anyway, I drive up to this hotel and hesitantly get out of my car. I am very nervous, which is unusual for me, as I travel 38 weeks out of the year by myself and think of myself as one smart/tough woman (until today). Walking in confidently, shoulders back, chest out, here I go…it can’t be all that bad, can it? Well to my dismay the lobby is PACKED with a bunch of burly looking, hard ass men and I thought I was going to faint, I can’t stay here, I said to myself, I will get strangled, raped, something horrible is going to happen to me, eh gads, I must run! But no, I thought I would just slowly walk up to the front desk and show them that I wasn’t scared (yeah, right), and check things out. So as quietly as I could, I said to the gal behind the front desk, “am I going to be safe staying here”, as I looked back over my shoulder at the group of men. To my horror, she started cracking up and laughing so hard it seemed like forever before she could compose herself. Then she looked at me and said “miss, you couldn’t be safer any where in the world, you see all those guys there, they are secret service agents for VP Dick Cheney who is in town, and you just happen to have 2 of them on either side of your room”, Oh my gosh, did I ever feel like an idiot…so, it goes to show you, don’t always judge people by what they look/dress like, ‘cause you never know who might be staying in the room next door!
Lisa
Our City Girl, Street Smart, Lisa has had quite a "country girl" education with the building of the AmericInn Hotels in Borger and Pampa. The one in Borger was the FIRST AMERICINN built in the entire state of TEXAS! and it is owned by a MARINE! OORAH!