Followers

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Bike for the Beirut Vets

Beirut Veterans Tribute 

Reported by: Ben Manning

Friday, Oct 10, 2008 @05:48pm EST

HOLLIDAYSBURG, BLAIR COUNTY




Huntingdon 
County man will bike more than 500 miles trying to get a commemorative stamp for Beirut Veterans.




Mike Bangert served as a Marine in 
Beirut. He got their just after the October 23rd 1983 bombing. 241 servicemen were killed in the barracks bombing. 18 of them were from 
Pennsylvania.




Now that we're coming up on the 25th anniversary he wants to honor the veterans that lost their lives. He took off Friday morning on a 550 mile ride from Hollidasyburg to 
Camp 
Lejeune in 
North Carolina. He’s using the ride to draw attention to House Resolution 887. That bill calls for a US Postal Stamp to honor the Marines' peace keeping mission in 
Beirut. He’s already got 20 congressman signed on to co-sponsor the bill. He needs a total of 50. Congressmen Bill Shuster and John Murtha are on the list.



He’s hoping to convince people along his bike route to call their Congressman and get them to co-sponsor the bill.


Bangert will arrive in 
Camp 
Lejeune for the remembrance ceremony marking the 25th anniversary of the 
Beirut bombing.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

In Honor of a Hero

In Honor of a Hero

As part of the Project 2996 - today we remember, and honor the victims of the September 11 attacks.

never enough of it
time marches on
trickles away
each day
dies
and
each day
a new dawn
time marches on
never enough of it

John Chipura knew how precious life was. He learned that lesson at age 21, on October 23, 1983 as a Marine in Beirut.

John was a 21 year old radio operator on his second tour as a member of the 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment 24th Marine Amphibious Unit. He was stationed in Beirut when terrorists with a truck bomb took out the battalion headquarters barracks and killed 241 of his fellow leathernecks and service men.

John dodged death and came home from that tragedy. He didn't speak much about it, he didn't dwell on the fact that he survived because he was leaving the barracks early to assume his post as a radio operator when the bomb exploded. He didn't dwell on the fact that the man walking just behind him was killed.

John's brother, Gerard Chipura, a fireman with Ladder Company 148, said his brother never forgot his experiences as a Marine. "We didn’t know it, but John kept in touch with all the families from the bombing," his brother Gerard said, "I don't think John ever thought he would live to see anything worse than what he saw that day in Beirut."

He was marked by the experience. "When he came back, he was more of a hugging person. He knew how precious life was because it could all be over in a second." - Nancy Chipura, John's sister

His brother Gerard said John was missing for three whole days in Beirut before he was able to get through to the family and let them know he was fine. He said the 9/11 deja-vu experience was painfully "surreal." "My sister said, 'I'm going to give him three days.' But he hasn't shown up yet. Not this time," said his brother.

John lived his life to the end as a hero.

Gerard and his family find solace in the words that John wrote in November 2000, on the occasion of the Corps 225 birthday: "We Marines are truly blessed. We get to enjoy the sweet taste of this Freedom because we know its price."

“He was a true Marine" . - FDNY Lt. John Atwell

After his honorable discharge from the Marines in 1987, John desired to continue serving the community and joined the city Police Department in 1987. He was assigned to the 72nd Precinct in his old neighborhood, Sunset Park, for seven years. John devoted three years service in Brooklyn South Narcotics and then returned to the 72nd Precinct as a detective.

“As a police officer he was always looking to clean up the neighborhood and help other families. He was very caring, and nothing got in his way or bothered him.” - Gina DeFalco, John's Fiancee.

After 12 years of service to the NYPD, John yearned for the camaraderie of the firehouse; his brother, Gerard, was a fireman, as their father, Anthony, had been. In August, 1998, John achieved his dream.

Following the footsteps of his father, Anthony Chipura, John joined the city Fire Department. "He knew you work as a team, as a unit in the Fire Department -- he liked that,' said his brother. "He always thought people call the Police Department when there's a problem, to get somebody bad, but you call the Fire Department when people needed help."

Graduating from firefighter training in 1998, John Chipura was assigned to Engine Co. 219, Brooklyn, for one year. He then rotated through Ladder Co. 81, South Beach, and Engine Co. 80 in Manhattan. John had recently returned to Engine Co. 219 to once again serve Downtown Brooklyn.

On Sept. 11, he arrived at Engine 219 to work the day tour and was detailed to Ladder Co. 105, which is housed in the same location. After reports of the first attack, he called his sister, Nancy Chipura, who worked on the 69th Floor of Tower 1. He was unable to make contact. Just before responding to the World Trade Center, John called his fiancee, Gina DeFalco, who also worked Downtown, for more information about Nancy. He received no word about his sister when he arrived at the scene at 8:45 a.m. with Ladder 105. “There wasn’t any news,” said Ms. DeFalco, “but later, when I heard that Nancy was safe, I called John to tell him. But his ladder company had already left.” John and the five other firefighters in the truck have not been heard from since.

Witnesses told the family he was last seen assisting in the evacuation of many people from Tower 2. "He was inside when it collapsed," said his brother. "I know he was looking for my sister."

Mr. Chipura and Ms. DeFalco, who met through a friend in the Fire Department, had planned to marry just six weeks after Sept. 11. "Getting married was the sole focus of his being for the last few months," said his brother. "He was 39-years-old and finally found the right girl. He held her so close to his heart."

Gerard Chipura said his brother was always trying to help people and make them "feel good." "He wanted to make everybody happy. He didn't want anybody to be upset," said his brother. "When John was not serving the community, he was serving his family and friends. He was a great conversationalist, problem solver, hard worker and friend," said his brother. "John embraced hobbies such as country dancing and motorcycling because he liked the sense of community he found."

John Chipura was a mentor for many at Boy Scout Troop 21. He was a member of the troop since 1974 and went on to serve as assist scout master until he was lost in the attack. He was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion, the Iwo Jima Association and the Beirut Veterans Memorial Association. John was also a member of St. Joseph and St. Thomas Parish, Pleasant Plains.

His mother, Jane Chipura, died in 1994 and his father, Anthony, died in 1996. In addition to his brother, Gerard, and his sister, Nancy Chipura, surviving are his twin sister, Susan Cohen; another sister, Eileen Cella; and several nieces and nephews. John also left behind the love of his life, Gina DeFalco.

Dear John,

In the blink of an eye
Our lives went awry
Not a day has gone by
That we all do not cry

For what we had
For what was planned
For what took place
For what was yet to be

For births, promotions, holidays, birthdays,
graduations, bar mitzvahs
Celebrated without you, but always thinking of you
Another blink of an eye

And a year has gone by
How can it be?
It went so fast and yet so much has passed
So many tears, can it only be a year?

Lives went on, go on, different, not the same
We try, we share, we wonder why
We try to make sense of that blink of an eye
We try to make each blink count

We try to do what you would want us to
We try to make that blink of an eye
Mean something.

Help us, show us, tell us
Be there as you always were
In our hearts, in our thoughts
In every blink of our eyes.

With all our love always,

Your family, friends, fiancé and Mom-to-be

Except for the short poem at the beginning of this post, none of these words are mine. They are culled from various articles on the internet. I have never met John Chipura, but I wish I had the opportunity to do so. In life, John touched so many lives, not only his family and friends, but also, every person he came into contact with. Serving as a Marine, John protected our freedom, and as police officer and a fireman, John helped make so many people safe.

I feel a special kind of love for John Chipura, and I thank G-d for men like him.

This Tribute was originally posted on September 11, 2006, and is reposted today as part of this year's Project 2996. The original post can be found here.

His resting place shall be in the Garden of Eden.
Therefore, the Master of mercy will care for him
under the protection of His wings for all time
And bind his soul in the bond of everlasting life.
God is his inheritance and he will rest in peace
and let us say Amen.

Posted by LindaSoG at September 11, 2008 12:01 AM

Friday, September 05, 2008

When will we get our Recognition?????

Mickey Mouse Gets Greater Recognition Than U.S. Marines
A U.S. Marine wipes a tear from his eye minutes after a truck bomb blew up a building housing U.S. Marines in Beirut killing 241 U.S. service personnel in Oct. 1983. (Photo by Claude Salhani) U.S. postage stamp of Mickey Mouse. (USPS)
TOOLBAR
U.S. Marine veterans who served in Beirut during the deployment of the multinational force in 1982-83 and families of the victims who gave their lives in the service of peace are discovering that the U.S. Postal Service reserves greater recognition to Mickey Mouse than to fallen Marines.

The Beirut Veterans Association has been struggling with the Post Office bureaucracy for nearly 25 years -- in fact next Oct. 23 will mark the 25th commemoration of the attack on the U.S. Marine compound near Beirut Airport in which 241 U.S. servicemen, the vast majority Marines, lost their lives when a truck filled with explosives rammed into the Battalion Landing Team building where the Marines were housed. It was described as the largest non-nuclear explosion in history and marked the beginning of a shadowy war which continues to this day.

The Marines, who are used to fighting tough battles seem, however, to be facing a losing fight with the United States Postal Service (USPS). Despite numerous attempts and petitions to have a stamp issued, the USPS -- and the powers that be in Washington, D.C. -- prefers to have the whole incident forgotten. The "official" reason from the Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee for refusing to issue a stamp commemorating the Marines' deployment and the greatest loss in human lives the corps sustained since the WWII battle of Iwo Jima is supposedly based on standing rules not to commemorate disasters.

According to David Failor, the executive director of Stamp Services of the USPS, the committee has a "longstanding general policy not to honor the victims of tragic situations, including natural disaster, acts of violence and catastrophes."

Randy Gaddo, the president of the Beirut Veterans Association (BVA) said he was "shocked and appalled at this decision and especially at the characterization of our killed-in-action Marines, sailors and soldiers as 'victims' of a tragic situation."

The U.S. servicemen killed in Lebanon, says Gaddo, "were not victims" They were sent to Beirut on a new, "untested and dangerous mission: Peacekeeping." And they were the first casualties in the global war on terror, and were killed in action.

Party politics and who is or is not to blame for placing the Marines in harm's way is not the object of this exercise. What the BVA is attempting to do is keep the memory of those who died in the quest for peace in the Middle East alive. No doubt that deserves a stamp.

There are numerous examples contradicting the committee's assertion that their denial is based on existing policy; Some examples:

-- The Liberty Bell stamp: on July 8, 1776, the Liberty Bell is said to have rung out from the tower of Independence Hall summoning the citizens of Philadelphia to hear the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence by Colonel John Nixon. The bell is forever associated with one of the most violent eras of American history as Americans fought to forge a bold new nation. The bell later became an icon for another violent chapter in American history when abolitionists adopted it as their symbol to end slavery.

-- The Purple Heart stamp: is awarded to any member of the Armed Force or any civilian national of the United States who, while serving with one of the U.S. Armed Services, has been wounded or killed.

-- Sugar Ray Robinson stamp: paying homage to a man who represents the most elementally violent sport of boxing.

-- National WWII Memorial, Spanish American War, Korean War, Civil War, Vietnam War stamps: all representing violent acts and all which included catastrophes of epic proportion, including the attack on Pearl Harbor.

-- Breast Cancer, Prostate Cancer and Hospice Care stamps: representing victims of a tragic illness and disease.

Stamps have also been issued recognizing ducks, Star Wars, a silver coffee pot, Marvel Comics superheroes, the Muppets, tropical fruit, Daffy Duck, Wily Coyote, the Roadrunner, Minnie Mouse and Mickey Mouse.

We join the Beirut Veterans in asking the Post Master General to reconsider the BVA's request for a commemorative stamp to be issued. If Mickey and Minnie Mouse deserve a stamp, so does the memory of those who "came in peace."

Thursday, July 10, 2008

The Iranian Money Trail where does it go?

"Taken from the NY Sun, we are still looking for damages from the Iranians, and not received anything as of yet. Why do some politicians what to talk to this regime? "



Victims of the 1983 bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut cannot attempt to seize funds belonging to Iran from international development banks or from state-run banks based in Japan and Korea, a federal judge has ruled.

Judge Royce Lamberth ruled yesterday that the institutions, including the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, have sovereign immunity and are exempt from most legal process.

In 2007, Judge Lamberth ruled that Iran was legally and financially responsible for the bombing because the Islamic nation funded and trained the terrorist group that carried it out, Hezbollah. He awarded the victims nearly $2.7 billion.

The summonses issued to the banks were some of more than two dozen issued by lawyers for the victims to multinational corporations and other entities earlier this year in a quest to track down Iranian money.

Judge Lamberth declined a request by a Japanese bank to sanction attorneys for the bombing victims for going after the state-run banks, but he gave the victims' lawyers a warning. "Plaintiffs' counsel has come dangerously close to such sanctionable conduct," the judge wrote. He said no punishment was warranted because "plaintiffs' counsels' misstatements of law may be attributed to lack of relevant legal expertise and incompetence."

A lawyer for the victims, David Cook, said he respected Judge Lamberth's rulings. "We are in the path of justice in enforcing this $2,656,944,877 judgment. Chasing around Iran down the path will not be easy effortless or free. Iran will never stop. But one day ... we will catch up," he said. He declined to comment on the judge's warning.

Mr. Cook said none of the writs served on multinational corporations or banks through the federal court in Washington had yet turned up Iranian funds, but that he is pursuing similar claims in four or five other American courts.

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

And you would like to talk to these people????

It seems like we have been shouting about this for 25 years, new proof appears thanks to the pajamas media blog. Click the more link to view the entire post.



"The men who ordered the destruction of the Pan Am flight over Lockerbie and the bombings of the Marine Corps barracks in Lebanon, the Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, and the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia are pursuing the nuclear program in Iran and with one goal in mind: to obtain The Bomb."

And they want to destroy you....... (more)

Sunday, June 15, 2008

BETTER LATE THAN NEVER GREAT MESSAGE FROM RANDY GADDO

PRESIDENT BEIRUT VETERANS OF AMERICA



MEMORIAL DAY IN PEACHTREE CITY, Georgia
May 26, 2008
Guest Speaker's Comments
Guest Speaker: Randy Gaddo, Chief Warrant Officer-4, USMC (Retired)
THANK YOU MARINE - AND THANKS TO ALL OF YOU FOR BEING HERE TODAY… MEMORIAL DAY IS ALL ABOUT REMEMBERING, AND WHEN YOU LEAVE HERE TODAY I WANT YOU TO REMEMBER A FEW VERY IMPORTANT THINGS ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED IN BEIRUT 25 YEARS AGO… THERE ARE SO MANY THINGS I WANT TO TELL YOU BUT WE DO NOT HAVE TIME HERE. BUT, I WANT YOU TO REMEMBER THAT 270 U.S. SERVICEMEN DIED IN BEIRUT BETWEEN 1982 AND 1984. I WANT YOU TO REMEMBER THAT WE KNOW NOW THAT THEY WERE THE FIRST CASUALTIES IN THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERROR. I WANT YOU TO REMEMBER THAT WHAT HAPPENED IN BEIRUT 25 YEARS AGO HAD A DIRECT CONNECTION TO WHAT HAPPENED ON SEPTEMBER 11TH, 2001. IT ALSO HAS A DIRECT CONNECTION TO THE WAR WE NOW FIGHT IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN AND ELSEWHERE…
BUT IN ORDER TO REMEMBER WE GENRALLY NEED SOME SORT OF MEMORY TRIGGER, SOMETHING THAT WILL HELP US REMEMBER. FOR THOSE OF US WHO WERE THERE, WE HAVE OUR TRIGGERS AND THERE'S NOT A DAY GOES BY THAT SOMETHING DOESN'T REMIND US.
SO I AM GOING TO SHARE WITH YOU SOME THINGS ABOUT THE DAY OF THE BEIRUT BOMBING, OCTOBER 23, 1983…SOME THINGS I REMEMBER SO THAT YOU ALSO WILL HAVE A MEMORY TRIGGER TO REMEMBER.
I REMEMBER A DAY VERY MUCH LIKE THIS ONE HERE TODAY, PLEASANT, SUNNY, A LITTLE COOL, LIGHT BREEZE, QUIET, VERY QUIET…IN HINDSIGHT, TOO QUIET. IT WAS A SUNDAY. SUNDAY HAD GENERALLY BECOME A DAY OF REST FOR BEIRUT…I DON'T KNOW WHY, MAYBE BECAUSE AFTER CONSTANT FIGHTING THE REST OF THE WEEK EVERYONE JUST NEEDED A DAY OFF. AT ANY RATE, IT HAD BECOME A DAY WHEN U.S. SERVICEMEMBERS WOULD BE GIVEN AN EXTRA RATION OF SLEEP. AND OMLETTES. I REMEMBER WE NORMALLY HAD A HOT BREAKFAST, AND OMLETTES, ON SUNDAYS IN THE MESS HALL THAT WAS IN THE LOWER LEVEL OF THE BARRACKS. NO MORE OMLETTES AFTER OCTOBER 23RD.
ON THAT OCTOBER MORNING I HAD GOTTEN UP EARLY BECAUSE I HAD WORK TO DO. I HAD EIGHT ROLLS OF FILM I HAD TO DEVELOP AND PRINT BEFORE I HELPED THE REST OF THE MARINES IN MY UNIT WATER PROOF OUR BUNKER BECAUSE WE WERE GOING INTO THE RAINY SEASON. SO AT 6 A.M. I WAS HALFWAY OVER TO THE BARRACKS WHICH WAS ABOUT A MINUTE WALK FROM MY TENT…AND I REMEMBER THE BIRDS WERE SINGING LOUDER THAN I'VE EVER HEARD BIRDS SING. I MEAN IT WAS LIKE A SYMPHONY. MAYBE BECAUSE THERE WAS NO SHOOTING IN THE MOUNTAINS, NO ARTILLERY IN THE DISTANCE. MAYBE THE BIRDS WERE TRYING TO TELL ME SOMETHING. I WAS THE ONLY PERSON MOVING AROUND AT THAT POINT. MOST EVERYONE ELSE WAS SLEEPING, OR ON GUARD DUTY. MAYBE IT WAS THE BIRDS WHO TOLD ME I NEEDED A CUP OF COFFEE BEFORE I WENT TO WORK. SO I TURNED AROUND AND WENT BACK TO THE COMBAT OPERATIONS CENTER AND GOT A CUP OF JAVA AND SAT DOWN AT MY LITTLE FIELD DESK TO PLAN MY WORK. ABOUT 20 MINUTES LATER I STARTED TO PUSH MYSELF OUT OF MY CHAIR TO HEAD BACK TO THE BARRACKS…WHEN I HEARD AN M-16 FIRE TWO OR THREE SHOTS. I STOPPED BECAUSE IT WAS NOT A SOUND I EXPECTED TO HEAR ON SUCH A BEAUTIFUL QUIET MORNING. A COUPLE OF SECONDS LATER I FELT A WARM RUSH OF AIR ON MY FACE, LIKE A BLAST FURNACE, THEN HEARD AND FELT A THUNDEROUS THUD THAT ECHOED OFF THE HILLS AROUND US…AND A SECOND LATER I WAS LIFTED UP AND THROWN BACK SEVERAL FEET LIKE A RAG DOLL. IT FELT LIKE I'D BEEN HIT IN THE CHEST WITH A 2x4. I WAS DAZED BUT I HAD MY HELMET AND FLAK JACKET ON AND THAT PROBABLY ABSORBED A LOT OF THE SHOCK OF THE BLAST WAVE THAT HAD HIT ME. MY COMPATRIOTS IN THE TENT HAD ALL BEEN IN THEIR SLEEPING BAGS ON COTS AND THEY HAD BEEN UNCEREMONIOUSLY THROWN ON THE DIRT AND WERE SQUIRMING AROUND IN THEIR SLEEPING BAGS WONDERING HOW THEY'D ENDED UP ON THE GROUND. I THOUGHT WE'D BEEN HIT BY A ROCKET OR ARTILLERY ROUND SO I GOT THEM ALL IN OUR BUNKER WHICH WAS RIGHT BEHIND THE TENT AND WENT OUTSIDE TO SEE WHAT HAD HAPPENED. I EXPECTED TO SEE A SMOLDERING HOLE OUTSIDE OUR TENT. WHAT I DID SEE IS SOMETHING I'LL NEVER FORGET. OVER IN THE DIRECTION OF THE BARRACKS WHERE I'D BEEN HEADED 20 MINUTES EARLIER, I SAW A MUSHROOM CLOUD RISING SEVERAL HUNDRED FEET IN THE AIR…I REMEMBER IT WAS STILL RISING. I TOOK OFF RUNNING TOWARDS IT AND AS I CAME AROUND THE CORNER OF A BUILDING THAT WAS BETWEEN ME AND THE BARRACKS, I REMEMBER THAT ALL THE LEAVES HAD BEEN STRIPPED FROM THE TREES AND BUSHES EVERYWHERE AND WERE LYING ON THE GROUND. I KEPT RUNNING TOWARDS THE MUSHROOM CLOUD AND AS I CAME AROUND ANOTHER CORNER WHERE NORMALLY I WOULD HAVE SEEN THE BARRACKS, I SAW THE CONTROL TOWER OF THE BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. I STOPPED DEAD IN MY TRACKS BECAUSE THAT WASN'T WHAT I WAS SUPPOSED TO BE SEEING. I REMEMBER THE FEELING THAT THINGS WENT INTO SLOW MOTION FOR A WHILE THEN. I COULD SEE THE MUSHROOM CLOUD STILL RISING BUT THINGS WERE FALLING TOO…A GRAY, HEAVY DUST WAS DRIFTING DOWN COVERING EVERYTHING LIKE A THICK BLANKET. AS MY BRAIN STARTED ENGAGING AGAIN I FOCUSED CLOSER IN AND BEGAN TO SEE THINGS, HUMAN THINGS, THAT SNAPPED ME BACK TO REALITY BECAUSE..WITHOUT GOING INTO DETAIL… IT WAS OBVIOUS MANY MEN HAD DIED THERE.
I RAN BACK TO THE COMBAT OPERATIONS CENTER TO REPORT WHAT I'D SEEN AND GET HELP. I SAW MY BOSS, MAJOR BOB JORDAN, COMING OUT OF HIS HOOTCH COVERED WITH DUST AND LOOKING DAZED BECAUSE HE'D BEEN BLOWN OUT OF HIS RACK TOO AND I SAID…OR PROBABLY YELLED, I DON'T RECALL…THAT THE BARRACKS WAS GONE. NOW, THOSE WORDS IN BEIRUT IN 1983 WERE AS IMPOSSIBLE TO COMPREHEND AS "THE TWIN TOWERS ARE GONE" WERE IN 2001. THIS WAS A TWO-FOOT THICK REINFORCED CONCRETE FORTRESS THAT HAD SERVED AS HEADQUARTERS FOR THE ISRAELIS, PALESTINIANS AND OTHERS…IT HAD WITHSTOOD ARTILLERY AND HEAVY NAVAL GUNFIRE WITH BARELY A SCRATCH. YET, IT WAS GONE. WELL, LONG STORY SHORT, I GOT THE MAJOR TO UNDERSTAND AND WE GATHERED OUR FORCES AND STARTED RESCUE AND RECOVERY OPERATIONS.
NOW, LET ME REWIND A BIT AND GIVE YOU ANOTHER MEMORY TRIGGER. LET'S GO BACK TO 6 A.M., AND GO OVER TO THE FAR SIDE OF THE FOUR-STORY BARRACKS AND GIVE YOU THE MEMORY OF A MARINE CORPORAL WHO WAS ON GUARD DUTY…THE ONE WHO I HEARD FIRE HIS WEAPON. THIS CORPORAL MANNED A SENTRY POST THAT WAS NEAR THE ENTRANCE ON THAT SIDE OF THE BARRACKS. HE SAW A LARGE TRUCK CIRCLE A PARKING LOT OUTSIDE THE PERIMETER OF OUR AREA, LIKE DOZENS OF TRUCKS DID EVERY DAY AS THEY DELIVERED THINGS TO THE AIRPORT. ONLY THIS TIME, THE TRUCK CIRCLED ONCE, CIRCLED AGAIN, AND THEN CAME SPEEDING DIRECTLY FOR THE CORPORAL. HE REALIZED IT WAS AN IMMEDIATE THREAT BUT BECAUSE OF OUR RULES OF ENGAGEMENT, WE WERE UNDER ORDERS NOT HAVE LOADED WEAPONS. THE BULLETS WERE IN THE MAGAZINE, WHICH WAS IN A POUCH ON HIS EQUIPMENT BELT. OUR RULES OF ENGAGEMENT AS A PEACEKEEPING FORCE ALSO DICTATED THAT WE COULD NOT FIRE ON ANYONE UNLESS WE KNEW THEY WERE A THREAT, AND WERE SUPPOSED TO GET AUTHORIZATION FROM HIGHER HEADQUARTERS FIRST. BUT THE CORPORAL DIDN'T NEED HIGHER HEADQUARTERS TO TELL HIM THIS WAS A DEADLY THREAT, SO HE PULLED OUT A MAGAZINE, LOCKED AND LOADED AND GOT OFF A COUPLE OF SHOTS AS THE TRUCK PASSED. BUT IT WAS TOO LATE. HE SAW THE FACE OF THE DRIVER - WHO WE LEARNED LATER WAS IRANIAN…AND THE DRIVER WAS SMILING AS HE DROVE 12,000 POUNDS OF GAS ENHANCED MILITARY GRADE EXPLOSIVES INTO THE BUILDING AND DETONATED IT. THE FBI INVESTIGATORS LATER SAID THAT IT WAS THE LARGEST NON-NUCLEAR BLAST THEY'D EVER INVESTIGATED. 220 MARINES, 18 SAILORS AND 3 SOLDIERS DIED AS PEACEKEEPERS.
NOW HOPEFULLY YOU'VE PICKED UP A COUPLE OF MEMORY TRIGGERS: QUIET MORNINGS, COFFEE, LOUD BIRDS, OMLETTES, BIG TRUCKS---SO YOU'LL REMEMBER THIS NEXT TIME YOU SEE THEM.
NOW, LET ME GIVE YOU A FEW FACTS WE'VE LEARNED THROUGH VARIOUS INVESTIGATIONS SINCE THE BOMBING THAT CONNECTS THE DOTS BETWEEN THEN AND NOW.
FIRST, WE KNOW THAT THE TERRORIST GROUP HEZBOLLAH, WHICH WAS FORMED AND SUPPORTED BY IRAN, AND STILL IS, WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE BOMBING. WE KNOW THAT THE HIGHEST LEVELS OF IRANIAN GOVERNMENT HAD ISSUED ORDERS TO HEZBOLLAH TO TAKE EXTREME ACTION AGAINST THE MULTINATIONAL FORCE IN BEIRUT, CONSISTING OF U.S., FRENCH, ITALIAN AND BRITISH TROOPS. THE HEADQUARTERS OF THE FRENCH TROOPS WAS BOMBED SIMULTANEOUSLY, KILLING 89 FRENCH TROOPS. WE KNOW THAT THESE ATTACKS WERE PLANNED FOR MANY MONTHS, AND THAT THEY DID PRACTICE RUNS, INCLUDING A SMALLER SCALE ATTACK OF THE U.S. EMBASSY IN BEIRUT ON APRIL 18, 1983, KILLING 60.
WE KNOW THAT ONE IRANIAN HEZBOLLAH TERRORIST WAS THE ARCHITECT OF THIS NEW SIMULTANEOUS ATTACK, MASS BOMBING, TACTIC, AND THAT THE ATTACK ON U.S. AND FRENCH TROOPS WAS A DELIBERATE TEST. THE FACT THAT THE MULTINATIONAL FORCE PULLED OUT SHORTLY AFTER THE BOMBINGS VALIDATED THAT TACTIC. NOW, HERE'S ANOTHER THING I WANT YOU TO REMEMBER: AT THAT TIME THERE WAS A YOUNG HEZBOLLAH MAN TRAINING TO BE A TERRORIST, BY THE NAME OF OSAMA BIN LADEN. HE TOOK HIS LESSONS FROM THE DEVELOPER OF THIS NEW TACTIC. AFTER 1983 THEY PRACTICED AND HONED THIS TACTIC FOR YEARS, TESTING IT, IN ATTACKS SUCH AS THE FIRST BOMBING OF THE WORLD TRADE CENTER IN 1995. THEY CONTINUED TESTING, IMPROVING. THEN ON SEPTEMBER 11, 2001, THEY USED IT AGAIN, SIMULTANEOUS ATTACKS, ONLY THIS TIME USING COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT INSTEAD OF TRUCKS. SO YOU NOW SEE THE DIRECT CONNECTION BETWEEN SEPTEMBER 11TH, 2001 AND OCTOBER 23, 1983. SAME TERRORISTS, SAME TACTIC. THEY'VE BEEN AT THIS A VERY LONG TIME, AND THEY WILL CONTINUE UNLESS THEY ARE STOPPED.
AS I SPEAK, THOUSANDS OF MILES FROM HERE IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN AND OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD, OUR TROOPS ARE ENGAGED IN A WORLD WAR UNLIKE ANY BEFORE IT…IT HAS BEEN CALLED WORLD WAR III - THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERROR - A WAR AGAINST A SHADOWY ENEMY WHO HAS THE POTENTIAL TO DEPLOY WORLD WIDE - TERRORISTS - WHO LONG AGO SET A GOAL THEY SAY IS BASED ON THEIR EXTREME INTERPRETATION OF A RELIGION. THE GOAL IS SIMPLE - TO FORCE THE WORLD TO THEIR WAY OF LIFE…AND ANY MEANS JUSTIFIES THAT END. THERE IS NO LIMIT TO THE ATROCITIES THEY WILL COMMIT.
ON OCTOBER 23RD, 1983, HUNDREDS OF AMERICAN CHILDREN WERE LEFT WITHOUT FATHERS; HUNDREDS OF AMERICAN WIVES WITHOUT HUSBANDS; AMERICAN MOTHERS AND FATHERS WOULD SEE THEIR SON COME HOME IN A CASKET.
I'D LIKE TO TELL YOU ABOUT ONE LITTLE GIRL WHOSE DADDY DIED IN THE BEIRUT BOMBING. THIS LITTLE GIRL WAS A BABY WHEN HER DADDY, A MARINE CAPTAIN, WAS TAKEN FROM BY TERRORISTS. SHE NEVER REALLY KNEW HER FATHER. SHE KNEW THAT HER MOTHER CALLED HIM A PEACEKEEPER, AND A HERO. SHE DIDN'T KNOW IT THEN, BUT HER DADDY AND HIS BUDDIES WERE SUCCEEDING IN THEIR MISSION IN BEIRUT BACK IN 1983, AND PEACE WAS A POSSIBILITY BECAUSE THEY WERE THERE…THAT'S WHY THE TERRORISTS HAD TO KILL HIM….BECAUSE FOR THEM PEACE AND FREEDOM MESSED UP THEIR PLANS. SHE NEVER REALLY GOT TO KNOW HER FATHER - EXCEPT THROUGH THE LETTERS HE WOULD SEND HOME TO HER REGULARLY LIKE A SORT OF DIARY TO LET HER KNOW WHAT HE WAS DOING AND WHY. SHE KEPT ALL THE LETTERS AND READ THEM OVER AND OVER AGAIN AND SHE WANTED TO KNOW MORE ABOUT HER FATHER.
I MET THIS YOUNG LADY DURING THE 20TH REMEMBRANCE OF THE BEIRUT BOMBING BACK IN 2003, AT THE BEIRUT MEMORIAL IN JACKSONVILLE, N.C. SHE HAD COME THERE TO FIND OUT ABOUT HER FATHER FROM THE MEN WHO HAD SERVED WITH HIM. SHE HAD ONE OF THOSE LETTERS WITH HER AND SHE LET ME READ IT. IT WAS, TO SAY THE LEAST, VERY EERIE. THE LETTER WAS DATED SEPT. 10, 1983…REMEMBER THAT DATE. IN THE LETTER, HER DAD SAID THAT PEOPLE BACK HOME WOULD QUESTION WHY THE UNITED STATES WAS INVOLVED IN BEIRUT, AND WHY IT WAS IMPORTANT TO LET THE PEOPLE THERE GAIN THEIR FREEDOM AND STRENGTH. HE TOLD HER SOMETHING IN THE LETTER THAT, AS I READ IT THERE 20 YEARS AFTER HE WROTE IT, SENT CHILLS UP MY SPINE. HE TOLD HER THAT IT WAS FAR BETTER TO CONFRONT THE TERRORIST ENEMY THERE WHERE THEY LIVED RATHER THAN HAVE TO FIGHT THEM 20 YEARS LATER IN THE UNITED STATES. HE WROTE THAT LETTER TO HIS LITTLE GIRL 18 YEARS TO THE DAY BEFORE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, THE CAPTAIN'S WORDS PREDICTED WHAT WE NOW KNOW. HAD WE STOOD OUR GROUND 25 YEARS AGO, IT IS VERY POSSIBLE SEPTEMBER 11TH WOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED. AND ANYONE WHO THINKS WE CAN PULL BACK INTO A SHELL NOW AND HOPE TERRORISM WILL GO AWAY SIMPLY ISN'T LOOKING AT THE LESSONS HISTORY OFFERS. IF WE DON'T TAKE THE FIGHT TO THEM, THEY WILL BRING IT TO US. PEOPLE ASK IF WE ARE ACCOMPLISHING ANYTHING IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN. I SAY YES. TERRORISTS NO LONGER HAVE A SAFE HAVEN IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN. THEY CAN'T OPERATE WITH IMPUNITY. IN TANDEM WITH OUR HOMELAND SECURITY EFFORTS WE HAVE MADE IT MORE DIFFICULT FOR THEM TO FUNCTION. BUT NOT IMPOSSIBLE…AND THEY HAVE PROVEN THAT THEY WILL BIDE THEIR TIME SO WE CAN'T LET OUR GUARD DOWN. IF WE PULL OUT OF IRAQ BEFORE THE TIME IS RIGHT, GUESS WHO MOVES IN…IRAN, AND TERRORISTS WILL ONCE AGAIN HAVE A SAFE TRAINING GROUND. DO WE WANT TO LOOK BACK 25 YEARS FROM NOW AND REGRET NOT HAVING STAYED THE COURSE AGAIN? I HOPE NOT…
TOO MANY AMERICANS ALL TOO OFTEN TAKE FOR GRANTED THE SIMPLE CONCEPT OF BEING FREE - NOT THE PEOPLE HERE TODAY, NOT YOU, BECAUSE THE FACT YOU'RE HERE TELLS ME YOU DO GET IT. YOU DO KNOW THAT FREEDOM IS NEVER FREE - ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE WE PAY. AND YOU KNOW THAT WE MUST REMEMBER AND HONOR THOSE WHO HAVE GONE BEFORE US. WE HAVE MANY DUTIES AS AMERICAN CITIZENS, BUT, THE FIRST DUTY IS TO REMEMBER. THANK YOU AND HAVE A WONDERFUL MEMORIAL DAY…

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Flag Day: Four Personal Perspectives


President and Nancy Reagan file by the flag-draped caskets of victims of the April 18, 1983, bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon in an April 23, 1983 file photo. Photo courtesy Ronald Reagan Presidential Library

Tomorrow (June 14, 2008) the United States observes National Flag Day, an annual tribute to the American flag, the ideals it stands for and the sacrifices made to preserve them.

President Woodrow Wilson recognized during his first Flag Day address in 1915 that the freedoms the U.S. flag stands for weren't and never would be free.

"The lines of red are lines of blood, nobly and unselfishly shed by men who loved the liberty of their fellowship more than they loved their own lives and fortunes," he said. "God forbid that we should have to use the blood of America to freshen the color of the flag."

But American blood has spilled time and time again to preserve American liberties, most recently in the war against violent extremism. In this year's Flag Day Proclamation, President Bush calls on the nation to remember the troops who carry Old Glory before them "as they defend the liberties for which it stands."

"On Flag Day and during National Flag Week, we remember those in uniform whose courage and sacrifice inspire us here at home," Bush said. "We also remember the rich history of one of our oldest national symbols and reflect on our duty to carry our heritage of freedom into the future."

Four current or retired servicemembers recently shared their personal perspectives about how the flag has inspired them through their proudest as well as darkest days as a symbol of patriotism, strength and resilience.

9/11 Terror Attacks

Few Americans will forget the image of three firefighters raising an American flag over the World Trade Center ruins in New York just hours after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

But for Army Capt. Joe Minning and his fellow New York National Guard soldiers, many of them New York City firemen and police officers, the Ground Zero flag took on a very personal significance as they desperately sifted through the rubble looking for survivors.

"Seeing the flag raised above all of the rubble and ruins of the World Trade Center instilled a new sense of pride in me for our country," he said. "No matter what happens to the United States -- on foreign ground, on U.S. soil -- we, the American people, will always continue to move forward, rebuild and face any challenges that lie ahead"

Three years later, Minning and the "Fighting 69th" Brigade Combat Team would take that inspiration with them to Iraq, where they lost 19 soldiers securing Route Irish and its surrounding Baghdad neighborhoods during their year-long deployment.

Among those killed was Army Staff Sgt. Christian Engledrum, a New York firefighter who, like Minning, worked amid the dust and smoke immediately following the World Trade Center attack. Engledrum, the first New York City employee to die serving in Iraq, became a symbol of the unit that went from Ground Zero to Iraq's Sunni Triangle, and after his death, to the mountains of Afghanistan.

The flag and what it represents continue to motivate unit members during their current deployment to Afghanistan as embedded trainers for the Afghan National Army, he said.

Minning said he recognizes when he sees Old Glory flying at his tiny forward operating base there that he and his fellow soldiers are following in the footsteps of the earliest U.S. patriots and defending the same values they fought for.

"The flag is a symbol of everything the United States stands for -- from our founding fathers up until now, all that we have accomplished, and the hurtles our country has overcome," he said.

As a soldier, Minning said, he and his fellow soldiers recognize that it's up to them to continue carrying the torch forward.

"It is the American soldier who keeps the country moving forward and will never let it be taken down by any adversity. It is what we fight for and, if we fall in battle, what our coffins are draped with," he said. "And it's what we are committed to protecting and defending, no matter what the price."

The Iraq War

When thousands of people gathered in late April at the Cincinnati Red's Great American Ballpark, all eyes were on a platform at the pitchers' mound covered by the flag-draped casket of Army Sgt. Matt Maupin.

The mourners gathered to remember the 20-year-old Army reservist who went missing more than four years earlier when his convoy came under attack in April 2004. Insurgents released a videotape shortly after the incident showing him in captivity, and his whereabouts remained unknown until the Army found and positively identified his remains in March.

Command Sgt. Maj. Leon Caffie, the top enlisted Army Reserve soldier, was among countless people who had hoped and prayed for Maupin's safe return. As he joined the crowd in Ohio to honor and bid farewell to Maupin, Caffie looked out at thousands of hand-held flags waving in the stands, all surrounding Maupin's casket.

"It underscores the meaning and symbolism of the flag when you see it draped over the coffin of this young man who had the world going for him," Caffey said.

Maupin is among thousands of U.S. troops whose lives have been cut short at the hands of terrorists. Back in October 1983, 241 Marines were killed when a terrorist truck bomb struck their barracks in Beirut. In June 1996, 13 airmen died during the terror attack on Khobar Towers in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. In October 2000, 17 crewmembers from USS Cole were killed when a terrorist bomb ripped through their ship at Aden, Yemen.

Then came the September 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States and the war on terror they ushered in.

Through it all, the flag has served as an unwavering source of inspiration that's unified America, Caffie said.

"It has endured a lot -- being dragged through streets and burned and disrespected and spit on and stepped on," he said.

"And yet it has survived and served as a nucleus that brings this country together across gender, ethnic and religious backgrounds," he said. "It is the American flag that has united us and will continue to inspire patriotism in this country."

Beirut Embassy Bombing

Back in April 1983, rescue workers picking through the rubble of what had been the U.S. Embassy in Beirut following a terrorist attack uncovered the body of 21-year-old Marine Cpl. Robert V. McMaugh. Beside his body lay the tattered remains of the U.S. flag that had once stood proudly beside his guard post in the embassy's main lobby.

McMaugh's fellow Marine security guards draped their fallen comrade in a fresh American flag and carried him away on a stretcher. A squad of Marines snapped to attention and saluted.

"It was a poignant moment," recalled retired Chief Warrant Officer Charles W. "Bill" Henderson, a spokesman attached to 22nd Marine Amphibious Unit in Lebanon at the time of the bombing. "Everyone had been digging and digging, then suddenly, everything stopped. Not a word was said. Seeing the body of a fellow Marine covered with the American flag, ... it was an electrifying moment."

While stationed in Beirut, Henderson said, he came to appreciate the flag, not just as a piece of material, but as a symbol of courage. "Each Marine (in Lebanon) wore an American flag on his shirt," he said. "It did more than show that we were Americans. It showed that we were representing this country and what it stands for: freedom for all people."

Twenty-five years later, Henderson said terrorist attacks that followed that initial salvo and the thousands of Americans who have died as a result have only deepened the flag's symbolism.

"What's behind it are the blood and tears of hundreds of thousands of soldiers who have sacrificed. The symbolism behind the flag is this long tradition of sacrifice to preserve liberty," he said.

"Yes, it is just a piece of cloth," he said. "But what it represents are the lives of thousands of Americans who have given everything for this nation -- who ask nothing in return but felt an obligation of duty to their country."

Henderson said he doesn't take disrespect for the flag lightly. "When you insult our flag, you insult the lives and the sacrifices of all the men and women who have served this country," he said.

On the other hand, honoring the flag is showing respect and appreciation for all they have done. "You are honoring everything that we, as a nation, have accomplished, what America has done, and what America represents to the world," he said.

Iranian Hostage Crisis

Now-retired Col. David M. Roeder remembers living without the freedoms he had worked to protect when he and more than 50 other Americans were taken hostage for 444 days in Iran in November 1979.

Roeder, assistant Air Force attache to the U.S. Embassy in Tehran at the time, watched helplessly as U.S. flag burnings became almost daily media events. His captors taunted the hostages by carrying garbage from one area of the embassy compound to another, wrapped in the American flag.

Through it all, Roeder said, he never lost faith in his country or the flag that symbolizes its ideals. "When you talk about a flag, whether it's standing in a place of honor at a ceremony or draped over a casket or waving from someone's house, you're talking about a symbol," he said.

"But the importance of that symbolism is monumental. It represents what we are, wherever we are in the world," he said.

"And no matter what anyone else says about it or does to it, the flag never loses dignity. It only gains dignity, because when someone attacks the American flag, it's because they recognize all that it represents and the greatness of this country."

Twenty-seven years after his release, Roeder, now 68, holds on to that symbolism with fervor. He flies a flag at his home in Pinehurst, N.C., and a summer home in Wisconsin every day. His pickup truck has not one, but several, flag stickers on it.

Like many Americans, he was moved by the show of Old Glory nationwide in the aftermath of the 9-11 attacks, and said he wishes it had never ended. "Wouldn't it be great if you could keep that going?" he said. "It tells everyone who sees it who we are and what we stand for," he said.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Candidate's Statements about Terriorist States



This Blog has always been, and will always be, a sounding board against terrorism, wherever it is, and whatever political party is speaking about it. The goal of the Blog is to educate the citizens of the United States about Terrorists, their goals, and unfortunately, their achievements. Being a Beirut Veteran, I feel that I have a unique perspective on terrorism.

When I gather with fellow veterans, the topic sometimes reverts to the conversation of, "What would have happened if we stayed in Beirut, and Reagan didn't pull us out?" The what ifs, and the whys, haunt some of us to this day, that is why I for one, cannot remain quiet about terrorism, and the Countries that support them. I also cannot remain quiet when I hear statements made by candidates, about terrorism, such as those made by U.S. Senator Barrack Obama ,


"Renewing American Diplomacy

  • The Problem: The United States is trapped by the Bush-Cheney approach to diplomacy that refuses to talk to leaders we don't like. Not talking doesn't make us look tough – it makes us look arrogant, it denies us opportunities to make progress, and it makes it harder for America to rally international support for our leadership. On challenges ranging from terrorism to disease, nuclear weapons to climate change, we cannot make progress unless we can draw on strong international support.
  • Talk to our Foes and Friends: Obama is willing to meet with the leaders of all nations, friend and foe. He will do the careful preparation necessary, but will signal that America is ready to come to the table, and that he is willing to lead. And if America is willing to come to the table, the world will be more willing to rally behind American leadership to deal with challenges like terrorism, and Iran and North Korea's nuclear programs."
(text taken from the Barrack Obama for President 2008 web site)


These statements taken from Senator Obama's Web Site, appear to be naive when coupled with the experience of terrorism since 1983. Talking to these terrorist states does exactly the opposite of what Senator Obama thinks will happen. When Hamas (Palestine) Hezbollah (Iran) and other Terrorist States admit their role in the murder of 241 of my Brother Marines,Sailors and Soldiers, then, and only then, we might have a dialog.

How can Senator Obama state that he will speak with Iran when currently, they have been found guilty of murdering my fellow servicemen? Iran has not complied with the judgment issued by the Courts and has thumbed it's nose at the Courts and the United States.

" Iran reacted to a federal court ruling today by scoffing at paying a $2.65 billion penalty for its alleged role in a 1983 bombing, the AP reports. "The American judge's ruling is baseless," a spokesman said of yesterday's decision. "This ruling against Iran is politically motivated." Iran also denies any involvement in the US Marine barracks attack in Beirut, which killed 241 service members. Iran hinted it may countersue; the spokesman said: "Americans have taken repeated measures contrary to legal principles." It also complains that the court's decision was "not legally defendable" because it was made "without listening to the other side's views." Iran ignored the suit for 6 years and refused to mount a defense." (associated press 2007)


By talking to these Muslim extremist states, the U.S will appear weak; this has been proven by history time and time again, staring with Neville Chamberlain's conference with Hitler.

It seems that we all should take a step back and realize that these extremist nations want to eliminate us. Recent statements such as Senator Obama's send a chill down my spine.....

"I would meet directly with Iranian leaders. I would meet directly with Syrian leaders. We would engage in a level of aggressive personal diplomacy in which a whole host of issues are on the table. ... Iran and Syria would start changing their behavior if they started seeing that they had some incentives to do so, but right now the only incentive that exists is our president suggesting that if you do what we tell you, we may not blow you up." ( NY Times )


Senator Clinton's statements during the Campaign, have also been a frightful image of what could be.....

"I would engage in negotiations with Iran, with no conditions, because we don't really understand how Iran works. We think we do, from the outside, but I think it is misleading. ... I would negotiate with them, no conditions, but with some sticks that we could use to try to get leverage to move them in the direction we want."

In New Hampshire, Oct. 10, 2007


Senator Clinton thinks we don't know how Iran works, believe me Senator, we all know how Iran works, and have witnessed it's deadly actions up close and personal.

Senator McCain does fare better in his outlook, but not by much.......

"What I would be concentrating my efforts on is trying to get a league of democracies outside of the U.N., because Russia and China are going to veto just about anything we want to act effectively against Iran, and those league of democracies should cut off any kind of loans, which are being extended as we speak by European banks; diplomatic, other sanctions to put real pressure on a rather fragile economy in Iran. I think that's the way we should pursue this."

MSNBC, Sept. 17, 2007


League of democracies Senator? I think this was tried after WWI and directly led to WWII. We can do better that that. Well, the good part is that Senator McCain has not said he will meet with Iran......... yet.


I can be accused of overreacting to Terrorism, I can be accused of being a paranoid Former Marine who will never forgive or forget the atrocities of the past, I can be called a narrow minded thinker whose only goal is to seek revenge against those purported enemies. I can be accused of all these things, but, the one true fact is that I will forgive, but I will not forget, and neither can my fellow Americans.

Thank you for listening..

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Hero Honored

Northport street to be named for fallen Marine

The Brothers

Joseph Boccia, third from left, with brothers Ray, Rich and Jim.



In the early morning hours of Oct. 23, 1983, while soldiers were sleeping, a truck stocked with explosives was driven into the U.S. Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, by a terrorist.

The suicide mission claimed the lives of 241 military personnel and seriously wounded countless others who were in Lebanon on a peacekeeping mission.

Twenty five years later, the incident is being referred to by the Beirut Veterans of America as, "the first battle of terrorism" and the group's motto is . . . . "The First Duty Is to Remember."

Capt. Joseph J. Boccia Jr., a Marine from Northport, lost his life in the attack, and keeping true to the veteran's motto, will be remembered in a ceremony later this month.

Starlit Drive, a street that he grew up on, will be named in his honor.

A family friend and Northport police chief, Ric Bruckenthal, is responsible for getting the job done. He contacted the Huntington Town Board saying he thought it would be a good idea to remember "all of our fallen."

"The Town was very receptive to the idea," Bruckenthal said, "this wasn't a big petition, I didn't have to beat them over the head, they were just very receptive."

The board approved the renaming at a meeting on March 18, voting to change the street name to "Captain Joseph J. Boccia Jr./Starlit Drive." A date has not be set yet for the renaming ceremony

Bruckenthal, who lost his son in 2004 in Iraq and is neighbors with Boccia's brother Raymond, knows how much "things like this helps the family."

A graduate of Syracuse University and also a member of the ROTC, Boccia joined the U.S. Marine Corps in 1978, graduating from Parris Island in South Carolina, where he was the recipient of the USMC Achievement Devotion Award, which distinguished him as the outstanding man of Platoon 1142. He was deployed to Beirut as part of a peacekeeping force.

According to Bruckenthal, "the people on the block won't have to change their address, adding Captain Boccia's name is symbolic."

Thursday, January 03, 2008

We win again!!!!

U.S. court rules against Iran, in favor of widow

By Tom Ramstack
January 1, 2008

The widow of a naturalized American citizen won a $466 million federal court judgment Friday against the Iranian government, which she accuses of torturing and executing her husband.


An Iranian military court said the man, Siavash Bayani, engaged in "disgraceful activities — spying for the Great Satan, America." He was hanged in August 1997 at Evin prison outside Tehran.


The judgment in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia raises political questions about the extent to which U.S. courts can exercise authority over foreign governments.


U.S. courts have issued several rulings against the Iranian government, including a $2.7 billion judgment for the families of Marines killed by the 1983 bombing of their barracks in Beirut, $13 million for the family of an American woman killed by a 2002 bombing at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and $254 million for the families of Air Force members killed in a 1996 terrorist attack in Saudi Arabia.


U.S. court judgments against Iran for acts of terrorism total more than $6 billion, according to congressional records.


The State Department has not reacted to the Bayani ruling.


The federal Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act normally bars U.S. courts from judgments involving foreign governments. The law reserves political issues to the president and Congress. "This action is brought pursuant to the 'terrorism exception' to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act," U.S. District Judge Henry H. Kennedy Jr. wrote. The exception gives U.S. courts authority over cases involving terrorism or torture by foreign governments.


Mr. Bayani was an Iranian who came to the United States as a college student but returned to Iran to join the Iranian air force. His government sent him to the United States in 1977 to supervise Iranian students studying at the Oceana Naval Air Station in Virginia Beach.

Mr. Bayani, his wife, Fatameh, and their two children were granted asylum in the United States in 1984 during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. Mr. Bayani and his wife received American citizenship on Oct. 20, 1994.


The family returned to Iran on Feb. 2, 1995, as Mr. Bayani's mother became gravely ill. Five months later, he returned from a job interview to tell his wife that she should leave Iran immediately with their children. He gave no detailed explanation.


Mrs. Bayani and her children flew to the United States on July 17, 1995. The next day, her husband was arrested and accused of being a CIA informant.


"Siavash, in fact, was never employed by the Central Intelligence Agency or any other U.S. government agency and never received money from the U.S. government for information about the Islamic regime in Iran or for any other services," the court's ruling said.


After Mr. Bayani's arrest, his family was unable to contact him for a year. In August 1996, he was allowed to telephone his family for "eight to 10 minutes" while interrogators listened in, the court record says. He told of being tortured and warned his wife not to return to Iran. He repeated the warnings in letters.


A few months after Mr. Bayani telephoned his family, Iranian "government officials contacted Siavash's mother and offered to help gain his release in exchange for large sums of money in U.S. dollars," the ruling said. Mrs. Bayani used the family's life savings, withdrew the maximum amount from her credit cards and took out loans from family and friends.


"These efforts yielded $95,000, which she sent to Siavash's mother so that she could pay government officials to gain access to Siavash," Judge Kennedy wrote.


"A few months later, Siavash's mother-in-law received a phone call from an Iranian government official, notifying her that Siavash had been hung by the neck until dead," Judge Kennedy wrote. "The execution took place only hours after Siavash's mother had died."


The court's judgment awarded $66.3 million in damages to the family, whom it characterized as suffering post-traumatic stress disorder. It went on to say, "Punitive damages shall be assessed against the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp." for $400 million.