Military honors fallen EOD techs at ceremony Check out

Transcription

Military honors fallen EOD techs at ceremony Check out
T H E R E D 7 . n et
Friday, May 9, 2014
2014
Emerald
Warrior
ALSO INSIDE
Briefs...............................6
Philpott............................6
|4
Check out these
mental performance
strategies
Military honors
fallen EOD techs
at ceremony
Page 3
Page 2
Page | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 9, 2014
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Year No. 4 Edition No. 19
Military honors fallen EOD techs
By KAREN ROGANOV
Northwest Florida Daily News
“Help us to see death as the
gate to eternal life … We commend
the souls of these everlasting departed into your care.”
So said Air Force Chaplain Joseph G. Wright as he led a crowd of
about 2,000 people in prayer May 3
during the 45th Annual Explosive
Ordnance Disposal Memorial Service to the honor EOD technicians
killed in service.
The families of the eight men
honored were presented American
flags by Army Chief of Staff Gen.
Raymond Odierno, Marine Corps
Commandant Gen. James Amos
and Brig. Gen. James Burton,
commanding general of the 20th
Support Command.
“It’s difficult right now. It’s kinda like a summation of everything
we’ve been through,” Kenneth
Reid said of the ceremony’s significance and seeing his son’s name
added to the granite cenotaphs.
Reid and his wife Dorothy were
here in 2008 to celebrate their son’s
graduation from the Kauffman
EOD Training Complex on Eglin
Air Force Base.
Nicholas Reid, an Army staff
sergeant, died Dec. 13, 2012, in
combat operations in Afghanistan.
As for the next steps, “we’ll
continue to honor his memory,”
Dorothy said.
Those plans include their
hometown of Brockport, N.Y., naming the post office after their son.
“It’s already passed the House,”
she said of the approval process.
Nicholas’ best friend from high
school, 28-year-old Xuan Nguyen,
also attended the ceremony.
“He’s got the warmest heart.
He’ll help out everybody no matter
who they are,” Nguyen said.
With the addition of the eight
names, the number of the fallen
men and women since World War
II honored on the EOD Memorial has reached 306. Every name
was read aloud during the solemn
ceremony.
This year, the men ranged from
28 to 33 years old, were from the
Army and Marine Corps.
NEW NAMES
The following names were added
to the EOD Memorial: Army Staff
Sgt. Kenneith “Wade” Bennett;
Army Staff Sgt. Nicholas Reid;
Army Sgt. 1st Class Jeffrey Baker;
Army Staff Sgt. Joshua Bowden;
Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt.
Gregory Mullins; Marine Corps
Staff Sgt. Mathew Marsh; Marine
Corps Staff Sgt. Eric Summers;
and Marine Corps Sgt. Miguel
Ortiz.
Traveling in from St. Stephen,
S.C., William and Linda Phillips
were there for a seventh year to
remember their son, Marine Corps
Sgt. John Paul Phillips.
John died August 16, 2006, from
burn wounds covering 75 percent
of his body and an accompanying
infection. It was five months after
his Humvee drove over an improvised explosive device in Iraq.
John had graduated EOD
school the year before and left behind his new bride.
“So many of the boys in recent
years have served with John,” said
William Phillips, indicating their
names were now etched in gold on
the memorial.
He recalled two EOD friends
who visited John at the Brooks
Army Hospital in San Antonio,
Texas. Their names were added to
the wall the next year.
Phillips was a sort of walking
memorial to his son. He wore a dog
tag imprinted with John’s photograph and another image of him
encased in plastic and sewn onto a
leather vest next to Marine Corps
patches and Bible verses.
Odierno, the keynote speaker,
gave a synopsis of each man’s
service. The EOD techs are volunteers, and the Eglin school graduates about 1,000 students a year.
“They represent what is best
about the human spirit: selfless
sacrifice, dedication to mission and
personal courage,” Odierno said.
“They understand that special
bond that is indescribable … It’s
about that unspoken commitment
to each other.”
NICK TOMECEK | Daily News
Audrey Baker, 3, hugs a flag given to her to honor the memory of her
father Sgt. 1st Class Jeffrey Baker on May 3 during the Explosive Ordnance Disposal 45th Annual Memorial Service. Baker was killed in action May 14, 2013 while serving with an EOD unit in Afghanistan.
Tech. Sgt. Sam King | USAF
Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno comforts Mandi Bennett, widow
of Staff Sgt. Wade Bennett, during the 45th Annual Explosive Ordnance Disposal Memorial Ceremony May 3, at Eglin Air Force Base.
Friday, May 9, 2014 | THE RED 7 | Page thor3 warrior
Mental performance strategies to utilize anywhere, anytime
THOR3 Mental
Performance Specialist
Performance in the
Special Forces environment requires far more
than just technical skills
and physical prowess, yet
this is where most Soldiers
invest their time.
A focused mind is critical to your performance,
and the training of your
mind is often overlooked.
Every movement, decision and action starts with
thought. When under pressure and stress, your mental game is either going to
help you and your team’s
performance or hurt it.
Your thoughts are either automatic, habitual
and running the show or
intentional, deliberate and
under your control (no, I
did not intend to rhyme
there, but now that I am
conscious of it, I’m going to
leave it as it is).
As warrior athletes,
training the mind is essential to your everyday
performance and absolutely necessary for your
performance when it matters most.
Here are two strategies to begin incorporating consistently in your
regular training schedule
and everyday life to bring
out optimal, confident and
consistent execution no
matter what.
Here’s how to gain
more mastery of your
mind.
 Breath Control.
Breath is life force, so
when you are holding your
breath or breathing shallowly, you cannot think as
clearly. You narrow your
options and limit your actions. The brain requires
about 25% of your oxygen,
so when you are breathing
shallowly, you are preventing your brain from operating in an optimal way.
Throughout the day,
consider whether you
are holding your breath,
breathing shallowly or
breathing deeply and
steadily.
Breath control is an
excellent way to manage
stress, increase performance and get into the
“now” of the moment to
make better decisions.
TRY THIS: Breathe on a
4-2-6-1 cycle.
 4 count inhale
through nose
 2 count hold at top
 6 count exhale blow
through mouth
 1 count hold at
bottom
1. To yourself about
yourself
Complete 10 cycles,
2. To yourself about
and notice whether or not
others
you feel any different from
3. To others about
when you started.
yourself
Train up on your breath4. To others about
ing for at least 5 minutes a others
day (only focus on the 4-26-1 cycle for 5 minutes).
Consider in each case
Try to reach 25 cycles
whether your internal or
without distraction. If
external dialogue is posiyour mind wanders, start
tive, negative or neutral.
over at one. Focus on your
Consider how your
breath to bring your mind
negative or positive evaluback to the present moations of yourself or othment to make more effecers impact your everyday
tive decisions.
interactions, behaviors and
attitudes.
 Self Talk. We talk
Is your self-talk enhancto ourselves at over 800
ing your results and interwords a minute. Some of
actions, or are they getting
it conscious (in our aware- in the way from your inness), much of it uncontended results?
scious (automatic).
Follow your results
Our self-talk is like the
back to your self-talk and
instructions given to a
how you are programming
computer. We are either
your computer.
running the programs that
Next, consider what
get us the desired results
you say to yourself (and to
due to proper input, or
others) about various situthere is error in the mesations and scenarios.
sage and then the desired
Are your thoughts perresults are skewed or off
formance enhancing or
the mark.
performance diminishing?
It’s the ol’ “Garbage
Whenever a perIn-Garbage Out” or “Good formance diminishing
Things In Good Things
thought arises in your
Out” equation.
awareness, simply let that
TRY THIS: Pay attention go and shift the self-talk
to four scenarios. Notice
to be beneficial to your
what you say:
performance.
To gain even better
results, work with a specialist who can refine and
hone your self-talk skills.
About THOR3 .
mental performance
To learn more about
how to further develop
your range of mental skills,
visit Dr. Andrea Wieland,
mental performance specialist with THOR3 over
at the CRTF. In THOR3’s
Education Series, Andrea
will be teaching 4 of 8 basic
mental skills that every
warrior should understand
and utilize consistently.
Test your skills with the
Mental Toughness Psychological Skills Profile to see
how you measure up.
About the author
 Andrea Wieland,
Ph.D., M.B.A., THOR3 Men-
tal Performance Specialist
Andrea has 20 years
of experience coaching
top performers from elite
athletes to top business
leaders on their mental
games.
Working with Special
Forces Soldiers is an honor and privilege for Andrea. She intends to have
a positive impact on the
performance of individuals, teams and leaders in
the critical area of mental
performance.
 Competed for 13
years on the U.S. National
Field Hockey Team.
 Competed in the 1996
Olympics as a field hockey
goalkeeper.
 Entrepreneur for
two decades, including
the role of CEO at an elite,
integrated performance
and health center similar
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Friday, May 9, 2014 | THE RED 7 | Page Page | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 9, 2014
2014
Emerald
Warrior
U.S. Air Force Combat Controllers point
to an incoming aircraft while standing
on the back of a truck
during Emerald Warrior 2014 at at Stennis
International Airport,
Miss., May 2.
Senior Airman
Colville McFee | USAF
Senior Airman Jodi Martinez | USAF
Senior Airman Jodi Martinez | USAF
U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer
Tim Sewseyey yells out commands
for a CH-47 Chinook helocast
training, an airborne technique
used by small forces to insert into a
military area of operations, during
Emerald Warrior 2014, Gulfport,
Miss., April 30.
U.S. Army crew members of a UH-60
Black Hawk sit aboard the black hawk to conduct fast rope
training with the U.S. Army 20th Special Forces Squadron,
during Emerald Warrior 2014, Gulfport, Miss., April 30.
U.S. Army Special
Forces members with
the U.S. Army 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne) move a Zodiac
Combat Rubber
Raiding Craft’s
motor in in preparation
for helo-cast training
during Emerald
Warrior 2014 at
Hurlburt Field, May 2.
Senior Airman
Nicholas Byers | USAF
A U.S. Navy HH60H Seahawk
from the Helicopter Sea Combat
Squadron(HSC)
84, extracts Air
Force combat controllers during Emerald Warrior, May 2,
Hurlburt Field.
Staff Sgt. Tim Chacon
| USAF
Staff Sgt. Marleah Miller | USAF
Members with the 22nd Special Tactics Squadron jump from an MC-130H Combat Talon II during Emerald Warrior over Hurlburt Field, May 2. Emerald Warrior is
an annual, joint exercise to train special operations, conventional and partner nation forces in combat scenarios designed to hone special operations air and ground
combat skills, and is the Department of Defense’s only irregular warfare exercise.
Airman 1st Class Jasmonet Jackson | USAF
A U.S. Air Force CV-22 Osprey from the 8th Special Operations Squadron, fly over Emerald Coast during the Emerald Warrior exercise while in route to Hurlburt Field, May 2.
Members with the
7th Special Forces
Group (Airborne)
pause from preparing their parachutes
for a high-altitude
low-opening jump to
pay their respects
during retreat on
Hurlburt Field,
May 2.
Staff Sgt. Marleah
Miller | USAF
Page | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 9, 2014
House panel rejects most proposed military benefit curbs
The House armed
services’ subcommittee
on military personnel has
rejected Pentagon plans to:
slow increases in military
housing allowances starting
next year; raise TRICARE
fees on families and retirees,
and narrow coverage by
ending TRICARE Prime,
the military’s managed care
option.
But in shaping personnel
sections of the fiscal 2015
defense authorization bill
(HR 4435), the subcommittee wouldn’t block a planned
military pay cap for January.
The Obama administration
seeks a one percent raise
versus 1.8 percent to match
private sector wage growth.
Also, subcommittee chair
Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.)
hinted that the Defense
Commissary Agency’s
budget would be squeezed,
and presumably so would
shopper savings, if base grocery stores can’t run more
efficiently.
The bill would require
the Secretary of Defense
to conduct a new review of
commissaries, in this case
by relying on “the services
of an independent organization experienced in grocery
retail analysis.”
Such a review, Wilson
said, might help to “reverse
some of the cuts” in the
commissary
system budget. Wilson
didn’t say
how deep
the cuts
would be.
Committee
staff said
those type
of details
would not
be released until the full
committee amends and
votes out the full defense bill
May 6.
The administration has
proposed cutting $1 billion a
year from the Defense Commissary Agency’s $1.4 billion
appropriation by 2017. The
cut would be phased over
three years, starting with
$200 million in fiscal 2015.
If the subcommittee decided to block only half of the
proposed cut for next year,
as one unconfirmed AP report suggested, commissaries would face a hit of $100
million or seven percent.
Wilson and Rep. Susan
Davis of California, ranking
Democrat on the subcommittee, needed only minutes
to complete an open “mark”
of the bill’s personnel provisions. With defense budgets
squeezed by the 2011 Budget Control Act, the number
of personnel initiatives is
modest.
Tom
Philpott
The Senate Armed Services Committee will unveil
its version of the bill in late
May, after the Joint Chiefs
of Staff have had another
chance to urge deeper cuts
to compensation program
than the House panel is
endorsing.
The House panel did accept proposed active duty
force cuts totaling 52,800
by October 2015. That includes a 30,000 cut in Army
strength to reach 499,000;
a 16,700 cut to Air Force,
down to 310,900, and a 6,100
cut in Marines to 184,100.
Navy strength would be unchanged at 323,600.
Studies often serve to
delay decisions and there
are plenty ordered up by the
House panel in this wartime
election year. One is to be
an anonymous survey of
random service members
on pays and benefits to determine preferred forms of
compensation.
Other language directs
more frequent reviews
and analyses from the U.S.
Comptroller General to
determine the adequacy of
the number of health care
providers who accept TRICARE Standard and TRICARE Extra.
The Defense Secretary
also is to submit a report on
modernizing and realigning
military medical facilities.
During mark up Wilson
and Davis touted new steps
in the bill to strengthen protections against sexual assaults. Each concluded brief
remarks by rejecting most
Defense proposals to rein in
personnel costs.
Back in March, when
introducing the 2015 defense
budget request, Robert
Hale, then under secretary
of defense and comptroller,
warned that if Congress
rejected every initiative to
curb compensation, it would
punch “a $2.1 billion hole in
our fiscal ‘15 budget.”
The House subcommittee seems to have punched
a hole only half that size by
opting not to secure a full
January military pay raise
of 1.8 percent. If that silence
on the raise survives the
full committee mark, and a
vote by the full House and
also a Senate version of the
defense bill, it would be a
green light for President
Obama to impose a one percent pay cap, as he did last
year, under his authority to
introduce an alternative federal pay in September.
Just a few years ago, the
armed services committees
could toss out budget costsaving initiatives, or vote
to add expensive new programs, by negotiating deals
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and we need to be informed
of their analysis before proceeding with wide impacting
changes,” he said.
The commission’s report
is due next February. Members of the armed services
committees cited that often
in deflecting the pleas of
military leaders over the
past two months that compensation growth must be
slowed now.
Davis did so again
Wednesday. Apparently not
swayed by recent testimony
of military leaders, Davis
said she needed to hear
more.
“While I support not including in the mark the proposed legislative changes
to the commissary system,
the housing allowances
reduction and the health
care changes,” Davis said,
“I do believe that we need
to begin a conversation to
address these issues. Part
of that conversation needs
to include the results of
the [MCRMC] so that we
can address compensation
and retirement in a holistic
approach.”
Tom Philpott is a syndicated columnist. You may write to him at
Military Update, P.O. Box 231111,
Centreville, VA 20120-1111; or at
[email protected].
red 7 Briefs
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with appropriators to raise
defense budget top lines.
That isn’t possible under
the restraints of the 2011
Budget Control Act. It also
is why the Joint Chiefs warn
that training, modernization
and other critical readiness
accounts are at risk if their
plans to curb benefits are
killed.
Wilson sounded unconcerned as he rattled off the
cost-saving ideas his subcommittee had rejected.
“This mark does not
include the Department’s
request for military retirees
to pay more for health care”
or its proposal to make “a
fundamental change to the
TRICARE benefit” or its
plan to trim increases in Basic Allowance for Housing
for stateside members living
off base, Wilson said.
He didn’t explain how,
given rigid budget ceilings,
the subcommittee will replace savings lost from not
capping increases to Basic
Allowances for Housing,
modifying TRICARE and
raising TRICARE fees.
Wilson did note the nation is
still at war. He also gave another reason to delay most
benefit cuts.
“Congress established
the Military Compensation
and Retirement Modernization Commission [MCRMC]
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Free steak lunch
for military
Cumulus Media and
Logan’s Roadhouse are
serving free steak lunches,
in conjunction with Lee Automotive Group and Eglin
Federal Credit Union, for
our area’s military members. The free feast takes
place on Thursday, May 22
from 10:30 a.m. until 1:30
p.m. at Liza Jackson Park
in honor of Military Appreciation Month.
On-air personalities from
NASH FM 105.5, 99ROCK,
Z96, Coast 93.3 and News
Talk 1260 will serve the
free Logan’s Roadhouse
sirloin steaks, tossed salad,
over-loaded mashed potatoes and Logan’s rolls to
the first 500 current or past
military service members.
Buffalo Rock Pepsi and
Blue Bell Ice Cream will
round out the menu, and
military members can register to win $100 VISA gift
cards and other prizes. The
lunch will be served under
the pavilion at the west side
of Liza Jackson Park near
the boat launch.
For more information or
to be a part of the 7th Annual Military Appreciation
Cook-Out, call Cumulus
Media at (850) 243-2323, the
NASH studio at (850) 2441055, the 99ROCK studio
at (850) 243-3699 or the Z96
studio at (850) 664-0965.
See briefs page 7
Friday, May 9, 2014 | THE RED 7 | Page Ranger Camp set to host open house this weekend
Thousands of students
each year go through
the strenuous training to
become an Army Ranger,
attending a portion of the
course at Camp Rudder.
Less than 50 percent will
graduate.
“We do this open house
to build up our relationship with the community,”
said Army Sgt. 1st Class
Labaron Paschall. “We
aren’t able to get out very
often because when we
are in cycle we are very
busy. This gives us a
chance to showcase the
talents of our instructors,
what they are capable of
doing and how they do it.”
The event is a popular
one. In 2012, about 2,200
people attended and a
similar crowd is expected
this year.
Paschall said the
snake team — “our own
rock stars” — will handle
venomous snakes and
alligators, which always
delights the crowd. An
airborne team will parachute into the camp from
a plane overhead. Various
weapons will also be on
hand, and attendees will
have a chance to fire them
of your four person team is
required no later than May
16. For information, contact Barry Woods at (850)
The International Test 830-5061.
and Evaluation Association
(ITEA) Emerald Coast Chapter will host a meeting and
dinner from 5-7 p.m. ThursEveryone with base acday, May 15 at the Boathouse cess is invited to shop or sell
Landing (the Bilge Pub). The at Eglin’s basewide Parking
guest speaker is Maj. Gen. Lot Sale at 8:30 a.m. May 10
(USAF ret.) Jeffery Riemer, on Georgia Avenue. Look for
currently chief operating the event flags and signage
officer of InDyne, Inc. The at the two large parking lots
topic is “Are We Ready for across the street from the
the Next BRAC?” RSVP to Eglin Conference Center
[email protected] with entrée and BX Mini Mall. Sellers
selection (fish, chicken, beef) may park in any available
by May 8. There is a $5 cover space in either lot, then use
charge and the dinner is $20. the adjacent space to display
Membership in ITEA is not their wares. Shoppers are
required to attend.
welcome to park in any of
the parking lots off Van Matre Avenue, surrounding the
event area. Space for sellers
is free. Advance reservations
are not required. For inforRelay For Life Golf Tour- mation, call 850-882-1482. nament is May 23 at the Fort
Walton Beach Golf Course.
Shotgun start at noon. The
event benefits the NicevilleValparaiso Relay For Life
and makes a difference in
The Air Force Enlisted
the fight against cancer.
Village’s major local fundThis Four Man Scramble raising event, the 11th Anformat event includes tour- nual Bob Hope Memorial
nament entry, cart, greens Charity Golf Classic, will be
fee, lunch, drinks, and a post held May 16-17 at the Eglin
event meal for $50 per per- AFB Golf Course in Niceville.
son. Advanced registration Registration is open online
at www.afev.us/GolfClassic or
by calling 850-651-3766. Proceeds from this event benefit military widows in need
residing at the Air Force Enlisted Village (AFEV).
Play begins on Friday,
May 16 at noon on The Eagle
course. Golfers will play The
Eagle again on Saturday,
May 17 with an 8:30 a.m. start
and an awards luncheon will
immediately follow. There
will be prizes for the winning
teams, a longest drive contest sponsored by GEICO,
a closest to the pin contest,
and an opportunity for holein-one prizes sponsored by
Sam Taylor Buick Cadillac.
The two day tournament
is $150 per person and golfers will receive green fees,
golf cart, range balls, commemorative coin, goody bag,
on-course refreshments and
lunch for both days.
Corporate sponsorships
are available and include
golf: Gold $5,000 - 8 golf registrations, event banner and
publicity, Silver $2,500 - 4 golf
registrations, event banner
and publicity, and Bronze
$1,000 - 2 golf registrations,
event banner and publicity.
Secure a Corporate Sponsorship by registering online at
www.afev.us/Corporate or
call 850-651-3766. Hole Sponsorships are also available
for $100.
By LAUREN SAGE REINLIE
Northwest Florida Daily News
EGLIN AFB — The
Army’s 6th Ranger Training Battalion Open House
is back on this year, after
a hiatus due to budget
concerns last year.
For over 60 years, the
battalion has invited the
public out to Camp James
E. Rudder to show off
what their instructors and
students are up to deep in
the swampy forest about
25 miles north of Fort Walton Beach.
—with blanks, of course.
This year, the event also will feature a car show
on the other side of the
camp, Paschall said.
Attendance is free, but
proceeds from concession
sales, donations and car
show entry fees will go to
Fisher House and to help
pay for the battalion’s annual ball.
“It’s a long drive, but
it’s well worth it,” Pashcall said.
The camp is located
on Overlord Drive. Signs
direct traffic from State
Road 189. The event will
be from 10 a.m. until 5
p.m.
For a schedule of
events go to www.nwfdailynews.com.
briefs From page 6
Parking Lot Sale
Relay For Life Golf
Tournament
Bob Hope Memorial
Charity Golf Classic
May 15 @ 7:30 p.m.
• $20
Mattie Kelly Arts Center, Niceville
All proceeds benefit Youth Orchestra Scholarships & programs
Call or Click for tickets
(850) 729-6000 or www.mattiekellyartscenter.org
(Plus $2 Box Office processing fee)
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ITEA Emerald Coast
Chapter meeting
EA/EO
Page | THE RED 7 | Friday, May 9, 2014
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Hammock Bay, Freeport
Approx. 53 miles
Winners Gait, Pace
Approx. 27 miles
Waterford Sound,
Gulf Breeze
Approx. 22 miles
Abernathy, Pace
Approx. 23 miles
Mid 200s*
Low 200s*
Terra Bella, Pace
Approx. 27 miles
Cottonwood, Milton
Approx. 22 miles
Habersham, Pace
Approx. 28 miles
Ashley Plantation, Pace
Approx. 32 miles
High 200s*
877-786-0329
Find out the full details
drhorton.com/savings
Home and community information, including pricing, included features, terms, availability
and amenities, are subject to change and prior sale at any time without notice or obligation.
Terms and Conditions Apply. See a D.R. Horton Sales Representative for Details.
Price effective 04/25/2014. *Home and community information, including pricing, included
features, terms, availability and amenities are subject to change and prior sale at any time
without notice or obligation. Mileage is approximate and may vary. Note: BAH stands for
2108840
Basic Allowance for Housing; BAH varies from installation to installation.