USA — Vice President, Dr. Biden Welcome Soldiers Home at Fort Drum

FORT DRUM, N.Y. — Sol­diers of the 10th Moun­tain Division’s 2nd Brigade Com­bat Team received a rous­ing wel­come home from Iraq here today, not only from fel­low sol­diers, fam­i­ly mem­bers and com­mu­ni­ty lead­ers, but also from Vice Pres­i­dent Joe Biden and his wife, Dr. Jill Biden.

homecoming celebration marking the return of the 10th Mountain Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team from Iraq
Vice Pres­i­dent Joe Biden and his wife, Dr. Jill Biden, are wel­comed to Fort Drum, N.Y., for a home­com­ing cel­e­bra­tion mark­ing the return of the 10th Moun­tain Division’s 2nd Brigade Com­bat Team from Iraq. Join­ing the Bidens on the stage are Army Maj. Gen. James L. Ter­ry, 10th Moun­tain Divi­sion com­man­der, and Army Com­mand Sgt. Maj. Christo­pher K. Gre­ca, the division’s com­mand sergeant major.
DoD pho­to by John D. Banusiewicz
Click to enlarge

The brigade is one of the Army’s most-deployed units, hav­ing served three deploy­ments to Afghanistan and four to Iraq, and had been deployed to east­ern Bagh­dad since October. 

Army Maj. Gen. James L. Ter­ry, 10th Moun­tain Divi­sion com­man­der, not­ed that the 2nd Brigade served well in Iraq in 2004 and 2005, in 2006 and 2007, and again from last fall until now. 

“Dur­ing the most recent deploy­ment,” Ter­ry told the brigade’s sol­diers, “you have done a mag­nif­i­cent job lay­ing the foun­da­tion for tran­si­tion to Oper­a­tion New Dawn – from train­ing Iraq’s secu­ri­ty forces to enabling pub­lic works projects and pro­vid­ing sim­ple ser­vices to the peo­ple of Iraq, your efforts have been critical.” 

The vice pres­i­dent not­ed that because their son, Beau, is a Nation­al Guard offi­cer who served a year-long deploy­ment in Iraq, he and Dr. Biden have a spe­cial appre­ci­a­tion for the ser­vice and sac­ri­fices the 2nd Brigade sol­diers and their fam­i­lies have made. 

“I think you under­es­ti­mate just how much you do,” he told the more than 2,600 sol­diers and fam­i­ly mem­bers attend­ing the cer­e­mo­ny. “You under­es­ti­mate the awe that you inspire. You under­es­ti­mate the notion that the Amer­i­can peo­ple, when they get to see up-close and per­son­al what you do, have incred­i­bly high regard for all of you. The sac­ri­fices you and your fam­i­ly make on behalf of the Amer­i­can peo­ple are hard to measure.” 

Biden said he did­n’t have to study up to know about the 10th Moun­tain Division’s proud his­to­ry, because he’d already heard about it from his long­time friend and col­league in the Sen­ate, for­mer Kansas Sen. Bob Dole, who was severe­ly wound­ed by ene­my fire while serv­ing in the divi­sion as a pla­toon leader. 

“You are today’s war­riors,” he said to the 2nd Brigade sol­diers, “and wor­thy of the proud lega­cy you represent.” 

The military’s mis­sion in Iraq has been com­plex and chal­leng­ing, the vice pres­i­dent said. 

“[The mis­sion involved] a war zone with no safe havens and no front lines, an invis­i­ble threat from explo­sives that turned high­ways into death traps, and an ene­my that used sui­cide as a dev­as­tat­ing weapon, requir­ing – and most peo­ple don’t under­stand this – split-sec­ond deci­sions that could save sol­diers’ lives or cause the death of inno­cents,” Biden said. More than a mil­lion U.S. ser­vice­mem­bers have served in Iraq since the war began, the vice pres­i­dent noted. 

“You and your col­leagues have per­se­vered and suc­ceed­ed,” he told the 2nd Brigade sol­diers. “With your help, Iraq’s lead­ers and secu­ri­ty forces per­se­vered and are suc­ceed­ing. And there­fore, those who sought to make chaos and destruc­tion a hall­mark of the new Iraq have failed because of you.” 

Not­ing that he’s been to Iraq on numer­ous occa­sions, includ­ing four times as vice pres­i­dent, Biden told the sol­diers and their fam­i­lies he’s seen the div­i­dends of their service. 

“I know what you’ve sac­ri­ficed, and I know what you’ve accom­plished,” he said. “You and your fam­i­lies have endured mul­ti­ple deploy­ments – four to Iraq and three to Afghanistan for the 2nd Brigade Com­bat Team alone. You have felt the strain of miss­ing anniver­saries and hol­i­days, birth­days, and even the arrival of a new­born child or the loss of a parent. 

“You have enabled the Iraqi peo­ple to replace a tyrant with a new con­sti­tu­tion, a new par­lia­ment, and two nation­al elec­tions con­duct­ed freely, fair­ly, and, by and large, safe­ly. And per­haps most impor­tant­ly, you have pre­pared Iraq’s secu­ri­ty forces to safe­guard their future as a sov­er­eign, sta­ble, self-reliant country.” 

It’s now up to the Iraqi peo­ple and their lead­ers to move for­ward in estab­lish­ing a new per­ma­nent gov­ern­ment, the vice pres­i­dent added, and he expressed con­fi­dence that they would do so. 

The home­com­ing here is one of many this sum­mer, as the Unit­ed States ends its com­bat mis­sion in Iraq and draws down to 50,000 troops remain­ing in the coun­try by Aug. 31, in accor­dance with an agree­ment between the U.S. and Iraqi gov­ern­ments. The agree­ment calls for the remain­ing U.S. troops to advise and assist Iraq’s secu­ri­ty forces until all U.S. forces leave Iraq by the end of next year. 

Dr. Biden intro­duced her hus­band at the home­com­ing event, and took the oppor­tu­ni­ty to offer her own words of wel­come to the return­ing sol­diers and to share her impres­sion of today’s servicemembers. 

“In my trav­els to mil­i­tary bases across our coun­try and abroad,” she said, “I have been tru­ly over­whelmed by the courage of our men and women in uni­form and inspired by the dig­ni­ty and the sense of patri­o­tism that our mil­i­tary fam­i­lies exhib­it every day.” 

She not­ed that she and the vice pres­i­dent cel­e­brat­ed the recent Fourth of July week­end with troops in Iraq. “I was hum­bled by their ded­i­ca­tion, their resilience and their pride in the work they were doing. … We are hon­ored to be in your pres­ence today, and are thank­ful for the oppor­tu­ni­ty to thank you and your fam­i­lies for your ser­vice to our country. 

“So to all of the fam­i­lies,” Dr. Biden con­tin­ued, “we know you are serv­ing too. And this coun­try appre­ci­ates your courage, your strength and your sacrifice.” 

No mil­i­tary fam­i­ly should have to bear its strug­gles alone, Dr. Biden added, not­ing that she and First Lady Michelle Oba­ma have been work­ing togeth­er to ask all Amer­i­cans to do what they can to make the load lighter for the fam­i­lies that are pro­vid­ing for the nation’s defense. 

After the home­com­ing event, Dr. Biden vis­it­ed Fort Drum’s Chapel Dri­ve School Age Cen­ter, one of many child-care facil­i­ties on the sprawl­ing post. She toured the facil­i­ty — which includes a gym­na­si­um, a tech­nol­o­gy lab and a home­work cen­ter among its fea­tures – while about 135 chil­dren were par­tic­i­pat­ing in the center’s sum­mer camp program. 

Robin D. Moor, the facility’s direc­tor, showed Dr. Biden around, and at every stop, the chil­dren eager­ly explained what they were doing as they par­tic­i­pat­ed in a wide range of activ­i­ties – some recre­ation­al and oth­ers educational. 

“We make sure that when they come here, they have a lot of fun things to do while their par­ents are at work or deployed,” Moor said. She also not­ed that the sum­mer camp pro­gram has a full-time fam­i­ly and youth behav­ior­ist with whom chil­dren can talk about their feel­ings and con­cerns about their par­ents’ deploy­ments or oth­er aspects of an Army child’s life. 

The chil­dren weren’t shy about ask­ing ques­tions, and were delight­ed to learn that Dr. Biden is a career edu­ca­tor and an Army moth­er. When she told a group of chil­dren that Beau Biden had served a year-long deploy­ment in Iraq, a girl shot up her hand to ask a ques­tion – but it was­n’t about deployments. 

“How old is he?” she want­ed to know. Told that Beau Biden is 41, the girl exclaimed, “Wow, that’s 11 years old­er than my mother!” 

Dr. Biden then con­duct­ed a pri­vate meet­ing with 10 wives of Fort Drum sol­diers to hear their con­cerns and ideas. Before she left, she urged all of the women to stay in touch with her and invit­ed them to pay a per­son­al vis­it if they’re ever in Washington. 

Source:
U.S. Depart­ment of Defense
Office of the Assis­tant Sec­re­tary of Defense (Pub­lic Affairs) 

Face­book and/or on Twit­ter

Team GlobDef

Seit 2001 ist GlobalDefence.net im Internet unterwegs, um mit eigenen Analysen, interessanten Kooperationen und umfassenden Informationen für einen spannenden Überblick der Weltlage zu sorgen. GlobalDefence.net war dabei die erste deutschsprachige Internetseite, die mit dem Schwerpunkt Sicherheitspolitik außerhalb von Hochschulen oder Instituten aufgetreten ist.

Alle Beiträge ansehen von Team GlobDef →