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Last post 20 years ago by tonester666. 1 reply replies.
Above and Beyond the call....
rayder1 Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 06-02-2002
Posts: 2,226
Here's a copy of an Email that was passed on to me. I don't ordinarily pass on emails since, at times, their validity is questionable. I don't doubt this one:


The Third Infantry Regiment at Fort Myer has the responsibility for providing ceremonial units and honor guards for state occasions, White House social
functions, public celebrations and interments at Arlington National Cemetery....and standing a very formal sentry watch at the Tombs of the
Unknowns.

The public is familiar with the precision of what is called "walking post" at the Tombs. There are roped off galleries where visitors can form to observe the troopers and their measured step and almost mechanical silent rifle shoulder changes. They are relieved every hour in a very formal drill that has
to be seen to believe. Some people think that when the Cemetery is closed to the public in the evening that this show stops.

First, to the men who who are dedicated to this work...it is no show...it is a "charge of honor". The
formality and precision continues uninterrupted all night. During the nighttime, the drill of relief and the measured step of the on duty sentry remain changed
from the daylight hours. To these men...these special men, the continuity of this post is the key to the honor and respect shown to these honored dead,
symbolic of all American unaccounted for American combat dead.

The steady rhythmic step in rain, sleet, snow, hail, hot, cold... bitter cold... uninterrupted. 'Uninterrupted' is the important part of the honor shown.

Last night, while you were sleeping, the teeth of Hurricane Isabel came through this area and tore hell out of everything... We have thousands of trees
down...power outages...traffic signals out...roads filled with down limbs and "gear adrift" debris...We have flooding...and the place looks like it has
been the impact area of an off shore bombardment. The Regimental Commander of the U.S. Third Infantry sent word to the nighttime Sentry Detail to secure
the post and seek shelter from the high winds, to ensure their personal safety.

THEY DISOBEYED THE ORDER...During winds that turned over vehicles and turned debris into projectiles...the measured step continued. One fellow said "I've got
buddies getting shot at in Iraq who would kick my butt if word got to them that we let them down...I sure as hell have no intention of spending my Army career
being known as the goddam idiot who couldn't stand a little light breeze and
shirked his duty." Then he said something in response to a female reporter question regarding silly purposeless personal risk...."I wouldn't expect
you to understand. it's an enlisted man's thing."

God Bless the rascal...In a time in our nation's history when spin and total bull**** seems to have become the accepted coin-of-the-realm, there beat
hearts...the enlisted hearts we all knew and were so damn proud to be a part of...that fully understand that devotion to duty is not a part time occupation.
While we slept, we were represented by some damn fine men who fully understood their post orders and proudly went about their assigned responsibilities unseen,
unrecognized and in the finest tradition of the American Enlisted Man.

Folks, there's hope....The gene that George S. Patton...Arliegh Burke and Jimmy Doolittle left us...survives.

(From a subvet friend in our nation's capital)

...More....Nina Swink adds.....

On the ABC evening news, it was reported tonight that, because of the dangers from Hurricane Isabel approaching Washington DC, the military members
assigned the duty of guarding the Tomb of the Unkown Soldier were given permission to
suspend the assignment. They refused. "No way, Sir!"

Soaked to the skin, marching in the pelting rain of a tropical storm, they said that guarding the
Tomb was not just an assignment, it was the highest honor that can be afforded to a service person. The tomb has been patrolled continuously, 24/7,since 1930.





tonester666 Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 05-07-2003
Posts: 1,324
spent 2 years stationed at Ft Meyers. Made friends with a few of these guys - very dedicated men. Everybody who visited me was shown the tomb.
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