Home Page - DefendAmerica 
[NOTE: Because of increased web traffic, you may experience delays.  Please be patient.]
Feb 18, 2004
space
Homeland Security Advisory System
Homeland Security Advisory System
space
Support For Our Troops
space
DoD Video Broadcast
space
Saddam's Capture - A Video from Golf Troops' Perspective
Skip Navigation
spaceFirstGov
spaceEPA
spaceFAA
spaceFBI
spaceFEMA
spaceHomeland Security
spaceJustice Department
spaceState Department
spaceTreasury Department
spaceWhite House
spaceWar on Terror Sites
space
spaceDefenseLINK
spaceArmy
spaceNavy
spaceAir Force
spaceMarines
spaceCoast Guard
spaceReserve Affairs
spaceArmy Reserve
spaceNavy Reserve
spaceAir Force Reserve
spaceMarine Reserve
spaceCoast Guard Reserve
spaceNational Guard
spaceAir National Guard
spaceArmy National Guard
spaceESGR
spaceMerchant Marines
space
spaceCivil Air Patrol
spaceCoast Guard Auxiliary
spaceFBI
space
spaceDefense Department
spaceState Department
spaceWhite House
 
Photo, caption below.
space
PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE — U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Luke Salkeld, noncommissioned officer in charge of fuels preventive maintenance for the 407th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron's fuels flight, places a brake light on an R-11 refueling truck. Salkeld is deployed to Tallil Air Base, Iraq, from Shaw Air Force Base, S.C. U.S. Air Force photo by Photo by Tech. Sgt. Bob Oldham
space
Reconstruction Teams Work
To Secure, Rebuild Afghanistan
By Kathleen T. Rhem / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Feb. 18, 2003 – Officials are happy with the progress of 11 provincial reconstruction teams in Afghanistan and are looking to expand the program throughout the country.
     Eleven teams are operating in Afghanistan, with a 12th becoming active this week. Coalition partners operate three of these teams. New Zealand and the United Kingdom each operate a team, while Germany runs one under the auspices of NATO, the top American general in Afghanistan said Feb. 17. More
Briefing  Video Report
Bush Thanks Fort Polk Troops, Pledges Vigilance in Terror War
By Donna Miles / American Forces Press Service
President George W. Bush greets national guardsmen as he joins them for lunch at Fort Polk, La., Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2004. White House photo by Paul Morse     WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2004 — President Bush credited soldiers and their families at Fort Polk, La., today with “serving with skill and bravery in the war on terror” and leaving “no doubt that that the enemy will be defeated and freedom will prevail.”
     The commander in chief thanked troops at this northwest Louisiana post that has trained and deployed more than 10,000 troops in the war of terror. More   Remarks
Coalition Continues Offensive Operations in Iraqi Freedom
ByJohn D. Banusiewicz / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2004 - Calling the military situation in Iraq "relatively stable," Combined Joint Task Force 7's deputy operations director detailed recent military activity during a Baghdad news conference today.
     Army Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said the past week has seen an average of 17 engagements daily against coalition military forces, just over four per day against Iraqi security forces and fewer than two per day against Iraqi civilians. More
Outreach Programs Point Iraqis Toward Road To Democracy
Fear of Free Iraq Fuels Terror Attacks, Kimmitt Says
U.S., Coalition Forcing Taliban
To Change Tactical Response
By Kathleen T. Rhem / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2004 — U.S. and coalition actions in Afghanistan have forced terrorist groups operating there to change their strategies. So coalition forces continue to adapt their tactical approach in response, the top U.S. general in that country said today.
     Army Lt. Gen. David Barno, commander of Combined Forces Command Afghanistan, explained that Taliban forces used to attack coalition elements in large numbers, until they realized that would get them killed in large numbers. More
space
Iraq Weekly Progress Update (Governance, Electricity, Education, Oil, Security, Economics, Health Care)
U.S. Defense Dept. slides with facts &
figures on reconstruction efforts in Iraq.
White House Fact Sheet: Progress in Iraq
Iraq Update  . Maps of Iraq
Iraq's 55 Most Wanted
Mass Graves
space
USS Yorktown Deploys
To Support War on Terror
     PASCAGOULA, Miss., Feb. 18, 2004 (NNS) — The guided-missile cruiser USS Yorktown and its crew of approximately 400 deployed Feb. 17 from its homeport at Naval Station Pascagoula to be part of the USS Wasp Expeditionary Strike Group, which is making its maiden deployment as an Expeditionary Strike Group in support of the global war on terrorism.
     Yorktown is slated to be the surface warfare commander for the strike group, meaning that the ship and its crew will lead the defense of the group against any surface threat. Story
USS George Washington Joins 5th Fleet
Coalition Ups Rewards Program
    WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2004 — An enhanced, three-tiered reward program is the coalition's latest weapon against insurgents in Iraq, officials announced at a Baghdad news conference today.
    The program's top tier covers the 10 members of the "Top 55" most-wanted members of Saddam Hussein's regime who remain at large. More
All Soldiers To Wear
U.S. Flag Insignia
     WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2004 (Army News Service) — All soldiers can now wear the U.S. flag insignia on the right shoulder of their utility uniform, as a continued reminder that the Army is engaged in a war at home and abroad.
     “The flag has been around for years to identify deploying troops. Now based on the Army’s joint expeditionary mindset, the flag represents our commitment to fight the war on terror for the foreseeable future,” said Sgt. Maj. Walter Morales, the uniform policy chief for G1. More
Commander Visits 'Old Guard'
Troops in Horn of Africa
     CAMP LEMONIER, Dijoubti, Feb. 17, 2004 — The regimental commander of the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, “The Old Guard,” visited the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa this week to meet with Old Guard soldiers deployed here.
     Col. Chuck Taylor toured the region with the Regimental Command Sergeant Major Harry Wimbrough and regimental chaplain Maj. Raymond Robinson. More
Marine Sgt. Maj. Visits U.S. Troops in Georgia
Transformation
space
New Bouy System to Protect
Navy Ships from Terror Attacks
      NAVAL WEAPONS STATION SEAL BEACH, Calif., Feb. 17, 2004 (NNS) — As part of an ongoing program to protect U.S. Navy ships from terrorist attacks, Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach began installation of a new barrier system in Anaheim Bay in mid-January.
     The barriers are an added component of the force protection measures already in place to thwart small craft attacks of the type that damaged USS Cole in the port of Aden, Yemen, in October 2000. Story
More Transformation News
space
space
Radio
space
space
Air Force Radio
AFRTS - Radio
Soldiers Radio
space
space
Television
space
space
Air Force TV
AFRTS - TV
Navy-Marines TV
Soldiers Radio&TV
 
Fallen Warriors
 
Remembering Those Who Perished  At the Pentagon
 
Send E-Mail to Troops at AnyServiceMember.
 
Link to Profiles.
 
Military Systems & Equipment.
 
Humanitarian Aid
 
Backgrounders
 
Subscribe to DefendAmerica Email News.
 
Feedback.
Photo Essay -
banner image
Convoy Through Khyber Pass 6 More Photos
Photo, caption below.
With a steady flow of people passing as they cross the border, members of the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force - Afghanistan and the 19th Special Forces Group move through the village of Torkham, Afghanistan, in the Khyber Pass, following a border security meeting in Pakistan, Feb. 10, 2004. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Joe Belcher  Photo Essay Archive
‘Screaming Eagles’ Retrieve Aircraft from Jacksonville Port
By U.S. Army Pfc. Dallas Walker / Fort Campbell Public Affairs Office
Soldiers of 8th Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment wrestle a CH-47D helicopter into hoisting position aboard the USNS Benavidez Feb. 16 at Jacksonville, Fla. U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Dallas Walker     JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Feb. 18, 2004 — Things have come full circle for the soldiers of 8th Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment.
     Just over a year ago at Jacksonville, they loaded the helicopters of the "Screaming Eagle" 101st Airborne Division on cargo vessels bound for Kuwait. This week, these same aircraft arrived back at Jacksonville, and many of the same soldiers, now combat-hardened, were waiting for them. More
space
Inside Iraq - banner image

U.S. Troops Train Iraqi
Civil Defense Corps Soldiers

Sgt. Marlon Harper (right), a tanker with C Troop, 1st Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, and an Iraqi Civil Defense Corps instructor, conducts an after-action review with Iraqi soldiers at Baghdad International Airport's Camp Slayer. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Shauna McRoberts     BAGHDAD, Iraq, Feb. 18, 2004 – Soldiers from 1st Armored Division’s 1st Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment are spending the next month training soldiers from the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps. The Iraqi Civil Defense Corps is a home guard consisting of Iraqi citizens who volunteered to serve their nation and fight terrorist insurgents within their homeland.
     The Iraqi Civil Defense Corps soldiers of B and C Company, 304th Battalion, 40th Brigade, originally trained with U.S. soldiers from 82nd Airborne’s 2nd Brigade. “We’re taking what the soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Division taught them and building on it,” said 1st Lt. Matt Weightman, a scout platoon leader with C Troop, 1st Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment.  More
Iraqi Security Force Members Honored For Explosives Disposal Work
space
space
Homecoming - banner image
space
V Corps Troops Return Home
From Iraqi Freedom Deployment
     MANNHEIM, Germany, Feb. 17, 2004 -- Enthusiastic families, friends and co-workers were on hand at Tompkins Barracks Feb. 11 to greet soldiers of V Corps Artillery, the command element for the corps’ field artillery assets, marking the end of their year-long deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
     As chance would have it, the unit's homecoming ceremony occurred on the same date it deployed 140 of its soldiers exactly one year ago. More
space
Family, Friends, Fresh Paint
Greet Returning Soldiers
Spc. Jeremy Kersey, a member of V Corps’ Alpha Company, 302nd Military Intelligence Battalion, kisses his six-month old son Jacob upon the unit’s return to Patton Barracks in Heidelberg, Germany Feb. 13 from a year-long deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. U.S. Army photo

     HEIDELBERG, Germany, Feb. 17, 2004 - An extra-special treat greeted soldiers of the Alpha Company of V Corps' 302nd Military Intelligence Battalion when they returned here Feb. 13 at the end of their year-long deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
     As family and friends greeted them, those troops got an added bonus -- newly renovated living quarters for them at their home station on Heidelberg’s Patton Barracks. "Being deployed, you always miss the little things the most," said Spc. Edward Dingman. "Coming back to something like this, I really feel loved and appreciated." More

space
space
More News - banner image
War on Terrorism
FBI Chief Mueller: Counterterrorism is FBI's Top Priority
Panel to Review Detainees Housed at Guantanamo Bay
U.S. Troops Work Closely with Iraqi Police and Security Forces
Rumsfeld Staunchly Defends Preemption to European Officials
Croatian PM Voices Support for U.S. Policy of Preemption
Iraq
Dangerous Detainees Important To Intell Effort, Rumsfeld Says
Terrorists Know Time Running Out as Iraqi Sovereignty Nears
Terrorists Must Lose Race For Weapons of Mass Murder
Some Iraqi Cities Not Ready For Local Control, Kimmitt Says
Bomb Kills 2 Soldiers; Coalition Campaign Focuses on Zarqawi
Military News
Air Force 'Patriot Express' Flights Diverted to Support Deployments
Some Reservists Eligible For New Health Benefits
Nat'l Guard Unit's Deployment 'Different' Than Active, Reserve
. Myers Praises Guard Troops, Families for Service, Sacrifice
. Defense Leaders Urge Proper Funding to Face Terror Threats
. National Guard, Reserve Update
space
Defense Officials
Identify Army Casualty
     WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2004 — Defense Department officials announced today the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.
     Spc. Michael M. Merila, 23, of Sierra Vista, Ariz., died Feb. 16 in Talifar, Iraq, when his convoy was hit by an improvised explosive device. Merila was assigned to the Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 1st Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment, Fort Lewis, Wash.
Remembering the Fallen
'Coulter’s Place'
Remembers Fallen Soldier
Maj. Doug Babb, 124th Signal Battalion executive Officer, dedicates the battalion's new Internet café at Forward Operating Base Ironhorse, Tikrit, Iraq Feb. 1, 2004.  The building is dedicated to the memory of Chief Warrant Officer Alexander S. Coulter, who was killed Nov. 17. 2003. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Benjamin R. Kibbey
     FORWARD OPERATING BASE IRONHORSE, Tikrit, Iraq, Feb. 18, 2004 — Since the beginning of Coalition operations in Iraq, there has been effort here to improve the quality of life for soldiers, including providing such amenities as Internet and satellite phones.
     Before he was killed Nov. 17, Chief Warrant Officer Alexander Scott Coulter worked to provide that kind of communication to Soldiers Task Force Ironhorse. More
space
space
America Pays Tribute to the Troops
starSign an On-line Thank You Note
space
space
space
Afghanistan Update
space
More Afghanistan Update Details
Maps of Afghanistan 
space
space
space
Defense Leaders Speak
space

President George W. Bush

"...The men and women we have sent to Iraq and Afghanistan have given vital service in the war on terror....We and our coalition have delivered more than 50 million people from cruel oppression. We've removed sources of violence and instability....We've removed from power enemies of this country. We have made America more secure."
space
Remarks at Fort Polk, La., Feb. 17, 2004
space
Defense Views
Quotes by U.S. defense leaders
space
space
Profile
U.S. Air Force
Lt. Col. Michael Fossum
Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Fossum (left) and fellow astronaut Steven Swanson train inside a specially built KC-135 Stratotanker at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston for an upcoming mission. During initial astronaut training, the modified aircraft is used to test tools and basic techniques in moving around in zero gravity. Fossum is a reservist assigned to the F-16 system program office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. Courtesy photo
      WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio — An Air Force reserve officer assigned to the F-16 Fighting Falcon system program office here is one of four NASA astronauts named to fly on space shuttle mission STS-121. The mission, planned for November, will follow a shuttle mission scheduled for September.
     Lt. Col. Michael Fossum, an individual mobilization augmentee, will serve as a mission specialist, responsible for supporting flight operations during launch and re-entry. More
More Profiles
space
space
On the Ground
space
space
In Iraq
space
space
Camp Falcon Weather Team
Helps Put Steel on Target
space
space
Spc. Kate Waters meteorological team crewmember, assigned to the 1st Armored Division Artillery Combat Team, prepares a weather balloon during a recent meteorological team mission to gather weather data for various field artillery positions around Baghdad. U.S. Army photo    BAGHDAD, Iraq, Feb. 16, 2004 — For three soldiers, having one of the Army's smallest military job skills, and to some, probably the most unknown job supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom, can be frustrating and rewarding at the same time. More
space
space
space
space
'On The Ground' Archive
space
space
space
space

Ballistic Missile Defense | Defense Department Overview | Joint Chiefs of Staff
CENTCOM | EUCOM | JFCOM | NORAD | NORTHCOM | PACOM | SOCOM | STRATCOM | SOUTHCOM | TRANSCOM
Maps | Recruiting | Today's Military | DoDBusOpps
Home | Privacy & Security | Disclaimer | About Us | Contact Us | Archive | Search