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olympian2004 Lt.Jg.
Joined: 25 Oct 2004 Posts: 121 Location: Boulder, Colorado
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 4:39 am Post subject: Haven't Read Newsweek Since May 26th, 2003 - This is Why... |
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http://www.blackfive.net/main/2005/05/havent_read_new.html
Major Mathew Schram's Memorial Day
http://www.blackfive.net/main/2004/05/one_year.html
Memorial Day is like any other day when you're in an Army at War.
On Memorial Day, May 26th, 2003 at approximately 7:00AM, Major Mathew E. Schram was leading a resupply convoy in Western Iraq near the Syrian border. Major Schram was the Support Operations Officer for the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment (out of Ft. Carson, Colorado). He had responsibility for organizing the logistical arm of the regiment - ensuring that the Cavalrymen never ran out of food, fuel or ammo.
Normally, Major Schram would not accompany the convoys as his responsibilities kept him at the main resupply point. However, due to the problems with attacks on supply convoys (i.e. Jessica Lynch's 507th Maintenance Company ambush), he decided to lead this one. He also decided that there was a side benefit to the ride - he would be able to talk with the field commanders and troops that he supported. Major Schram wanted to make sure that his "customers" were happy. Anyone who knew Mat Schram knew that he was obsessive-compulsive about making sure "his soldiers" were taken care of...that's why he was one of the top logistical officers in the US Army.
Major Schram's convoy consisted of eight vehicles - one 5,000 gallon water tanker, two 3,000 gallon water trucks, one water pump truck, two 5,000 gallon fuel tankers, one truck with MREs and bottled water, and Major Schram's command Humvee (bumper numbers: S&T 323, 344, 350, 237, 210, 204, 219, and HQ12).
The convoy was headed North from Al Asad Airbase - Foward Operating Base (FOB) Webster (grid coordinate KC 640 430) along Route 12 to FOB Jenna (KC 360 748). After delivering supplies at Jenna, the convoy would continue on to Al Qaim - FOB Tiger (GT 146 911) which had the 1/3 Armored Cavalry.
At 7:15AM, vicinity KC 6514 6181, Major Schram's convoy approached a ravine where the bridge crossing the ravine had been destroyed. The convoy had to go down the embankment, into the ravine, and back up the other side to get back onto the highway.
Once the lead vehicle started up the far bank of the ravine, the convoy came under intense fire from Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPGs), machine guns, and small arms fire. It was an ambush. Fifteen Iraqi insurgents had been waiting by the ravine.
An RPG hit the lead tanker vehicle, disabling it in the kill zone. It was a perfect ambush set up. If the insurgents could knock out the first and last vehicles, then the entire convoy would be stuck in the kill zone. Bullets flew from insurgents on both sides of the ravine. The insurgent grenadiers were trying to concentrate fire on the last American vehicle to bottle Major Schram's convoy in the ravine. The attackers would then be able to kill the Americans at will.
Major Schram ordered his driver, Specialist Chris Van Dyke, to accelerate from their position in the convoy into the insurgents' positions. Major Schram sent a message to Headquarters for help and began returning fire out of the Humvee. The Iraqi grenadiers recognized the threat and shifted their fire from the rear truck to Schram's Humvee, HQ-12.
Multiple grenades exploded at the front and rear of HQ-12. Specialist Van Dyke was blown out of the vehicle. Once he stopped rolling on the ground, he got up and ran back to HQ-12. He got back in and drove the Humvee out of the Kill Zone.
When he turned to get orders from Major Schram, Van Dyke realized that his Major had been killed. Even though he wore body armor, two 7.62 rounds had gone through his armpit (where there is no body armor coverage) and struck his heart, killing him instantly.
The Iraqi insurgents had fled after they fired their grenades at HQ-12 which was heading for them at full throttle.
Immediately, from a nearby FOB, two Apache helicopter gunships were launched along with a MedEvac helicopter. A Quick Reaction Force from FOB Webster was on the scene in less than ten minutes. Aside from the death of Mathew Schram, the convoy suffered only two wounded. Specialist Van Dyke was wounded in his hand and was able to continue his mission. One other soldier in the lead vehicle suffered a broken femur from the initial grenade attack.
The MedEvac brought Major Schram's body and the injured soldier back to the hospital at FOB Webster. The military conducted a funeral for Major Schram in Iraq. Two hundred soldiers were present. Everyone that knew Mat loved him.
The military said it would take ten days to get Mat Schram's body to his family in Wisconsin. It took less than a few days. Also, in a few days after the ambush, the Army had rounded up all of the attackers and put them in prison.
I was at my desk at work on Tuesday, June 3rd. The phone rang. I looked at the caller ID to see that it was a call from Ft. Leavenworth. I picked it up.
It was John, a friend of mine and Mat Schram's. We had all served together years ago and had stayed in touch. He told me to sit down. I did. He told me that Mat had been killed in Iraq.
After composing myself, we finished our conversation and I promised to see John's wife, Patti, at the funeral. John had to be at Special Operations Command and couldn't make it.
I shut the door to my office, sat back down at my desk and wept for a long time.
At the funeral, Mat's family displayed his last letters and emails that he sent. All were strong, positive messages (sooo very Schrambo-like). Here's an example of the kinds of things that Mat told his family (from the Green Bay Gazette):
Phil Schram of Hartland said his brother had visited Wisconsin over Christmas. The family knew then war was likely. Mathew Schram had been involved in the first Persian Gulf War and, later, in Somalia.
“He was anxious to get over there and get to work. He loved the military. He loved the structure. He loved serving under George W. (Bush),” Phil Schram said.
The one part that I left out of this post is that Major Schram's convoy was followed by a car with a Newsweek reporter in it. Once the action began, the reporter and his driver turned and got the hell out of there. If it wasn't for Mat's charge up into the ambushers, they never would have made it out of there alive.
Newsweek never ran a story about my good friend, Mat.
It took a few weeks for me to decide what to do.
I had been reading Stephen Den Beste, Bill Whittle, Frank J.'s IMAO, and Misha for awhile at that point.
I started Blackfive and decided to write about Mat and other Americans like him - people that Newsweek would never tell you about.
It's Mat Schram's blog as much as it is mine.
So, today, on the anniversary of the sacrifice of my friend, please take a moment to pray for the families who have lost their loved ones in our fight against terror. Mat would have liked that.
One last note, there is a way to contribute to help Mat's fellow Officers attend graduate school. Some of Mat's family and friends got together to create:
The Major Mathew Earl Schram ALMC-LEDC/FT Endowed Fellowship
The fellowship, for Florida Institute of Technology's School of Extended Graduate Studies ' (SEGS) Ft. Lee, Va. center, will support U.S. military officers enrolled in the SEGS Logistics Executive Development Course (LEDC)-Florida Tech (FT) cooperative graduate degree program. The program is at the Army Logistics Management College at Fort Lee. Major Mathew Schram graduated from this school in 2001. This is the first fellowship established for a Florida Tech SEGS center.
The endowment will support one or more annual fellowships for military officers. The first fellowship will be awarded for the fall 2004 semester. To make a contribution to the fellowship, call the Florida Tech Office of Development at (321) 674-8962.
I found this story courtesy of Michelle Malkin's post today (May 16th, 2005) at:
http://michellemalkin.com/archives/002486.htm _________________ Tony in Boulder, Colorado |
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I B Squidly Vice Admiral
Joined: 26 Aug 2004 Posts: 879 Location: Cactus Patch
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 5:22 am Post subject: |
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I let my "Newsweek" subscription expire in '72. They'd pictured a judge in black robe with a shotgun duct-taped to his throat. The judge died (Black Panthers or Simbionese-somebody, whatever) and "Newsweek" gave it existential jibberish.
I remember a ballad that had PC deservedly short play, "Charles Whitman...who's to say he's wrong!". Essentially it advocated the shooting of all these 'astards. _________________ "KILL ALL THE LAWYERS!"
-Wlm Shakespeare |
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GM Strong Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy
Joined: 18 Sep 2004 Posts: 1579 Location: Penna
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 12:46 pm Post subject: |
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I B Squidly wrote: | I let my "Newsweek" subscription expire in '72. They'd pictured a judge in black robe with a shotgun duct-taped to his throat. The judge died (Black Panthers or Simbionese-somebody, whatever) and "Newsweek" gave it existential jibberish. |
You are referring to the kidnaping in 1970 at the Marin County, CA courthouse engineered by the notorious Communist radical Angela Davis. She set up a "liberation of the thugs known as "The Soldedad Brothers". These Soledad Brothers made sensational headlines on August 7, 1970 when George Jackson’s 17-year-old brother Jonathan burst into a Marin County courtroom with a machine gun, freed three San Quentin prisoners and took Judge Harold Haley as a hostage to demand freedom for the Soledad Brothers. Haley, prisoners William Christmas and James McClain, and Jonathan Jackson were killed by police fire as they attempted to drive away from the courthouse.
A Soledad Brother is, generally speaking, an African-American man doing time in California’s maximum-security Soledad Prison, and, quite specifically, one of three convicted felons -- John Cluchette, Fleeta Drumgo and George Jackson -- who were incarcerated in the maximum-security cellblock at Soledad when they were charged with killing a guard in retaliation for the murder of three black activists at the prison on January 13, 1970. Suddenly in the public spotlight although still locked down in his prison cell, George Jackson published a pair of best-selling books, Letters from Prison and Soledad Brother, which brought him world-wide attention. But on August 21, 1971, Jackson -- brandishing a 9mm automatic pistol alleged to have been smuggled into the prison by Angela Davis -- was gunned down in the prison yard at San Quentin in what officials characterized as an escape attempt.
The thugs got their reward, Angela Davis got a pass.
She is currently a UC Presidential Chair and professor with the History of Consciousness department at the University of California, Santa Cruz and director of the Women's studies department. Huh, Professor of WHAT???
This woman is a criminal, a hate filled anti-American Communist surrounded by dead bodies and is a "Professor" in one of the snake pits that front for higher education. _________________ 8th Army Korea 68-69 |
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nccjones Ensign
Joined: 05 Sep 2004 Posts: 62 Location: Virginia Beach
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 5:26 pm Post subject: |
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I quit reading Newsweek back in 96 when they were going to break the story about the ribbon with a "v" fiasco on Admiral Boorda..then CNO. I know the media feels the need to tell the truth, but to diminish a man's career over ribbons just was too much for me. ADM Boorda was the best thing for the Navy in decades. I'm sure there is more to his suicide than just the story, but I was upset that they were willing to ruin a good man's career over it. He didn't steal from the government, take private flights to Bermuda...he wore a ribbon that was in question....
Here is some of the story:
Rear Admiral Kendell Pease, who was with Boorda a little over an hour before the shooting, said Boorda was to have met with Newsweek's bureau chief in his Pentagon office at 2:30 p.m. to discuss questions about his Vietnam combat medals. The implication was that Newsweek was investigating whether Boorda had worn a combat ''V'' decoration that he was never officially awarded.
Pease said that when he told Boorda, about 12:30 p.m., what the subject of the interview was, the admiral abruptly announced he was going home for lunch instead of eating the meal that had been brought to his office. ''Admiral Boorda was obviously concerned,'' said Pease, the Navy's top public affairs officer.
In a statement, Newsweek Editor Maynard Parker said the magazine ''had not reached any conclusions'' about the medal controversy. Boorda's body was found about 2:05 p.m. in a side yard next to his quarters at the Washington Navy Yard. He was pronounced dead at D.C. General Hospital a few minutes later. |
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nccjones Ensign
Joined: 05 Sep 2004 Posts: 62 Location: Virginia Beach
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 5:38 pm Post subject: |
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You know...now that I think about it, if ADM Boorda really felt that guilty over the ribbon and Newsweek really felt it was such a story, why didn't Newsweek go after John Kerry for his questionable ribbons since he was running for President of the United States? I guess Newsweek feels the CNO is more important...huh. |
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I B Squidly Vice Admiral
Joined: 26 Aug 2004 Posts: 879 Location: Cactus Patch
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 5:53 pm Post subject: |
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I'm in the smallest room of the house. Your magazine is before me. Soon, it will be behind me. Couldn't you have made it more absorbent? _________________ "KILL ALL THE LAWYERS!"
-Wlm Shakespeare |
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