EMBED DAD WRITES ABOUT WAR HIS SON IS FIGHTING TONIGHT AT 9 EST WITH ANDREA
“It’s hard to go about your everyday business knowing your son is in harm’s way, but documenting first-hand accounts of their battles helped me cope.”
So wrote Prof. Andrew Lubin in his book Charlie Battery; A Marine Artillety Unit in Iraq — the story of his son and his battery fighting in the initial invasion back in ‘03.
But this isn’t a book just about battles. It’s about a unique perspective of the war, not only from the front lines, but also from the home front.
“It’s about war. It’s about Marines. It’s about family,” Lubin says. Readers learn what it was like from those who experienced it – and from their loved ones back home who watched it unfold live on television.
Lubin’s son has been deployed twice since and has re-upped for another tour this summer.
Lubin himself was embedded in Beirut last summer, in Iraq during October ‘06, and then spent Jan-May of this year in Iraq and Afghanistan. He says with luck and financing he’ll be returning Jan - March.
Andy Lubin was awarded the 2007 Gold Medal by Military Writers Society of America and is a member of the USMC Combat Correspondents Association. He specializes in history, current events, and international relations.
He’s been on ABC, CNN, FOX, Radio Ireland… and tonight he’s on with us. Join us!
We get underway at 9 p.m. ET. As always the Chat Room doors will be wide open for you!
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December 29th, 2007 at 5:51 pm
“Duty, Honor, Country”
I got a Christmas e-mail a couple of days ago from an old friend and DEA colleague. I am just going to call him Bill. I first met Bill in 1973, when we were both assigned to attend language school at the Foreign Service Institute in Rosslyn, Va. For the next 6 months, Bill and I studied the Thai language in preparation for our eventual transfer to Thailand. Subsequently, Bill was assigned to Chiang Mai, and I was assigned to Bangkok.
After Thailand, we went our separate ways, crossing paths every few years. At one point, Bill was assigned to Islamabad, Pakistan. During his tour there, the embassy was attacked and burned by an angry mob with loss of life. For his actions in helping save American and Pakistani lives, Bill was cited as a hero in that tragedy.
Eventually, our careers ran their course, and both of us retired from DEA. Bill continued in law enforcement for a while, then retired for good- for a short period. In the wake of 9-11 and our involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq, Bill (an Air Force Viet Nam veteran) decided he could not just sit back on the sidelines and enjoy his comfortable retirement-even though he was well into his 60s. As a result, he signed up about a year ago to assist our military in Afganistan. I assume his assignment has something to do with drug intelligence, but the important thing is that Bill is embedded with Army troops. After intensive training with the Army in the US and Germany, Bill went to Afghanistan, where he is today.
My point here is that there are few people like my friend, Bill. While I am in awe of the young men and women who are willing (in the absence of a draft) to put on the uniform and go fight for their country, that one in his 60s would step out of retirement to do the same is heroic beyond measure.
If this country can continue to produce more people like Bill, there will always be hope for our future.
God bless you, Bill….and stay safe.
gary fouse
fousesquawk