A son and a Marine

[quote=AlphaFoxtrot51;1993403]

Jordan Haerter’s memorial page[/quote]

Missing you…:911flag:

It’s been while…haven’t forgotten you though, I promise. I’ve gotta say that I find myself pissed off at the whole thing. I know how the game’s played, and when it’s your time it’s your time. But it was too soon…way too soon for you. I haven’t heard from J.S. in a while, but I think she’s doing ok. J.H. is a wreck though. She misses you…we all do. They named a bridge after you in Sag Harbor…and you got the Navy Cross, but I think I can speak for everyone when I say that we wish you were here…

-Remi

Semper Fi and RIP

AF51, thank you for keeping his memory alive.

[quote=AlphaFoxtrot51;1792634]Solemn farewell to fallen Sag Harbor Marine

BY MITCHELL FREEDMAN | mitchell.freedman@newsday.com
1:47 PM EDT, April 28, 2008
The stomping of feet as the Marines turned, the coffin of their fallen comrade in their care, broke the silence outside the First Presbyterian Church in Sag Harbor Monday morning, where hundreds assembled to grieve the death of Lance Cpl. Jordan Haerter.

From the grade school children in blue ponchos, to the contingent of police officers, volunteer firefighters and veterans, to those who simply stood with unopened umbrellas as the rain pelted their shoulders, mourners paid quiet tribute to Sag Harbor’s first casualty of war in decades.

Haerter, 19, was killed by a suicide bomber in the western Iraqi city of Ramadi on Tuesday, but not before he acted heroically to save other U.S. troops, military officials have said.

Haerter, a rifleman at a checkpoint, shot a truck driver when that driver disregarded orders to stop, relatives have said. The truck, which was filled with explosives, then swerved from where other U.S. troops were positioned, the family said they were told by Marines.

Inside the church, the Rev. Steven Howarth told congregants that the family of a military serviceman who Haerter had saved came to Sag Harbor to thank Haerter’s family.

“He had determination and a sense of responsibility,” Howarth said.

When Haerter learned he was being deployed to Iraq, Howarth said the teenager responded with: “It’s what Marines do.”

In a letter read aloud to those gathered, Christian Haerter gave his son advice about the perilous landscape he faced in Iraq.

You “should have compassion and humanity and decency, which are not weaknesses in character but strengths. You should never let your guard down.”

Against the pale green walls of the church, also known as the Old Whaler’s Church, the red, white and blue colors of the U.S. flag draped over Haerter’s coffin seemed brighter still.

Haerter, a member of the First Battalion, Ninth Marines, who graduated from Pierson High School in 2006, had been in Iraq less than a month.

His burial was to follow at the Oakland Cemetery in Sag Harbor.

– Staff Writer Laura Rivera contributed to this story.

This story doesn’t do his case justice…

LCpl. Jordan Haerter was a Marine. He was 19 years old and died only a days in country. Let me tell you something about Jordan.

As Jordan was standing guard at the checkpoint, a truck approached. His battle buddy ordered the vehicle to stop, and instead…it lurched forward towards his fellow Marines. LCpl. Haerter threw his teammate down, and opened fire on the vehicle…killing the suicide-bomber and placing himself in harms way. The truck detonated and killed him, but he saved the lives of his brothers-in-arms through his actions. LCpl. Haerter made a choice, knowing full well the consequences of his actions might result in his death…

Rest in peace Jordan…your fight is over.

                                      Jeremy aka AlphaFoxtrot51[/quote]

Although I do not approve of the conflict in question, I still know what its like to lose a friend.
Especially one who was doing what they believed to be right.

When it comes down to it, regardless of ones stance on the overall situation, one must acknowledge and honour the courage of those who step up and do what they believe must be done.

I do not personally believe in an afterlife, but if there is one I wish him well in it.
It is also my hope that his family and friends can come to terms with his death as best they can.

War is an ugly, horrific affair. It is the politicians who create it but the soldiers who fight and die in it.

I wish this young man a quiet rest and his family whatever solace they can find.