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Rep. Larry Seaquist, serving the 26th District Serving parts of Pierce and Kitsap Counties, including Port Orchard, Gig Harbor, Key Peninsula, and parts of Bremerton. |
August 6, 2009
OLYMPIA –As the 3,200 guard members, including 2,400 from Washington,
serving in the 81st Brigade make their way home after finishing a nine-month
tour of duty in Iraq, the friends, families, and communities they left
behind enthusiastically embrace their veterans and applaud their service to
our country.
150 soldiers arrived last week at McChord Air Force
Base. The rest of the brigade is expected to return over the next two weeks.
They had been in Iraq since last October. Their missions focused on convoy
security, force protection, provincial reconstruction and base operations.
They logged more than 3 million miles of travel in Iraq, according to the
Army.
State Representative Larry Seaquist, a former US Navy warship
captain and Pentagon strategist who completed a 32-year Navy career in 1994,
took the time to personally welcome home Washington’s guard members of the
81st, issuing the following statement:
“It is my great honor to
welcome home the 3,200 soldiers of Washington National Guard’s 81st Brigade.
You are our brothers, our sisters, our mothers and fathers, our husbands
and wives who have served our country overseas with courage and grace.
Before you left for Iraq last October, I had the privilege of visiting
some of you at the Yakima training facility as you were preparing to deploy.
You were leaving jobs as teachers, fire fighters, and sales managers. Some
were preparing to leave behind a pregnant wife or newly born child, others
an aging parent. Some of you were young men just starting out in life, some
had the grey hairs of men and women who have been through the ropes a time
or two already.
One moment that stands out vividly for me was when
we spoke of what we could do for you back home while you were deployed. The
one thing the few troops I spoke with asked for was a flag that had flown
over the state capitol. It made me reflect on how much we ask of our
country’s finest, and how little they ask of us in return.
It is my
hope that over the days, months, and years to come, we can offer up whatever
assistance is needed to help in the transition from active duty to normal
life back here at home.
We missed you all and welcome you back with
pride and gratitude. To each and every one of you, thank you for your
sacrifice and your service.
And we will not forget the ultimate
sacrifice of Specialist Samuel Stone who gave his life while serving our
nation.
Our National Guard and their families can be very proud of
their expert contributions to the security of our nation, as well as the
citizens of countries all across the globe.”
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