Obama honors fallen Americans at Dover

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
President Barack Obama salutes as a carry team carries the transfer case containing the remains of Army Sgt. Dale R. Griffin of Terre Haute, Ind., who, accordng to the Department of Defense died in Afghanistan, during the dignified transfer event at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Del., Thursday, Oct. 29, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Buy Sauk Valley Media Photos »

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hours after a personal encounter with the grim cost of war, President Barack Obama said Thursday the sight of 18 flag-covered cases holding the remains of Americans killed this week in Afghanistan can't help but influence his thinking about sending more troops overseas.

"It was a sobering reminder of the extraordinary sacrifices that our young men and women in uniform are engaging in every single day, not only our troops but their families as well," Obama said from the White House, reflecting briefly on his surprise middle-of-the-night trip to Dover Air Force Base to observe the return of the fallen Americans to the United States.

Speaking softly andsomewhat haltingly, Obama said losses such as these are "something that I think about each and every day."

Asked whether the somber experience — watching cases carrying the remains come off a giant C-17 cargo plane one by one in the darkness and meeting privately with families so fresh in their grief — will affect his overhaul of the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan, the president didn't hesitate to say that it would. But neither did he elaborate.

"The burden that both our troops and their families bear in any wartime situation is going to bear on how I see these conflicts," he said, adding nothing more.

By many accounts, it was a difficult night.

After a 40-minute helicopter ride around midnight to the Delaware base where U.S. forces killed overseas come home, Obama went immediately to a chapel to speak with relatives of the fallen. Their loved ones had died just two or three days before.

Of the 18 fallen Americans on the C-17, 10 of them — including three Drug Enforcement Administration agents — were killed Monday when a U.S. military helicopter crashed returning from a firefight with suspected Taliban drug traffickers in western Afghanistan. The other eight soldiers were killed Tuesday when their personnel vehicles were struck by roadside bombs in Afghanistan's Kandahar province.

The military calls the process of removing remains from the plane a dignified transfer, not a ceremony, because there is nothing to celebrate. The cases are not labeled coffins, although they come off looking that way, enveloped in flags.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments



Get Real Deals delivered right to your inbox!

Blogs

» Twin Cities Talk
Twin Cities Talk

Bringing people to the river

STERLING – More entities are throwing their support behind the Rock River Trail Initiative.
» The Sole Goal
The Sole Goal

Be bold. Brave the cold.

The Indian Summer couldn't last forever. But despite the dip in temperatures, there's no reason you can't train in the great outdoors. In fact, winter running can be the most rewarding.

Reader Poll

The Republican field of presidential candidates is down to four. Which one do you favor?

Newt Gingrich
Ron Paul
Mitt Romney
Rick Santorum