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thedrifter
08-16-05, 05:41 AM
Marines salute fallen comrades
By Kimberly E. Johnson, Special for USA TODAY

HADITHAH, Iraq — Marines gathered Monday to remember 23 of their own who were killed in a spate of violence that accelerated calls for the Bush administration to plan U.S. troop withdrawals.

Six Marines were killed Aug. 1, including five from the 3rd Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment, based in northern Ohio. Fourteen from the 25th Marines were killed Aug. 3 when their amphibious assault vehicle struck a roadside bomb; nine were from the Columbus-based Lima Company. Three other Marines were killed in separate incidents in the region.

After Monday's memorial service, Sgt. Eric Francis, 28, of Elyria, Ohio, said, "This has been one of the worst days of my life."

His best friend, Sgt. Bradley Harper, was killed in the Aug. 3 bombing. "Never in a million years did I think it would be this hard," Francis said. "You get over here and think you're indestructible."

The somber service was a scaled-down version of those normally held in the field. One rifle inverted into a sandbag supported a camouflaged helmet and 23 dog tags. A pair of dusty boots sat at its base. The thin metallic tinkle of the dog tags blown against the M-16 by the morning wind could be heard as the 25th Marines stood at attention at their base atop Hadithah Dam.

"It's important for the families to know that this happened, to know that their sons have not been forgotten," said Sgt. Maj. Edward Wagner.

Marines try to hold a memorial service as soon as possible after fighting stops to help put the events in perspective, said Lt. Col. Lionel Urquhart, battalion commander.

Those killed in action typically are honored with a full eulogy and a rifle memorial — a ceremony that requires the presence of three Marines for each death.

Monday's service was simplified because the number of recent casualties would have required participation of at least 69 of the roughly 300 Marines in attendance. A larger service is planned later in the year when the entire battalion, now spread throughout Anbar province, is reunited. The province is one of Iraq's most volatile regions.

Ohio's reservist 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines has suffered heavy losses. Since the unit and its attachments deployed in Iraq in March, 48 have been killed in action. The unit also has spent about 80% of its time actively patrolling and engaging insurgents, said battalion spokesman Capt. John Kasparian.

Reports of continuing deaths of U.S. servicemembers have contributed to a decline in President Bush's favorable rating for handling the situation in Iraq. A USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll released last week showed the nation split on whether it was a mistake to invade. Bush, responding last week to calls from protesters to withdraw U.S. troops, said it "would be a mistake for the security of this country."

Francis, the sergeant who lost his best friend, agreed. He said more, not less, manpower is needed. "If we're going to do it, we need to do it," Francis said. "Reduction of troops is not going to help us."

Ellie

thedrifter
08-16-05, 06:01 AM
Posted on Tue, Aug. 16, 2005
Ohio Marines eulogized as friend and `reconciler'
Funerals in Hamilton, Cleveland Heights for 2 more members of Brook Park unit
Associated Press

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS - One friend told mourners Monday about sipping beers with Edward Schroeder II and talking about Ohio State University football at their fraternity house before Schroeder became a Marine.

Another friend in a teen Christian outreach program with Schroeder said he was the type of person everyone should strive to be.

The funeral for Schroeder and another memorial across the state in Hamilton for Lance Cpl. Michael Cifuentes started a second week of services for 16 Ohio-based Marines killed in Iraq in the last month. Fourteen of them, including Schroeder and Cifuentes, were from units of the same Brook Park-based 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines. Schroeder and Cifuentes' unit was the Lima Company, based in Columbus.

Lance Cpl. Schroeder, 23, was known to friends and family as ``Augie'' based on his middle name, August. He died two weeks ago in a roadside explosion in Iraq.

``With Augie, there were no enemies -- only friends. He was put on Earth for a reason. Augie was, is and always will be my hero,'' fraternity brother Brian Cox said.

Cox wept several times as he recalled his experiences on campus with Schroeder.

``There are very few people of whom you can truly say (they) never let you down, who you can call a best friend. I have never experienced the sting of death until now,'' Cox said.

Speaking to about 400 people at the Church of the Saviour United Methodist, the Rev. Charles Yoost said Schroeder's life touched many people.

``It doesn't seem possible to believe that Augie is gone,'' he said. ``His brief life made some of us more thoughtful people.''

As mourners have done so many times in the last two weeks, dozens of people, including several holding large American flags, lined the streets leading to the church. Marines carried Schroeder's flag-draped coffin into the church, then back to the hearse for a procession to a cemetery.

Edward Schroeder spent his preschool years in China, then finished school in Maplewood, N.J. His family moved to Cleveland after he graduated from high school and started classes at Ohio State.

The young Marine went to Iraq filled with optimism about the mission, but he gradually became disillusioned with the war's progress, his father, Paul Schroeder, has said. His parents did not speak at the service.

At Cifuentes' funeral in Hamilton, nearly 1,000 people filled St. Julie Billiart Church to remember the 25-year-old aspiring teacher from Oxford who died in the same Aug. 3 bombing as Schroeder. Cifuentes went to high school in Cincinnati and graduated from Miami University.

``He was a lover, a reconciler... a person who was able to give everything away so that this world would be a better place,'' said the Rev. John Ferone.

As Cifuentes' hearse proceeded from the church to a cemetery in Cincinnati, drivers along the route stepped from their cars. Some removed their hats and looked down, while others placed their hands over their hearts.

Two more Ohio Marines are to have funerals later this week.

Ellie