America’s Heroes
by Bob HamerDuring my undercover career in the FBI, I often reflected on a verse from the “Original Testament,” as Ron Silver liked to call it. Moses told Joshua, “The Lord himself will go before and be with you. He will never leave you nor forsake you. Do not be discouraged, do not be afraid.” Those words gave me strength as I prepared many times to enter the belly of the beast. In fact, while standing at a Times Square urinal preparing for my first NAMBLA meet, I repeated the verse to myself…not sure that’s a scene for the Big Screen regardless of your religious beliefs.
In the New Testament, Paul admonishes us to “pray without ceasing.” I never understood that verse until I had a son deployed to a combat zone. Now I find myself praying for my son, his men, and their families almost constantly. Our Marine son is at a Forward Operating Base in Afghanistan. They have no running water, no heat, and only on occasion, electricity. The other evening I received a short email from him. His battalion lost three more men over the weekend. It was difficult for me to sleep that night, knowing somewhere in this nation mothers and fathers, wives, and children were mourning the death of a loved one.
Obviously, my interest in what used to be called the “Global War on Terror” and now is apparently just an “Overseas Contingency Operation” is more than a historical fancy. I’ve tried to read as much as I can about the decision to launch the war, our efforts on all fronts, and our successes and failures to date. I’ve read the good, the bad, and the ugly. Trained as an attorney, I expect there to be at least two sides to every issue, but as a twenty-six year veteran of the FBI, I’ve also learned facts speak for themselves. Depending upon the author, I can find hope or discouragement. What I have found are heroes. Today’s young people (and even many adults) are as likely to find their heroes among athletes, actors, or rock stars. I guess that is the luxury of youth and a celebrity-worshipping culture. But I like Oliver North’s definition in his latest book, “American Heroes.” He says heroes “place themselves at risk for the benefit of others.”
I’ve been fortunate to meet real heroes. Several weeks ago I attended “A Celebration of Freedom” at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. I shook hands with more than thirty Medal of Honor recipients. It was truly one of the most memorable nights of my life. But a few days later during a visit to the doctor, I told him of my experience at the reception. Professing to be a history buff, his questions caught me by surprise. “Is the Medal of Honor for military and civilians?” “Aren’t there higher medals or is that the highest?” This doctor was educated at one of our most prestigious universities yet seemed clueless to the sacrifices others have made in order for him to live in a free society.
Since my book was released in the fall, I’ve been able to share it with Marines wounded in this current war. I met a Marine who lost the use of his legs and is confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. He can maneuver pretty well, but he will never chase his children around the yard or at the beach the way you and I can. I met a Marine blinded by an RPG who will never see his children again. He can hear them and he can hold them but will never see them the way we see our children. I know a serviceman who was “present” for the birth of his child. He was deployed to a combat zone and listened over the phone as his wife give birth. I’ve spent time with children who pray every night for their daddy to come home safely. I’ve met the spouses of those deployed and watched them cope with not only managing a family but living with the constant worry the next phone call will bring tragic news.
What is so remarkable is not one Marine, not one serviceman, not one spouse I met asked for your pity or even your thanks. No one claimed victim status. All are volunteers and all believe they are part of a team who answered the call. They are proud and they are strong. Maybe, they too, have found comfort in the words of Moses. They are all my heroes.
Before you go to sleep tonight take a few moments to thank God for your spouse, your children, your home, a comfortable bed, and the servicemen and women who allow you to sleep under the blanket of freedom. I fear too many have forgotten or have never learned the real price of freedom.
Semper Fi.







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49 Comments
Thank you for your service to this country; and, for reminding us about all the sacrifices by so few for so many; I have thanked servicepeople for their service (they're so grateful for the small thought) and they always look so surprised by it – that alone is so sad!
We must never forget how important these men and women are for serving us!
Thanks to all of you again and again and again – I pray each day for you and your families!
That was powerful. I am reminded again of my nephew who's deployed right now. My husband and I are so proud that he chose to take that route to manhood given some of the challenges he's faced. We pray for him daily, and this brings tears to my eyes. I wish more people had this depth of understanding.
Service to your nation in the military is one of the biggest sacrifices of your self a person can make, and every man, woman, and child should honor our men and women who make it.
Thank you, and bless you, for this reminder. The daughter of a friend of mine is on her second deployment to Iraq. She, and all other service people like her, past and present, are the real heros of this country.
I wish the politicians would take their duties as seriously as our citizen soldiers. And there's reason for concern as our military may find itself even more restricted through more convoluted rules of engagement, placing soldiers in greater risk than what they already face.
The soldiers have gotten very little acknowledgment from Pop-media over the years, unless they were used to bash Bush. Largely lost is the fact that it is They who were surging, on their own, long before higher authorities caught on to their successes. The American ingenuity and Independent thinking of citizens fighting our war laid the real groundwork, and led the way for politicians to follow.
But again, we are building up in Afghanistan. We've got a new President. Noises are being made to 'welcome moderate Taliban'. It's not looking good for those 'rules of engagement'.
Thanks for your service !!!
" Behold, I am Moroni, your chief captain. I seek not for power, but to pull it down. I seek not for honor of the world, but for the glory of my God, and the freedom and welfare of my country."
Book of Mormon
Alma 60:36
Three service men make the ultimate sacrifice, and the MSM doesn't make it front page news? We must have a Democrat in the White House……………..
God Bless you, your family, your son, his fellow soldiers and all their loved ones. Please let them know there are still those of us here that appreciate what they do for us.
Three service men make the ultimate sacrifice, and the MSM doesn't make it front page news? We must have a Democrat in the White House……………..
God Bless you, your family, your son, his fellow soldiers and all their loved ones. Please let them know there are still those of us here that appreciate what they do for us.
Thank you greatly for your service and that of your son. Coming from a military family, I tend to not be able to read articles concerning our heroes without tearing up.
My boss at work once asked me what the difference between the Army and the Air Force was (yes she’s a liberal). I find it both appalling and amazing how people can know absolutely nothing about the people who make sacrifices for them but feel the need to have opinions on war while immersing themselves in sports and pop culture.
Col. Oliver North has had a long and arduous journey in his career of service. A dedicated marine and great guy, he is hugely responsible for turning back the communist takeover of Central America. He also paid a heavy price for it, targeted by a vengeful left wing press and members of congress hell bent on his personal destruction. William Sadler's villain in 'Die Hard 2' was based on North, and he was attacked form all fronts.
However, this is one damn good Marine- one who went back to Vietnam on his own dime to help exonerate one of his men on false war crime charges- they beat them- and has since become one of the great conservative voices in our country. This book should be on everyone's must read list…
Powerful. Real heroes never want attention, "lifetime achievement awards," or adulation. That's what differentiates people in the military from, say, Hollywood where there's an award show and a red carpet every week. People in the military have heart and you either understand that or you don't.
http://the100mostannoyingthings.blogspot.com/
Thank you for again reminding us of the true heroes that live among us. The constant sacrifices of the brave men and women of our Armed Services and each of their family members, should drive us each to our knees to pray for them and thank God for them, every hour of every day.
What can I say that has not already been said? THANK YOU!
Mr Hamer,
God judges nations, and I believe that, above all else, it is the Integrity and Valor of U.S. Fighting Forces, from Valley Forge to Forward Operating Base, Afghanistan, that continue to secure for America His "Divine Indulgence".
You are a writer with the gift of "saying it plain".
I think God admires the 'common touch' – He wrote "Two Testaments" using it ! ; )
Thank you for your sacrifices and that of your son and entire family. I fear real sacrifice and courage for this country are in jeopardy with the “me” generation that are now running things. God Bless America!
thank you for your sacrifice, not only in your service but that of your son's. i too am fearful that "too many have forgotten or have never learned the real price of freedom." it keeps me awake at night. i live in san antonio where the military uniform is as common as oak trees. as often as i can, i stop these men and women and thank them for their service. most times i am met with astonishment.
i have never in my life (all 47 years) felt such urgency to right our country's path as i do now. as i write about the state of our union i am called many things: extremist, fearmonger, uneducated, using a fiery pulpit, racist, hater. i know i am the opposite of these things. i am trying to serve my country the only way i know how, through my words.
may we all continue to have the strength to fight on. may we all stand and serve as we resist the march on our freedoms.
thank you. i will carry this essay with me throughout the day.
Ollie North negotiated with (armed) terrorists.
North is a hero doing the Lord's work- it is an ugly business, we know it firsthand- but he was always advocating freedom and resistance against communist tyranny. Politics and war make for strange bedfellows…
I think this generation may be the new "Greatest Generation" – they are selfless – well, at least some of them, and patriotic. It is astounding about that Doctor's ignorance about the MOH It is a medal with magical powers – for those few to have been awarded it and lived, everyone salutes them. Generals salute privates. I admire the military's code of conduct and honor.
They are people running our papers whose values are very different from ours – but then we knew that
One more thing Bob – what you did undercover – few of us would have the stomach for dealing with the kind of people you had to deal with – you were really face to face with Evil.
I will pray for your son, his men and their families also.
I love that picture, that's how I think of our military.
I do not want to see our Men and Women overseas serving an administration that defines their mission as "Overseas Contingency Operation". I want them home now! Not because there service and sacrifice of our service members is not Honorable it is due to this administration not treating them with Honor. This truly sickens me. I cannot imagine what our troops thought when they heard this VILE definition of there mission.
Contingency=something whose occurrence depends on chance or uncertain condition.
Our men and women in our Armed Services should not serve a Commander and Chief that defines there mission as "chance" from the get go.
I could not be more proud of our Armed Service members. I am totally amazed that the Officers did not order their men back to base and ready to pack up and leave when this VILE definition was announced.
Obama wishes he could, but the Iranians snubbed him. At least Fidel Castro's brother is more willing to talk, so Barry may yet get to work with heroes he admires.
Take a moment, cool down. From the real reports from overseas, our troops don't want to leave until the job is well and truly done. That needs to be respected. Back home right now, we have an important job to do to support them, mainly not letting the liberals cut resources until the troops are ineffective, so they can claim they were right to not support the operations from the start.
spot on. The USMC commandant was asked about the 'contingency' thing and brushed it off as Washington talk, which it is… this battle is being waged by conservatives for everybody. The troops know damn well what they're doing and what the consequences are.
"They are people running our papers whose values are very different from ours"
It is the way it is, but it's so appalling, isn't it?
That was my cooled down response. We must support our troops and I do. We also must understand the mind set of our Commander in Chief when he is willing to define the mission as "chance". When you speak of supporting our troops I hope that we all will do that with action. Support anysoldier.com send our troops items that you have in your pantry or bathroom they need them. Send them letters and balance what the hear on the news(yes the get news at remote bases). They have heard how this new administration has defined there mission. Let the troops know how you respect them today.
Semper Fi.
ooohrah!
is it just me or is there less reporting on the war in afghanistan. i rarely find anything in the news. maybe that's good. not really saying one way or the other. i guess even most democrats in congress support our presence there and obviously TOTUS wants to send more troops. is the MSM not reporting so we forget about that and concentrate on government bailouts?
I was thinking more about vehicles, armor, shells, grenades, and hardball, but if toothpaste and Slim Jims are needed, so be it!
Bob, thanks for this reminder. Powerfully put, and humbling. You can be sure our prayers are with your son.
"I tend to not be able to read articles concerning our heroes without tearing up."
Funny, I don't come from a military family myself, but have the same reaction. This was a very moving piece, Mr. Hamer; thanks!
If I could send vehicles, armor, shells, and grenades through the US postal service I would
. They could use Boresnake for fast cleaning of weapons though. What ever you send you can not believe the smile that you place on those faces. Truly Priceless!
As a man who has two friends in the Army, one in the Marines, one in the Marine Reserves (Served in the Marines proper after college, now in the reserves) , and one in the Coast Guard, I'm with you 100%. Pass on all the love, respect, and admiration you see here. Its their actions, their courage, their devotion to that which we hold dear, that makes them heroes, and i'm in awe of all that they do.
So?
As much as most of those officers wanted to, they, more than most, know what's at stake.
Thank God for that.
I won't forget. I won't EVER forget. As of 9/11, when I knew we had a man in the Oval Office who knew how to respond to an act of war, I've prayed every night for our men & women in the Armed Forces. They are all truly amazing and I'm terrified that we've entered an age where they aren't seen as the heroes they are.
Thanks for an incredible article.
If I believed what the media and Hollywood tell me, that picture would have to be a fake!
There's another photo from Iraq, that's pretty good too.
It shows a soldier with his weapon up, scanning for threats and behind him is an Iraqi boy behind the soldier, seeking protection. (It was in the aftermath of a car-bombing.)
May good fortune, health and happiness greet your family every day. Please thank your son for us.
Yes, I totally understand but am not shocked by your doctor's gap in knowledge concerning America's greatly sacrificing citizens. At one time in my life I was part of the Harvard Medical School 'community'. I can state without fear of contradiction that the situation there is not much different. Though, to be fair, there were several students in each class who had their schooling paid by the U.S. military in return for service as military physicians post grad. But other than them, the standard cultural education applies.
For now.
from a Navy doctor friend who read the post…Great article. I remember the one kid brought into the STP one night who literally no longer had a head after being hit by an RKG-3 grenade. Two things struck me – first and foremost I could only think of this kid's mother and the knock at the door she was going to get. Secondly, was the absolute professionalisim of all the other Marines. There was no wailing or uncontrolled emotion. They were deeply affected, but they took care of business. He was apparently a very well liked member of the unit and his memorial service a few days later was very moving.
People in our self-absorbed, self-indulgent society just don't get it. Unfortunately, the people who need to read your article probably never will. It's crazy that your doctor could have walked into that Reagan Library affair and have no idea that he was in the presence of greatness.
bob, i hope you don't mind, but i'm linking you on my blog today.
My dad told me this joke (he was retired Army and I'm a 20 yr AF Sr NCO)…
An AF officer and an Army officer were using the bathroom; the Airman finished and washed his hands and the Soldier finished and starting walking out.. the AF officer stated "in the Air Force they taught us to wash our hands after using the bathroom." The Army officer turned and said "in the Army they taught us not to pee on our hands."
My dad retired after 23 yrs in the Army. I'm working on my 21st year.
When you see those young Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, Airmen, and Coast Guardsmen in the airports or wherever… be proud; they come from all walks of life and this grouchy old SNCO is impressed by them more and more.
I pray that our country has the fortitude to see Afghanistan through to a conclusion that's acceptable. If we learned anything from October 3, 1993 in Mogadishu, it's that when our servicemen die, they should never die in vain. It's what pains me most about Vietnam, Beirut, Somalia, the Cole, and other assorted dustups that didn't end the way they should have. Don't send them off to die and then cut and run when it gets hard!
My greatest hope for this country is the young men and women now serving in our Armed Forces. Though they will return home with wounds and scars, they will appreciate the values that make this country great more than anyone else can understand. Knowing they will graduate to become the business and political leaders of tomorrow, I can see only success and greatness in our future.
I know exactly how you feel. My own son deployed 3 times with 1/7 Marines. I don't think I slept more than 15 minutes at a time the entire time he was gone. I would wake up praying for him. And my heart broke (and still breaks) every time another KIA is reported – another family will be forever changed. I will add your son and his Marines to my prayer list.
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