[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 64 (Monday, May 3, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S3029]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO GENERAL SCOTT THOELE
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I rise to congratulate Scott Thoele
(``Taylee'') of the Illinois Army National Guard on his promotion to
brigadier general.
General Thoele, as a colonel, led the Illinois Army National Guard
during its deployment last year to Afghanistan.
He commanded the 33rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, whose soldiers
served in that country from August 2008 to September 2009. The
mobilization of his soldiers was the Illinois Guard's largest since
World War Two.
Most of these men and women are civilian-soldiers from cities and
towns across Illinois. They have their own lives separate from service
in our Armed Forces.
Most do not serve full time in the Guard. In the midst of living
their lives--working at their jobs, spending time with their families,
and participating in their communities--they have made a patriotic
commitment to their country.
They have said, if my Nation needs me to serve and to fight abroad, I
will answer the call.
And last year, 3,000 soldiers from Illinois left their jobs, their
families, and their communities to serve at the call of their Nation.
General Thoele is one of those soldiers. He lives in Quincy, IL, with
his wife and four children. In his civilian life, he works at First
Bankers Trust Company in the bank's audit department.
This was a difficult deployment for the Illinois Army National Guard.
They spent the year in Afghanistan in austere conditions. Their main
task was to train and mentor the Afghan National Security Forces, in an
effort to help the Afghans take responsibility for their own safety and
security. They also provided security to the provincial reconstruction
teams across Afghanistan. Eighteen Illinois soldiers lost their lives
in service to their country. Dozens more were badly injured.
A long time ago, before he became President, there was a young
captain from Illinois who answered the call when his State needed men
to fight in the Black-Hawk war of 1832. He gathered 400 volunteers from
the Sangamon County State militia and traveled north to Prophetstown,
IL, marching through miles of what author Carl Sandburg described as
``swamp muck and wilderness brush . . . pushing and pulling when horses
and wagons bogged.''
It was also a difficult war--as all wars are. Sandburg wrote that to
the men under the young captain, ``it didn't seem the kind of war they
had expected and they wrote home about it.'' But ultimately they did
come home, while young Abraham Lincoln went on to reenlist--and to
serve his Nation in many ways.
I offer my thanks to General Thoele, who also continues to serve his
Nation, now as the Deputy Commanding General for the Army National
Guard at the Army's Combined Arms Center in Kansas. Thank you for your
work in Afghanistan and for bringing our soldiers home safely. And
congratulations again on your promotion to brigadier general.
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