[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 171 (Monday, December 31, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Page S8578]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING OUR ARMED FORCES
Pennsylvania's Fallen Heroes
Mr. CASEY. Mr. President, as we confront a whole range of difficult
issues at the end of this year and at the end of this Congress, we
should also be reminded we have fighting men and women serving for us
all over the world.
We think especially tonight of those serving in Afghanistan and those
who served prior to that time in Iraq. At various times we have come to
the floor and recited the names of those who were killed in action, and
tonight I am joined by my colleague Senator Toomey to read the names of
Pennsylvanians who gave, as Lincoln said, the last full measure of
devotion to their country--those who have been killed in action in
Afghanistan over the course of parts of 2011 and 2012.
I yield the floor for my colleague, Senator Toomey.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The junior Senator from Pennsylvania.
Mr. TOOMEY. Mr. President, I thank my colleague, the senior Senator
from Pennsylvania, for organizing this brief tribute that is so much
deserved by the men and women we are acknowledging today.
I wish to begin by extending my deepest condolences to the families,
friends, and loved ones of these Pennsylvania heroes whom we are going
to acknowledge this evening. In the lives our servicemembers led and
the cause for which they died, these folks represent all that is great
about America.
Many enlisted right after graduating from high school, and during
those very tough and grueling days and weeks in basic training they had
probably never heard of places such as Anbar Province in Iraq, the
Tangi Valley of Afghanistan or the other areas in those nations where
they fought and ended up dying for our country.
But these Pennsylvanians join a long line of soldiers, sailors,
airmen, marines, and Coast Guard members who have given the supreme
sacrifice to their country, a line that extends well back in the latter
part of the 20th century and includes World War II, the Korean war, the
Vietnam war, and of course the global war on terrorism.
It is no accident that Pennsylvania has suffered very heavily in this
conflict, as it has in other conflicts throughout our Nation's history.
I think it is because in towns across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
towns and cities such as Dallastown, Easton, Philadelphia, and Erie,
there are certain values that are deeply rooted in these communities:
importance of family, importance of faith, importance of community, and
the importance of public service, including very much the service to
this Nation.
The conviction that freedom is worth defending is one of those
convictions and the belief that a cause worth fighting for is not just
someone else's responsibility. These are the values that have shaped
these men and women, their families, their churches and houses of
worship, and their communities.
These values were exemplified in the lives of our fallen men and
women in service, and they will forever be honored by Pennsylvanians as
the native sons and daughters of our great Commonwealth for their
service to the country.
I will read the names of the men and women who have made the supreme
sacrifice for courage in this conflict, and Senator Casey will complete
the list: PFC David Anthony Jefferson, U.S. Army, Philadelphia; SGT
Louis Robert Fastuca, U.S. Army, West Chester; SPC Jesse David Reed,
U.S. Army, Orefield; LCpl Abram Larue Howard, U.S. Marine Corps,
Williamsport; SPC Dale Justin Kridlo, U.S. Army, Hughestown; SPC
Anthony Vargas, U.S. Army, Reading; SSG Sean Michael Flannery, U.S.
Army, Wyomissing; GySgt Justin Edward Schmalstieg, U.S. Marine Corps,
Pittsburgh; MSG Benjamin Franklin Bitner, U.S. Army, Greencastle; 1LT
Demetrius Montaz Frison, U.S. Army, Lancaster; SSG Edward David Mills
Jr., U.S. Army, Newscastle; Sgt Joseph Michael Garrison, U.S. Marine
Corps, New Bethlehem; Ssgt Patrick Ryan Dolphin, U.S. Marine Corps,
Moscow; Sgt Christopher Matthew Wrinkle, U.S. Marine Corps, Dallastown;
PO1 Michael Joseph Strange, U.S. Navy, Philadelphia; TSgt Daniel Lee
Zerbe, U.S. Air Force, York; SSG Eric Scott Holman, U.S. Army, Evans
City; Lt. Col. Christopher Keith Raible, U.S. Marine Corps, North
Huntingdon; CPO Nicolas David Checque, U.S. Navy, Monroeville; CDR Job
W. Price, U.S. Navy, Pottstown; and finally, MAJ Wesley James Hinkley,
U.S. Army, Cumberland City.
I yield the floor to the senior Senator.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The senior Senator from Pennsylvania.
Mr. CASEY. I thank the Senator for reading the first half of our
names, and I will continue with 20 more names: Sgt Derek Lee Shanfield,
U.S. Marine Corps, Hastings, PA; SFC Robert James Fike, U.S. Army,
Conneautville; SFC Bryan Alan Hoover, U.S. Army, West Elizabeth; Sgt
Joseph Davis Caskey, U.S. Marine Corps, Pittsburgh; LCpl Joshua Thomas
Twigg, U.S. Marine Corps, Indiana; CPL Joshua Alexander Harton, U.S.
Army, Bethlehem; LCpl Ralph John Fabbri, U.S. Marine Corps, Gallitzin;
SSG David Jee Weigle, U.S. Army, Philadelphia; Cpl Eric Michael Torbet,
Jr., U.S. Marine Corps, Lancaster; CPL Jarrid Lee King, U.S. Army,
Erie; SGT Robert Curtis Sisson, Jr., U.S. Army, Aliquippa; PFC John
Francis Kihm, U.S. Army, Philadelphia; 1SG Kenneth Brian Elwell, U.S.
Army, Erie; SGT Edward William Koehler III, U.S. Army, Lebanon; SSG
Brian Keith Mowery, U.S. Army, Halifax; SSG Kenneth Rowland Vangiesen,
U.S. Army, Erie; SrA Bryan Richard Bell, U.S. Air Force, Erie; CPT
Michael Cean Braden, U.S. Army, Lock Haven; PFC Cameron James
Stambaugh, U.S. Army, Spring Grove; and finally, SSG Brandon Robert
Pepper, U.S. Army, York, PA.
As I conclude the list of Pennsylvanians who were killed in action
over approximately a 2-year time period in Afghanistan--and one of the
names that was read was killed in Iraq--we remember and think of them,
and obviously we are paying tribute to them on a night like tonight. At
the same time, we are also thinking of their families as we pay tribute
to them.
I am reminded of the great recording artist Bruce Springsteen. One of
his songs was entitled ``You're Missing,'' and the refrain over and
over again is ``you're missing.'' He was able to sing, but I won't. The
song goes something like this: You're missing when I shut out the
lights; you're missing when I close my eyes; you're missing when I see
the sunrise.
For all those families out there who lost someone in Afghanistan,
Iraq, or in other conflicts, we are thinking of them tonight because
they are missing someone in the midst of this end-of-the-year and
holiday season. We are remembering them tonight and paying tribute to
those they loved and lost and also remembering them in our prayers.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
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