Oct 122012
 

Last Sunday, eleven years to the day after American boots first hit the ground in Afghanistan, an AWOL soldier who claims he was deployed a total of three times in Afghanistan, and once in Iraq, attempted to surrender to military authorities at Fort Hamilton, as reported by Elizabeth Flock for U.S News & World Report.

In an account on the blog Unoccupier, a person identifying himself as Sgt. Micah Turner writes that he turned himself in at the Southwest Brooklyn Army installation not once but twice, which a pro bono attorney says may buy him an additional 30 days of freedom. Continue reading »

Sep 042012
 

Arghandab River Valley, Afghanistan, where Bryan Dilberian was wounded (Image source: isafmedia via Flick).

The fundraising effort to build a new “smart home,” or automated housing unit, for a disabled Afghanistan veteran who was born and raised in Brooklyn, and attended high school at Fort Hamilton H.S., recently came $3,255 closer to accomplishing its mission, thanks to a donation made by three IHG Army Hotels properties and the Lend Lease Community Fund, writes Melisa Stumpf for Home Reporter. Continue reading »

Jun 192012
 

Vice Magazine has published a story on one local politico who was reminded of his past as a teenage musician in an unusual way – in the form of a prize-winning photograph of a soldier wounded in a Iraq.

An war image by photographer Laura Rauch of a wounded soldier being MedEvac-ed out of an Iraqi combat zone, who won an SPJ Award as a result, contained the now-famous phrase:

“For Those I Love, I Will Sacrifice.”

Words tattooed on a young Iraq War veteran, which were apparently taken from the lyrics to Hallowed Be Thy Name, a song Justin Brannan wrote when he was 16. He was fronting for NYC hardcore band Indecision at the time.

The teenage years are often a rebellious time in someone’s life, and for Brannan – who currently serves as president of the Bay Ridge Democrats, as well as a staffer for Councilman Vincent Gentile, they were no different.

“I wrote those lyrics when I was sixteen years old,” Brannan recently told Vice’s Benjamin Shapiro.  “I think I’ve figured some things out since then. That said, part of belief in anything is being critical.”

The song, which makes reference to Stockholm Syndrome and sacrificing for people “I’ve never seen” might very well echo the thoughts of a soldier trapped in a war zone and forced to deal with the everyday horrors of war in the name of relatively abstract concepts such as freedom, as well the lives of strangers – both home and in country.