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For Immediate Release
June 14, 2011
Contact:
Jennifer Wilson
(570) 675-3931
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- Floor Remarks
- Introducing PA Adjutant General Wesley Craig
Senator Lisa Baker Floor Remarks – National Guard Day
It is fitting that we are celebrating National
Guard Day on another important civic holiday: Flag Day. This past
weekend, I had the privilege of listening to a veteran speak about what
our flag means.
Command Sergeant Major Mike Urban joined the Army
National Guard in 1970 and spent most of his 41 years of military
service with the 109th Mechanized Infantry Battalion.
In Bosnia, he said it was not until the American
flag arrived that the massive slaughter of innocents was stopped.
In Iraq, he said, "I saw the true meaning of
courage as many soldiers went into harm's way every day with
temperatures reaching 140 degrees in the most dangerous place on the
planet at that time."
And in America, he described the folded flag as it
was removed from each coffin and reverently presented to survivors. "I
saw how carefully it was grasped by the loved one and held tightly to
their hearts. It was as though the flag when it was folded encased the
very soul of the soldier it had just left."
Of the many outstanding Pennsylvanians honored in
this chamber, few are more deserving of our admiration and appreciation
than the citizen-soldiers of the Pennsylvania National Guard, who are
willing to lay their life on the line to preserve our freedom.
Sen. John Pippy and Sen. Mike Stack are among the
distinguished members of this elite freedom force. And although today
is dedicated to honoring the National Guard, I would like to take a
moment to acknowledge and applaud all members of the General Assembly
who served in the military. They include 6 state senators and 21 state
representatives.
Today, we pause to salute them and all their fellow
Americans in uniform – past, present and future.
Pennsylvania was the first state in the nation to
form a militia, led by Ben Franklin. Two hundred and fifty-six years
later, Pennsylvania's Guard is one of the biggest, and it is the very
best.
Our National Guard is an expertly trained, highly
dedicated volunteer force, prepared and passionate about defending
freedom around the globe and protecting citizens here at home.
More than 20,000 soldiers and airmen now serve in
the Pennsylvania National Guard, and more than 600 are deployed in
critical areas in the world. Our Guard has been supporting NATO air
operations in Libya. Twenty countries were involved in this effort. A
Pennsylvanian led it.
Since 9/11, our Guard has been sent repeatedly to
combat zones and disaster areas, adding up to 25,000 individual
deployments. In carrying out their dual mission, most have been
deployed overseas two or three times, and have participated in Hurricane
Katrina clean-up and flood relief here at home.
Whether our Guard members are on a peacekeeping
mission, cooperating in counterdrug operations, or responding to a
tornado's devastation, they are ready and willing to serve and to
sacrifice, and to fight for a flag they love and protect so fervently.
But the price of liberty is steep, and the debt is
often paid with some of our best and brightest young lives. Since 9-11,
36 Pennsylvania National Guardsmen have been killed in Iraq or
Afghanistan. Many more have been seriously wounded.
We cannot forget their sacrifices, nor can we
forget our legal and moral obligation to care for them.
We must fully fund our Veterans Homes and fortify
the Educational Assistance Program. Our state's fiscal pressures may be
great, but our obligations to our veterans are greater.
Just as the threads of our flag hold together the
red and white stripes, and the white stars on a blue field, our military
heroes bring together and demonstrate our finest qualities as
Americans. They knit our diverse nation together, making it one nation,
under God, with liberty and justice for all.
One of these distinguished heroes – a leader among
leaders – is Major General Wesley Craig, our 51st Adjutant General.
General Craig has served our Commonwealth and our country for nearly
four decades. During his time as Commanding General of the 28th
Infantry Division, 8,000 soldiers were mobilized and deployed to the
peacekeeping mission in Kosovo and to combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.
He commanded 15,000 troops from eight nations in a multi-national
training mission in Egypt in 2005.
It is my distinct honor to present the Adjutant
General of Pennsylvania, Major General Wesley Craig.
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