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51smd

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Veteran's Day is approaching


Saw this on another fourm thought it was cool. Steve




Veteran's Day is approaching
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Veteran's Day is approaching I was thinking all of us vets should change our profile picture to an old unit patch or something similar to honor those we served with for the entire month of November.


What do you all think?


In order 1st Army, 197 FA Brigade, 50th AD,42nd ID and 18th MP Brigade.





Red Leg by choice MP by executive order...
 
Veteran's Day is approaching


Saw this on another fourm thought it was cool. Steve



Veteran's Day is approaching
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Veteran's Day is approaching I was thinking all of us vets should change our profile picture to an old unit patch or something similar to honor those we served with for the entire month of November.


What do you all think?


In order 1st Army, 197 FA Brigade, 50th AD,42nd ID and 18th MP Brigade.


View attachment 8580 View attachment 8581 View attachment 8582 View attachment 8583 View attachment 8584


Red Leg by choice MP by executive order...

These were all units or elements of units that Mobilized at Fort Dix in support of the War in Iraq and Afgainstan fro 2001 to the current time. Click on my LINK BELOW to see the names and pictures of the men and women who gave all to support your rights as Americans.
 
Image

2nd Reconnaissance BN
2nd Marine Division
 
2nd BN 7th CAV 1st Cavalry US Army




Bushden's Signature said:
HONOR THE FALLEN
http://www.militarycity.com/valor/honor.html

Over the years the United States has sent many of its fine young men & women into great peril to fight for freedom beyond our borders. The only amount of land we have ever asked for in return, is enough to bury those that did not return. COLIN POWELL
The best signature on this forum.
 
24th Infantry Division (United States) Gulf War

Desert Shield


An M270 MLRS of A Battery, 13th FA Regiment, 24th ID during Desert Shield


When the United Nations intervened in Kuwait in 1990, the 24th Infantry Division, which was part of the Rapid Deployment Force, was one of the first units deployed to Southwest Asia. It arrived in 10 large cargo ships of the US Navy Sealift Command.[SUP][84][/SUP] Advance elements of the 24th Division began arriving in Saudi Arabia on 17 August.[SUP][85][/SUP] Some controversy erupted when the division's round-out unit, the 48th Infantry Brigade (Mechanized), of the Georgia National Guard, was not called up for service.[SUP][86][/SUP] Army leaders decided that the use of National Guard forces was unnecessary, as they felt the active-duty force had sufficient troops.[SUP][87][/SUP] The 48th Brigade was replaced once the 24th Division was in Saudi Arabia with the regular Army's 197th Infantry Brigade (Mechanized). The 24th Division was then assigned to XVIII Airborne Corps as the corps' heavy-armored division.[SUP][88][/SUP]
In the months that followed, the 24th Division played an important part of Operation Desert Shield by providing heavy firepower with its large number of armored vehicles, including 216 M1A1 Abrams tanks.[SUP][89][/SUP] Elements of the division were still arriving in September, and in the logistical chaos that followed the rapid arrival of U.S. forces in the region, the soldiers of the 24th Division were housed in warehouses, airport hangars, and on the desert sand.[SUP][90][/SUP] The 24th remained in relatively stationary positions in defense of Saudi Arabia until additional American forces arrived for Operation Desert Storm. Aviation units of the division included 2nd Squadron, 4th Cavalry, and 1st Battalion, 24th Aviation Regiment.[SUP][91][/SUP]
Desert Storm


Division engineers perform mine clearing tests during Desert Storm prior to the beginning of the ground war


Once the attack commenced on 24 February, the 24th Infantry Division formed the east flank of the corps with the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment.[SUP][92][/SUP] It blocked the Euphrates River valley to cut off Iraqi forces in Kuwait and little resistance.[SUP][93][/SUP] At this time, the 24th Division's ranks swelled to over 25,000 troops in 34 battalions, commanding 94 helicopters, 241 M1 Abrams tanks, 221 M2 Bradley Armored fighting vehicles, and over 7,800 other vehicles.[SUP][94][/SUP] The 24th Infantry Division performed exceptionally well in the theater; it had been training in desert warfare for several years before the conflict.[SUP][94][/SUP] On 26 February, the 24th Division advanced through the valley and captured Iraqi airfields at Jabbah and Tallil. At the airfields, it encountered entrenched resistance from the Iraqi 37th and 49th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 6th Nebuchadnezzar Mechanized Division of the Iraqi Republican Guard. Despite some of the most fierce resistance of the war, the 24th Infantry Division destroyed the Iraqi formations[SUP][95][/SUP] and captured the two airfields the next day. The 24th then moved east with VII Corps and engaged several Iraqi Republican Guard divisions.[SUP][96][/SUP]

Ground operations during Operation Desert Storm, with the 24th Infantry Division positioned at the left flank


After the Iraqi forces were defeated, the U.N. mandated that the U.S. withdraw from Iraq, ending the Gulf War.[SUP][97][/SUP] By the time of the cease-fire on 28 February, the 24th Infantry Division advanced 260 miles and destroyed 360 tanks and other armored personnel carriers, 300 artillery pieces, 1,200 trucks, 25 aircraft, 19 missiles, and over 500 pieces of engineer equipment. The division took over 5,000 Iraqi prisoners of war while suffering only eight killed, 36 wounded, and five non-combat casualties.[SUP][98][/SUP]
After returning to the United States in spring 1991, the 24th was reorganized with two brigades at Fort Stewart and the 3rd Brigade reactivated at Fort Benning, Georgia, replacing the 197th Infantry Brigade.[SUP][80][/SUP] In fall 1994, Iraq again threatened the Kuwaiti border, and two brigades from the division returned to southwest Asia.[SUP][4][/SUP] As part of the Army's reduction to a ten-division force,[SUP][99][/SUP] the 24th Infantry Division was inactivated on 15 February 1996[SUP][1][/SUP] and reflagged to become the 3rd Infantry Division. Its three brigades were reflagged as 3rd Infantry Division brigades.
 

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Veteran's Day is going to take on a new meaning for me this year. My oldest son graduates Marine boot camp next Friday. I can't wait to see him. I will post pics next weekend.
 
First cav, nam. Saw in our local paper recently that some vagrants were using vets flags in the cemetary as toiletpaper.. We have a WWI vet who polices the place and from what I understand I would not want him to catch me with my pants down.
 
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