Thursday, September 9, 2004

Putting a Face on the Numbers of Casualties, Iraq

posted an excerpt, below, from one of the many articles which capture the stories of some of the men and women who have died. You can see the pictures, names, and stories of all of the men and women who died in Iraq at: http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2003/iraq/forces/casualties/



Iraq war claims 1,000th U.S.casualty

Seattle Post-Intelligencer

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/189908_iraq08.html



[Excerpts:]Every name in the roster deserves a story:



Caleb Powers, 21, a Marine Corps lance corporal from Mansfield who donated his time to the children's society that had cared for him as a boy.



Army Spc. Jeremiah Schmunk, 20, a fun-loving man who wore a wig and dress to school to invite a girl to a Sadie Hawkins dance in his hometown of Warden.



Army Spc. Jake Herring, a 20-year-old 180-pounder from Kirkland who was the undersized but tenacious center and co-captain of his high school football team.



John "Sully" Sullivan, a 28-year-old heavy metal "shredder" who traded guitar for weapons as a member of the Army's 101st Airborne Division.



The youngest soldiers from Washington to die in Iraq were only 19.

They were:

Marine Pfc. Cody Calavan of Lake Stevens;



Army Pfc. Duane Longstreth from Tacoma;



and Army Spc. Nathan Nakis from Sedro-Woolley.



A thousand dead is a terrible toll. But even the number one is a harsh statistic for families who pick up the telephone and get the news no one wants to hear. "It's just not the same here anymore," said David Scott, a father still grieving a year after his son's death. "There's an empty spot -- and it's felt all through our house."

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