All for One -- and One For All
"We stand in grief with the families and loved ones of these extraordinary 'Dogface Soldiers' during this unimaginable time.""But the search isn't finished until everyone is home. Words cannot express our gratitude to those still working around the clock during these extensive search and recovery efforts and your unwavering commitment not to rest until all are found.""This past week has been devastating. Though we have received some closure, the world is darker without them."“This loss is simply devastating. We are wrapping our arms around the families and loved ones of our Soldiers [during this difficult time]."Commander Maj.-Gen. Christopher Norrie, 3rd Infantry Division"It has been truly amazing and very humbling to watch the incredible recovery team from different commands, countries and continents come together and give everything to recover our Soldiers.""Thank you, Lithuania, Poland, Estonia, the U.S. Navy and the Army Corps of Engineers.""We are forever grateful."Lt. Gen. Charles Costanza, commanding general, V Corps
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"Lithuania mourns together with the American nation.""Please accept my heartfelt condolences, as well as those of the Lithuanian people, to you, the loved ones of those who lost their lives, and all the people of the United States of America. ""During this difficult time, our thoughts and prayers are with you."Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda
Under
NATO, to give reassurance to Eastern Europe, member-countries of the
military alliance were assigned to establish a Rapid Reaction Force as a
deterrent and a defence against Russian designs on its neighbours. With
a very real and demonstrated willingness to invade the borders of
neighbouring nations, the Russian Federation's ambitions of territorial
aggression and expansion gave birth to a renewed move by NATO to offer
protection to its members under duress of potential invasion.
Among
other member-nations the United States established a unit in Lithuania.
On March 25, an American armoured vehicle with four U.S. soldiers
aboard went astray in a marshy peat bog located at the huge General
Silvestras Zukauskas training ground nearby the town of Pabrade. A
search was undertaken and the location of the missing vehicle was found,
though no vehicle was in sight. The almost-70-ton behemoth had sunk
straight down, along with its personnel.
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It
took six days in a massive effort by American, Polish and Lithuanian
armed forces to locate and dig the M88 Hercules vehicle out of the peat
bog. The search was widened when three of the missing men of the 1st
Armoured Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division were found dead, and
a fourth body of the missing soldiers evaded the search teams. On a
tactical training exercise, the soldiers were reported, along with their
vehicle to be missing early on Tuesday.
The
thick forests and swampy terrain around Pabrade, some ten kilometres
west of the border with Belarus saw hundreds of Lithuanian and American
soldiers and other rescuers searching, engaged in a rescue mission. On
Wednesday the armoured vehicle's whereabouts was finally discovered,
submerged in 4-1/2 metres of swamp water.
Military
helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft, unmanned aerial systems and search
and rescue personnel were provided by the Lithuanian armed forces.
Excavators, sluice and slurry pumps were brought to the site, along with
other heavy construction equipment along with technical experts and
several hundred tons of gravel and earth, all to help with the recovery
mission.
American navy divers manoeuvred through thick layers of mud, clay and sediment "with zero visibility" to
finally reach the 63-ton vehicle on Sunday evening. There they
established several points where steel cables could be attached to
enable the work involved in lifting the vehicle. During the effort of
dragging the vehicle out of its submerged position, they began to lose
traction, requiring more heavy dozers to provide additional grip. Two
hours later the vehicle was pulled free of its ghastly grave.
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The
navy dive team's work was not over. They then turned to searching the
area with the use of radar for the presence of the still-missing fourth
soldier. And his body was ultimately found, to join that of his other
three comrades, to be returned to the United States and to their
families, for burial.
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"I can’t say enough about the support our Lithuanian Allies have provided us. We have leaned on them, and they, alongside our Polish and Estonian Allies — and our own Sailors, Airmen and experts from the Corps of Engineers — have enabled us to find and bring home our Soldiers.""This is a tragic event, but it reinforces what it means to have Allies and friends."Gen. Christopher Donahue, commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa
Labels: Eastern Europe, Lithuania, Misadventure, NATO, Rapid Response Teams, Russian Federation Threat of Invasion, U.S. Unit
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