At 9:44 p.m. on July 27, 1953, Harold
Smith had just 16 more minutes of the Korean War to survive before a
ceasefire came into effect at 10:00 p.m. You can imagine this 21-year
old Marine from Illinois out on combat patrol that evening, looking at
his watch, mentally ticking down the seconds. Suddenly, Smith tripped a
land mine and was fatally wounded. As one soldier recalled, “I was
preparing to fire a white star cluster to signal the armistice when his
body was brought in.”
Twenty-two years later, on April 29, 1975, Darwin Judge and Charles
McMahon were serving as Marine guards near Saigon in South Vietnam.
Judge was an Iowa boy and a gifted woodworker. His buddy, McMahon, from
Woburn, Massachusetts, was a natural leader. “He loved the Marines as
much as anybody I ever saw in the Marines,” said one friend. They had
only been in South Vietnam for a few days. At 4:00 a.m. on April 29, a
communist rocket struck their position and the two men died instantly.
On the early evening of November 14,
2011, David Hickman was traveling in an armored truck through Baghdad.
Hickman, an army specialist from North Carolina, had been in ninth grade
when the Iraq War started in 2003. A massive explosion ripped into
Hickman’s truck. It was a roadside bomb—the signature weapon of Iraqi
insurgents. Hickman was grievously wounded. The next day, just before
midnight, the Army visited Hickman’s parents in North Carolina to tell
them their son was dead.
Smith, Judge, McMahon, and Hickman were the final American combat
fatalities in Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq, respectively. An unknown soldier
will have the same fate in Afghanistan.
READ MORE:
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/06/america-win-loss-iraq-afghanistan/394559/
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