Community Media Coverage
Home Base Florida, David Lawrence Center help SWFL veterans with mental health services (naplesnews.com)
Home Base Florida partners with David Lawrence Center to help veterans with 'invisible wounds of war'
Naples Daily News
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The David Lawrence Center is now providing services to Collier County veterans and their families to address their post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health needs.
Under a tent Thursday at the nonprofit mental health center’s campus in Naples, the center announced a collaboration with Home Base Florida to offer specialized treatment on an outpatient basis at no cost to veterans or their families.
The therapy is considered the gold standard for addressing the “invisible wounds of war” which include post-traumatic stress disorder, substance abuse, depression, anxiety, anger, grief and loss.
Called “cognitive processing therapy,” the treatment was developed 10 years ago, said Michael Allard, chief operating officer and one of the founders of Home Base, a national nonprofit organization dedicated to helping veterans.
The focus is to help veterans find ways to manage their symptoms and come to terms with them in a safe manner — and extinguish their anxiety.
11th Annual Kensington Salute to SWFL Veterans Golf Tournament Raises Record-Breaking Total for Home Base Florida | Home Base
11th Annual Kensington Salute to SWFL Veterans Golf Tournament Raises Record-Breaking Total for Home Base Florida
April 19, 2022
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This April, Kensington Golf & Country Club held its 11th Annual Salute to SWFL Veterans Golf Tournament, raising a record-breaking $160,000 for Home Base Florida. The event has totaled over $1 Million raised in its 11 year tenure.
Thirty 4-some golf teams competed, and each was paired with a Florida Veteran making the group a 5-some. The day kicked off with an opening ceremony, followed by lunch before the 1 pm shotgun start. The evening ended with a dinner and closing ceremony, at which 2 Home Base participants shared their stories of hope and resilience through the care they received at Home Base Florida.
Louis D’Angelo, Army Veteran and Purple Heart recipient, joined the Army at age 25 to serve his country and have a career. He deployed to Iraq after the attacks of 9/11/2001 and suffered injuries from a rocket propelled grenade on his first day of duty. He also endured an IED explosion, which claimed the lives of 16 of his fellow soldiers. This event left Louis with deep guilt, and ultimately, Post Traumatic Stress. When he returned, he coped with substance use, endured many physical ailments, and struggled to return to civilian life. After moving to Naples, FL in 2014, he attended the Kensington golf tournament with a friend, which is where he learned about Home Base’s programs. Louis originally participated in Warrior Health and Fitness, and in 2017, he attended the Intensive Clinical Program. Louis says he uses the skills he learned at Home Base today and credits the care he received with saving his life.
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Matt Loebs served 17 years in the US Army as a Chemical Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, Explosive specialist and later transitioned into a Comat Engineer. Matt served in combat in Iraq, an experience that haunted him as his troops were under constant fire and many fell in battle. He says he learned to emotionally detach so he could carry out his mission. Matt also suffered from survivors’ guild as his childhood best friend died in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan on a mission that Matt himself approved. Along with his long-term physical ailments, Matt also suffered from PTS, depression, and anxiety. He faced many challenges returning to civilian life, including entering into a blended family, new marriage, and new career – many of which triggered his anxiety and depression even further. Matt was connected to Home Base as a US Army Reservist and ultimately participated in the Intensive Clinical Program in 2018. He gained tools and skills to help him cope and return to civilian life, and even still attends weekly outpatient therapy in Florida. Matt says Home Base continues to save his life and gave him his “happy ending”.
Many thanks to our partners at Kensington Golf & Country Club for your steadfast support through this annual event. The funds raised at Kensington help heroes like Louis and Matt find the healing they need and deserve.
Home Base - U.S. Army Veteran Matt Loebs' Story - Patriot Fund (patriotfundinc.org)
Home Base – U.S. Army Veteran Matt Loebs’ Story
Matt Loebs is a living testament to the life-changing work of Home Base Veteran and Family Care, an initiative co-founded by the Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital. Supported by crucial contributions from the Patriot Fund and other partners, Home Base has been able to deliver lifesaving care to Matt and hundreds of other Veterans and Military Families.
After retiring from the U.S. Army, where he specialized as a Chemical, Biological, Radiological Explosive Specialist and Combat Engineer, Matt faced invisible scars from multiple deployments in Iraq. The emotional and psychological toll affected not just him, but also his family and mental well-being.
It was Home Base Florida’s programs, enabled by generous support, that marked a watershed moment in Matt’s life. Through targeted intervention at the Home Base Intensive Clinical Program, he took the first pivotal steps toward reclaiming his sense of self and well-being.
As Matt transitioned from active duty to civilian life, he transformed his adversities into meaningful opportunities. Today, he’s a successful business owner and founder of the non-profit organization, Veteran MWR. His journey serves as an enduring symbol of resilience and transformation, showing the critical role that Home Base and its supporters play in altering the lives of Veterans and their families.
In realizing his full potential and making a meaningful societal contribution through Veteran MWR, Matt epitomizes the profound, positive impact a healed veteran can have on a community. This wouldn’t be possible without the essential support from The Patriot Fund and others. His story is a vivid reminder that when provided the resources to heal from the invisible wounds of war, veterans become not just survivors, but catalysts for change.
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Home Base Florida veterans, supporters honored at Red Sox spring training opener
April 27, 2023
US Army Veteran Matt Loebs and Boston Red Sox pitcher Richard Bleier meet near the mound where Mr. Loebs threw the ceremonial first pitch at Jet Blue Park for the Red Sox spring training season opener against the Tampa Bay Rays. COURTESY PHOTO
It was a great day at Fenway South at Jet Blue Park in Fort Myers at the Red Sox spring training season opener against the Tampa Bay Rays, but not because of the nail-biting 7-6 Red Sox victory in the bottom of the 9th inning. The day was special because it was a celebration of the Red Sox Foundation partnership with Home Base Florida that honored veteran participants and their families for their service.
The Red Sox Foundation donated more than 130 tickets for Home Base Florida veteran and family participants who were given the once in a life-time opportunity to walk onto the field to be acknowledged for their selfless sacrifice. The special event kicked off with a Home Base Florida pregame ceremony that introduced fans in the packed stadium to its mission and recognized those who served such as retired US Army Veteran Matt Loebs and his family. Mr. Loebs, who also happens to be a successful baseball coach, threw out a perfect, jaw dropping ceremonial first pitch during the pre-game ceremony and his children were given the honor of kicking things off with the official “play ball” announcement.
Immediately following the pre-game ceremony, Mr. Loebs joined Home Base Florida senior leadership for a special donor reception where he shared with the group of more than 75 supporters his experience in the military, his challenges transitioning to civilian life and how Home Base Florida helped him get his life back.
Mr. Loebs, who was born and raised in Naples and served more than 17 years in the Army as an explosive specialist and combat engineer, struggled with long-term health challenges from chemical weapons exposure and mental health challenges as he transitioned to civilian life.
“Many things from my days in combat in Iraq haunt me. Every day was ‘a blast’ there where I had to clean up body parts,” said Mr. Loebs. “That taught me to detach emotionally because the mission had to continue.”
While a useful tactic on the battlefield, that didn’t serve him at home. A professional high-achiever, Mr. Loebs shared that he struggled silently in his personal life with PTSD, depression, anxiety and survivor’s guilt. These challenges led to the end of his marriage and that finally made him reach out to Home Base Florida for help.
Mr. Loebs enrolled in the two-week Intensive Clinical Program in Boston, where he was relieved to know he wasn’t alone and that other veterans were going through the same challenges. He began to understand his triggers and learned how to cope with them in a healthy way.
The changes in him led him and his ex-wife to remarry in 2021.
“PTSD never goes away, but Home Base taught me how to live a fulfilled life with my trauma and gave me the skills to restore the most important part of my life — my family.”
It was an uplifting afternoon that showed how support can save and improve lives, build a network of comradery among veterans and family members and instill the trust that we will be there for our veterans when they return home. It was great day that ended with a win for veterans, a win for the Red Sox and a win for Home Base Florida. ¦
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Naples soldier honored at Cape Army Reserve Center
Staff Sgt. Marc Scialdo, 31, an Army soldier from Naples, was killed this week in a helicopter crash in southern Afghanistan. Scialdo, a Black Hawk crew chief serving his second tour of duty, was a 1999 graduate of St. John Neumann Catholic High School in Naples, and a 2002 graduate of Edison State College.
By Brittany Weiner, Nbc2
Published on: 7/12/2014
Honored for the ultimate sacrifice, and now remembered forever. On Saturday, the Cape Coral U.S. Army Reserve Center was named in memory of Army Staff Sergeant Marc Scialdo.
"He truly deserved it. He earned every bit of this honor," said Scialdo's older sister Jackie Nelson.
"Every soldier that's passed away should have something like this," said Scialdo's childhood friend Staff Sgt. Matthew Loebs.
Childhood friend and fellow soldier, Staff Sgt. Loebs helped make this possible.
"I started pushing forward trying to figure out how to get it done. Here we are today," said Staff Sgt. Loebs.
Hundreds attended the emotional ceremony; including Staff Sgt. Marc Scialdo's wife, parents and three siblings.
Local Soldier honored with Reserve Center dedication
By Sgt. Shantelle Campbell
August 7, 2014
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CAPE CORAL, Fla. -- More than 200 family, friends and fellow service members watched as the Cape Coral U.S. Army Reserve Center was memorialized and renamed in honor of Staff Sgt. Marc A. Scialdo on July 12.
A much loved and respected member of the Cape Coral community, Scialdo, a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter crew chief was deployed with the 603rd Aviation Support Battalion, 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, and was killed when his aircraft crashed near Daman in Kandahar province, Afghanistan, March 11, 2013.
At the beginning of the ceremony, everyone turned to face a lone U.S. flag. Soldiers saluted during "The Star-Spangled Banner" and two UH-60s flew overhead in Staff Sgt. Scialdo's honor.
The host of the ceremony, Maj. Gen. Gill Beck, commanding general of the 81st Regional Support Command, spoke of Scialdo's selflessness and legacy that will forever serve as an inspiration to Soldiers now and in the future.
"As we look back and remember a great American hero," said Beck, "we also look forward and recognize those people who are going to lead our country forward. They will be reminded by the example of [Staff Sgt.] Scialdo of what it means to be … committed to what our country stands for."
"From here forward as Soldiers come into the reserve center, they will have an example of a natural leader and a dedicated American Soldier who gave all and who will inspire others for years to come," added Beck.
In addition to Beck, Scialdo was remembered by Donald Slesnick, Army Reserve Ambassador for Florida, Mayor Pro Tem Rana Erbick of Cape Coral, staff members of Senator Marco Rubio and U.S. Rep. Curt Clawson and one of the battalion commanders of the 603rd CAB, 3rd Inf. Div., Lt. Col. Scott Leblond.
"It is an honor for myself and for Command Sgt. Maj. [Grant] Stange to participate in today's ceremony, memorializing the honor and sacrifice of Staff Sgt. Marc Scialdo," said Leblond.
"His love for his Soldiers and his unit was only topped by love for his family," Leblond continued. "His courage and his commitment were contagious to everyone that he came into contact with. He was a true inspiration every day that he served in uniform. He truly not only inspired his Soldiers at home, but also in combat. He energized his entire maintenance team as they went into Afghanistan."
"Marc Scialdo's legacy surely lives within his peers and in each one of the young Soldiers who still stand in my formations and the 603rd Aviation Battalion today," he added.
The last to speak about Scialdo was his sister, Jacqueline Nelson who extended the Scialdo family's thanks to everyone in attendance and also expressed much gratitude to Staff Sgt. Matthew Loebs, childhood friend of Scialdo and initiator of the event.
In her remarks she remembered her brother as a great man and Soldier.
"We are deeply touched to know that the Cape Coral Army Reserve Center is being named after Marc," she said. "We recognize what a paramount honor this is, and it speaks volumes about who Marc was and how he chose to live his life both as a man and as a Soldier."
Nelson continued by speaking of her brother's exemplary leadership and dedication to his Soldiers, family and friends. And, how he shined a light so bright that even in death, he continues to live.
"Marc was a shining light that brought people together and if he was standing here now, which I feel him, he would be smiling and probably cracking a witty joke or three," Nelson added. "He loved to laugh and he loved life. He loved God and his country. He fiercely loved his wife, his family, and his friends with a true heart. He also loved his truck … These are the absolutes that I've come to know and although he was my younger brother he was always someone that I looked up to and I will always continue to inspire to be like him."
"He will live on in our hearts … He will never be forgotten," Nelson concluded, "And, as the many brave and honorable men and women walk through the doors of this reserve center, we hope that Marc's legacy will be an inspiration for each of them. May God bless our Soldiers and our country and as Marc would say, 'KCCO -- Keep Calm and Chive On.'"
To conclude the ceremony, members of Scialdo's family and other distinguished guests unveiled the plaque dedicated to Scialdo and cut the ribbon that officially memorialized and opened the Staff Sgt. Marc A. Scialdo U.S. Army Reserve Center in honor of a great American Soldier who gave the ultimate sacrifice.
420th Eng. Company builds teamwork across units
Photo By Sgt. 1st Class Debralee Lutgen | U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers from the 420th Engineer Company (Route Clearance) out of... read more
FORT MCCOY, WISCONSIN, UNITED STATES
05.22.2015
Story by Staff Sgt. Debralee Lutgen
412th Theater Engineer Command
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FORT MCCOY, Wis. – Most passengers in a vehicle will occasionally watch the scenery pass by outside the window, just watching the trees, the grass and the birds. When you’re a route clearance Soldier, watching out your vehicle window is very different as you look for improvised explosive devises and explosive hazards.
The 420th Engineer Company (Route Clearance) out of Indiana, Pennsylvania, honed these skills during Warrior Exercise 86 15-02 at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin, May 2 to 22.
“Mainly, because we’re a route clearance platoon, it’s been route clearance and doing different training on different scenarios,” said 1st Lt. Justin Brown, 1st platoon leader, 420th Eng. Company. “Some of the scenarios have been interrogating IEDs, HMEs, homemade explosives, and on different routes while interrogating different sites, getting attacked and how to maneuver our vehicles and basically take down the enemy while reconning the route.”
Interrogating is a term used by route clearance personnel to mean investigating if an object is, in fact, an explosive hazard, usually using the arm of the Buffalo mine-protected vehicle.
One situational exercise in particular was somewhat unique for the unit when they served as the clearance package for an MEB battalion clearing the route of a suspected contaminated area.
“As engineers, we can work with any company. As route clearance, we technically work with every company because we clear the routes before they are able to move, period,” said Sgt. 1st Class Matthew Loebs, 1st platoon sergeant, attached to the 420th Eng. Company from the 388th Engineer Company. “Without us out front clearing those routes, that inhibits any other units from being able to move.”
Although this situation is one route clearance companies may face, the complexity was daunting.
“This is definitely something that needs to be practiced. Back to the Reserve Soldier not here that often, and then trying to piece together this complex exercise on spur of the moment,” said Loebs, a West Palm Beach, Florida, resident. “We executed and succeeded, but it needs some work.”
The mission was a success, but it was also an opportunity to see how the different units worked their piece and integrated with the other assets.
“Even though today was a little bit confusing, it did help out a little bit to see how different organizations can come together and plan. The engineers were working with the military police, the military police were working with the engineers and [chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear]. Everyone came together,” said Brown, a Upper Marlboro, Maryland, native. “It’s kind of like how the Reserve is, you pull all these entities into one and they have to work together. It was kind of confusing because it’s like I was in the beginning, taking something I really don’t know that much about and seeing how I can get it to work. It’s helping other people who really don’t know about route clearance or CBRN or MPs learn how to start working together. It was a stepping stone in the right direction.”
While building relationships across military occupational specialties, the engineers also built bonds with engineer counterparts. While the 420th Eng. Company was the lead for receiving the training, they were augmented by various other 412th engineer units from throughout the eastern states.
“From day one to present we’ve enhanced quite a few of our skills. We came in with a couple people from different units and the unit that was supposed to be here, the 420th, and we’ve had to quickly learn to work as a team and understand each other and understand what each other does,” said Loebs. “From the first mission it was kind of rough, to the last mission where they said we were the best ones they’ve seen. That shows we’re very good at adapting and overcoming.”
Soldiers augmenting a unit like this is not uncommon.
“You have to deploy at a certain strength so we had to come here at 80 percent strength for our unit,” said Brown. “This is definitely a normal thing that would happen in the Reserve.”
While it may be considered normal, the integration of Soldiers from different units is not always easy.
“With the Reserve you have so many different avenues thrown at you. You have the civilian who has a certain lifestyle that one day a month, they throw on their uniform. To have them come from different units and not know each other, you really have to be a people person to be able to integrate into a different scenario every time. For something like this to happen with this many types of people integrated into it, that shows a lot on them,” said Loebs. “You can have those environments where it’s a brotherhood and they’re the outsider and ‘we’re not letting them in’ verses this environment, where we enabled them to be able to support each other and empowered them to succeed out here. That’s not my success, that’s what they’ve done.”
Successful integration of the Soldiers is only one of the successes for this route clearance team.
“They came in here from different units to fill one platoon without knowing what each others job skills are and having to rely on them and teach them before we went out on missions to be able to execute. They followed through on that and succeeded at it. Even if they didn’t succeed, one of the things I said from the beginning was, ‘Failure is okay, we just need to make sure we learn from it.’ Those failures didn’t happened again on the last day of the training,” said Loebs. “They had their confidence built up and they were able to execute and even if they failed, they stood back up and they executed the next day and succeeded. That’s a great take-away from an exercise like this.”
The Soldiers weren’t the only ones who grew from this exercise.
“It allowed me to really see how to do the job, do the task, how to integrate different Soldiers, to integrate different pieces of equipment that I’ve never worked with before, knowing how each piece of equipment works. It’s also knowing how to get Soldiers who only come one weekend out of the month, two weeks out of the year to actually work as one,” said Brown. “It’s definitely a learning curve on how to get the Soldiers to understand what’s going on in my head to actually play out to each one of their understanding. I tell them, ‘It sounds good in my head, but do you understand what I’m trying to say.’ That’s the hardest part, sometimes as leaders we talk, but it doesn’t always come out the way you want it to.”
While Brown learned to be better understood, Loebs took away lessons learned by his fellow Soldiers.
“I think it gives them different avenues to tackle the ever-changing world out there. Everybody has deployed at different times and everybody can pull different things from their deployments and it’s a learning experience,” said Loebs. “I’ve learned a lot from the things I’ve heard out here. Now it might not be the right thing for when we deploy, but I can keep it in the back of my head in my toolbox. I might be able to utilize it or tweak it a little bit and make it our own.”
While most of the Soldiers showed growth during the exercise, Brown sees the most valuable outcome as the incorporation of all aspects of the Soldiers’ training.
“The value of this training is to basically bringing everything full circle. Soldiers throughout the year, we train on different tactics such as mine-sweeping, interrogating, how to recon a route, different route recon tasks,” said Brown. “The value of this training has been seeing everything put into play, the whole package put into play as one: seeing Soldiers able to operate the Buffalo, seeing Soldiers able to operate the Husky, seeing the platoon leader and platoon sergeant make calls and the Soldiers actually do it. It’s seeing how everything gels and comes together and the beautiful picture that it makes.”
Training dedication
By Sgt. David MarquisJune 18, 2014
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CAPE CORAL, Fla. - June 14, 2014, marked the Army's 239th birthday as well as Flag Day, however, Soldiers from the 365th Engineer Company out of Cape Coral Florida, dedicated this day to a fellow Soldier who fell on the battlefield.
These Soldiers, along with representatives from the area's recruiting company, participated in a Helocast training exercise at Crystal Lake to honor Staff Sgt. Marc A. Scialdo, a UH-60 Black Hawk crew chief who was killed in action on March 11, 2013 when his helicopter crashed during a night time training mission near Kandahar City, Afghanistan.
"Having these Black Hawks around is a great way to show the locals here what he did for a living," said Staff Sgt. Matthew Loebs, the 365th Unit Adviser. "It's an honor being able to do an exercise and dedicate it to him, and still get the value of training for our Soldiers."
Helocast is a battlefield insertion technique used by small groups of Soldiers that involves a helicopter hovering at a low altitude above a body of water which allows the Soldiers to disembark the helicopter in to the water.
Many of the Soldiers who participated in the training exercise are Sappers, which are specially trained combat engineers. They performed the Helocasttraining because, according to Loebs, Sappers are supposed to be ready to go anywhere in the world to perform their mission.
"Sappers are suppose to be able to be dropped into any environment and come out successful," said Loebs. "The Soldiers come out here, they learn the task, and they execute it and walk away feeling confident in their abilities."
With the help of the Cape Coral and the local agencies the training was a huge success, said 1st Sergeant Robert E. Cohn, 365th 1st Sergeant.
"This site was a really good site," said Cohn. "The city helped get us this area and the lake was perfect for what we are doing; everything went off without a hitch."
The locals living in the area also stopped by to watch the training while local police and fire departments, and Coast Guard and Coast Guard Reserve, were on scene to control crowds, provide medical treatment if needed, and be out on the water to assist Soldiers as they jumped the 20 feet from the Black Hawk into Crystal Lake.
With the day's training complete, the 365th feels ready to perform its mission, and with Scialdo's memory fresh on their minds the Sappers will be renaming the Cape Coral Army Reserve Training Center after Scialdo in July, according to Loebs.
As long as there is a need for combat engineers, the 365th will be ready for whatever environment they may find themselves in, they will be ready to jump into any fight, whether it's into Crystal Lake or anywhere else in the world where they are needed.
Pelican’s Nest Golf Club Supports Veterans
November 20, 2019
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This Veterans Day, members of the Pelican’s Nest Golf Club at Pelican Landing in Bonita Springs hosted their 4th annual golf tournament benefiting Home Base Southwest Florida. The event raised a staggering $160,000 this year through golf registration fees, sponsorships, a raffle, silent auction and generous donations. Since 2016, this event at Pelican’s Nest has raised over $455,000 towards the care and support of local SWFL Veterans and Military Families dealing with the invisible wounds, such as post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injury.
232 golfers hit the links on a beautiful Monday afternoon to celebrate Veterans Day. The opening ceremony featured Pelican’s Nest committee member and leader, Pat Phelan, Home Base Assistant Director of Development, Jason Cooper, and Home Base Veteran Matt Loebs.
Loebs, U.S. Army Veteran from the area, reached out to Home Base Program Director, fellow Veteran Armando Hernandez for help a few years ago. Armando assisted Loebs in enrolling in the Warrior Health & Fitness Program. “Thank you so much for supporting us. I want to let you know that your generosity and support is a direct reflection of my success over this past year. I lost 50 pounds this year!” Loebs said, as he twirled for the crowd.
While participating in the Warrior Health and Fitness Program in Southwest Florida, Loebs learned of Home Base’s two-week Intensive Clinical Program (ICP) offered in Boston. Thanks to the funds raised at Pelican’s Nest’s annual golf outing and other third-party golf fundraisers, Home Base was able to fly Loebs and a family member to Boston, at no cost, to receive over a year’s worth of evidence-based therapy and treatment in those two weeks. “If it wasn’t for me going through that process, I wouldn’t be here today. I was in a very dark place before I went there” Loebs stated.
Loebs ended his remarks by emphasizing, “From the bottom of my heart, I thank you because I see what you help other veterans with, as well. It’s because of the support and generosity, like this golf tournament, that we can get the help here in Southwest Florida.”
Other honorable guests included 4-star U.S. Army General (ret) Fred Franks, U.S. Army Brigadier General (ret) Ed Dyer, Home Base COO Michael Allard, Home Base Southwest Florida’s program Director, Armando Hernandez, Florida State Senator Kathleen Passidomo, Bagpiper Ken Hough and U.S. Air Force Col. (ret) Vince Fazio.
Pat Phelan, a member of Pelican’s Nest Golf Club who has been instrumental in organizing and growing the Pelican’s Nest Golf Tournament, is proud to be part of an event that supports those who have served. “My number one reason for being involved is to help these young people who gave so much become healthy, happy family members,” she said. “What affects one member of a family affects everyone.”
With the support of her committee of dedicated volunteers, local sponsors and club members, Phelan has grown this tournament significantly over the years. Many Pelican’s Nest members have military connections and remain committed to giving back to their local military community. Home Base Southwest Florida is honored to have such dedicated, generous, patriotic supporters like the Pelican’s Nest community.
The Secret Casualties of Iraq’s Abandoned Chemical Weapons
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A controlled detonation of recovered mustard shells near Taji, Iraq, on Aug. 17, 2008.John Paul Williams
Published: October 14, 2014
The soldiers at the blast crater sensed something was wrong.
KEY POINTS
During the Iraq war, at least 17 American service members and seven Iraqi police officers were exposed to aging chemical weapons abandoned years earlier.
These weapons were not part of an active arsenal. They were remnants from Iraq's arms program in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq war.
Many troops who were exposed received inadequate care. None of the veterans were enrolled in long-term health monitoring.
Munitions are unaccounted for in areas of Iraq now under control of ISIS.
In response to this investigation, the Pentagon apologized, announced new steps to provide medical support and to recognize veterans who had been denied awards. Learn more»
DOCUMENTARY
It was August 2008 near Taji, Iraq. They had just exploded a stack of old Iraqi artillery shells buried beside a murky lake. The blast, part of an effort to destroy munitions that could be used in makeshift bombs, uncovered more shells.
Two technicians assigned to dispose of munitions stepped into the hole. Lake water seeped in. One of them, Specialist Andrew T. Goldman, noticed a pungent odor, something, he said, he had never smelled before.
He lifted a shell. Oily paste oozed from a crack. “That doesn’t look like pond water,” said his team leader, Staff Sgt. Eric J. Duling.
The specialist swabbed the shell with chemical detection paper. It turned red — indicating sulfur mustard, the chemical warfare agent designed to burn a victim’s airway, skin and eyes.
All three men recall an awkward pause. Then Sergeant Duling gave an order: “Get the hell out.”
Five years after President George W. Bush sent troops into Iraq, these soldiers had entered an expansive but largely secret chapter of America’s long and bitter involvement in Iraq.
From 2004 to 2011, American and American-trained Iraqi troops repeatedly encountered, and on at least six occasions were wounded by, chemical weapons remaining from years earlier in Saddam Hussein’s rule.
In all, American troops secretly reported finding roughly 5,000 chemical warheads, shells or aviation bombs, according to interviews with dozens of participants, Iraqi and American officials, and heavily redacted intelligence documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.
The United States had gone to war declaring it must destroy an active weapons of mass destruction program. Instead, American troops gradually found and ultimately suffered from the remnants of long-abandoned programs, built in close collaboration with the West.
The New York Times found 17 American service members and seven Iraqi police officers who were exposed to nerve or mustard agents after 2003. American officials said that the actual tally of exposed troops was slightly higher, but that the government’s official count was classified.
Andrew T. Goldman in North Topsail Beach, N.C. In August 2008, Mr. Goldman was part of a team near Taji, Iraq, that was trying to destroy munitions that could be used in makeshift bombs. While holding a cracked shell, he noticed a strange smell.Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
The secrecy fit a pattern. Since the outset of the war, the scale of the United States’ encounters with chemical weapons in Iraq was neither publicly shared nor widely circulated within the military. These encounters carry worrisome implications now that the Islamic State, a Qaeda splinter group, controls much of the territory where the weapons were found.
The American government withheld word about its discoveries even from troops it sent into harm’s way and from military doctors. The government’s secrecy, victims and participants said, prevented troops in some of the war’s most dangerous jobs from receiving proper medical care and official recognition of their wounds.
Eric J. Duling at his home in Niceville, Fla. The cache that contaminated his explosive ordnance disposal team in 2008 was not the first discovery of chemical weapons in the war.Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
“I felt more like a guinea pig than a wounded soldier,” said a former Army sergeant who suffered mustard burns in 2007 and was denied hospital treatment and medical evacuation to the United States despite requests from his commander.
Congress, too, was only partly informed, while troops and officers were instructed to be silent or give deceptive accounts of what they had found. “ 'Nothing of significance’ is what I was ordered to say,” said Jarrod Lampier, a recently retired Army major who was present for the largest chemical weapons discovery of the war: more than 2,400 nerve-agent rockets unearthed in 2006 at a former Republican Guard compound.
Jarrod L. Taylor, a former Army sergeant on hand for the destruction of mustard shells that burned two soldiers in his infantry company, joked of “wounds that never happened” from “that stuff that didn’t exist.” The public, he said, was misled for a decade. “I love it when I hear, ‘Oh there weren’t any chemical weapons in Iraq,’ ” he said. “There were plenty.”
CHEMICAL WEAPONS FOUND BY AMERICAN FORCES IN IRAQ
Between 2004 and 2011, American forces in Iraq encountered thousands of
chemical munitions. In several cases, troops were exposed to chemical agents.
SOME EXPOSURES DETAILED IN THIS ARTICLE1 MAY 2004 Two soldiers exposed to sarin from a shell near Baghdad’s Yarmouk neighborhood. 2 SUMMER 2006 Over 2,400 nerve-agent rockets found at this former Republican Guard compound. 3 JULY 2008 Six Marines exposed to mustard agent from an artillery shell at an abandoned bunker. 4 AUGUST 2008 Five American soldiers exposed to mustard agent while destroying a weapons cache. 5 2010 OR EARLY 2011 Hundreds of mustard rounds discovered in a container at this Iraqi security compound.
Rear Adm. John Kirby, spokesman for Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, declined to address specific incidents detailed in the Times investigation, or to discuss the medical care and denial of medals for troops who were exposed. But he said that the military’s health care system and awards practices were under review, and that Mr. Hagel expected the services to address any shortcomings.
“The secretary believes all service members deserve the best medical and administrative support possible,” he said. “He is, of course, concerned by any indication or allegation they have not received such support. His expectation is that leaders at all levels will strive to correct errors made, when and where they are made.”
The discoveries of these chemical weapons did not support the government’s invasion rationale.
After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Mr. Bush insisted that Mr. Hussein was hiding an active weapons of mass destruction program, in defiance of international will and at the world’s risk. United Nations inspectors said they could not find evidence for these claims.
Then, during the long occupation, American troops began encountering old chemical munitions in hidden caches and roadside bombs. Typically 155-millimeter artillery shells or 122-millimeter rockets, they were remnants of an arms program Iraq had rushed into production in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq war.
All had been manufactured before 1991, participants said. Filthy, rusty or corroded, a large fraction of them could not be readily identified as chemical weapons at all. Some were empty, though many of them still contained potent mustard agent or residual sarin. Most could not have been used as designed, and when they ruptured dispersed the chemical agents over a limited area, according to those who collected the majority of them.
In case after case, participants said, analysis of these warheads and shells reaffirmed intelligence failures. First, the American government did not find what it had been looking for at the war’s outset, then it failed to prepare its troops and medical corps for the aged weapons it did find.
As Iraq has been shaken anew by violence, and past security gains have collapsed amid Sunni-Shiite bloodletting and the rise of the Islamic State, this long-hidden chronicle illuminates the persistent risks of the country’s abandoned chemical weapons.
Many chemical weapons incidents clustered around the ruins of the Muthanna State Establishment, the center of Iraqi chemical agent production in the 1980s.
Since June, the compound has been held by the Islamic State, the world’s most radical and violent jihadist group. In a letter sent to the United Nations this summer, the Iraqi government said that about 2,500 corroded chemical rockets remained on the grounds, and that Iraqi officials had witnessed intruders looting equipment before militants shut down the surveillance cameras.
Soldiers in chemical protection gear, including Sgt. Eric J. Duling and Specialist Andrew T. Goldman, examining suspected chemical munitions at a site near Camp Taji, Iraq, on Aug. 16, 2008.The New York Times
The United States government says the abandoned weapons no longer pose a threat. But nearly a decade of wartime experience showed that old Iraqi chemical munitions often remained dangerous when repurposed for local attacks in makeshift bombs, as insurgents did starting by 2004.
Participants in the chemical weapons discoveries said the United States suppressed knowledge of finds for multiple reasons, including that the government bristled at further acknowledgment it had been wrong. “They needed something to say that after Sept. 11 Saddam used chemical rounds,” Mr. Lampier said. “And all of this was from the pre-1991 era.”
Others pointed to another embarrassment. In five of six incidents in which troops were wounded by chemical agents, the munitions appeared to have been designed in the United States, manufactured in Europe and filled in chemical agent production lines built in Iraq by Western companies.
Staff Sgt. Eric J. Duling, left, Specialist Andrew T. Goldman, far right, and another member of an ordnance disposal team being treated for exposure to a chemical agent in August 2008.via Andrew T. Goldman
Nonproliferation officials said the Pentagon’s handling of many of the recovered warheads and shells appeared to violate the Convention on Chemical Weapons. According to this convention, chemical weapons must be secured, reported and destroyed in an exacting and time-consuming fashion.
THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT DID NOT FIND WHAT IT HAD BEEN LOOKING FOR AT THE WAR’S OUTSET, THEN IT FAILED TO PREPARE ITS TROOPS AND MEDICAL CORPS FOR THE AGED WEAPONS IT DID FIND.
The Pentagon did not follow the steps, but says that it adhered to the convention’s spirit. “These suspect weapons were recovered under circumstances in which prompt destruction was dictated by the need to ensure that the chemical weapons could not threaten the Iraqi people, neighboring states, coalition forces, or the environment,” said Jennifer Elzea, a Pentagon spokeswoman.
The convention, she added, “did not envisage the conditions found in Iraq.”
Nonetheless, several participants said the United States lost track of chemical weapons that its troops found, left large caches unsecured, and did not warn people — Iraqis and foreign troops alike — as it hastily exploded chemical ordnance in the open air.
This was the secret world Sergeant Duling and his soldiers entered in August 2008 as they stood above the leaking chemical shell. The sergeant spoke into a radio, warning everyone back.
“This is mustard agent,” he said, announcing the beginning of a journey of inadequate medical care and honors denied. “We’ve all been exposed.”