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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, September 13, 2009

New soldiers eager to serve


    By Chuck Crumbo
    McClatchy-Tribune News Service

     • Missouri set for a makeover

    COLUMBIA, S.C. — Almost to the hour eight years after terrorists crashed passenger jets into the World Trade Center, 760 soldiers graduated Friday from basic combat training at Fort Jackson, S.C.

    Within a year, about 80 percent of the new troops will head to Afghanistan or Iraq, following the footsteps of thousands of others who have fought America's two wars since Sept. 11, 2001.

    "We've got folks willing to put on this uniform ... and are willing to make the necessary sacrifice in order to preserve what we treasure the most, and that's our freedom and our way of life," Fort Jackson commander Brig. Gen. Bradley May told graduates after the morning's ceremony at Hilton Field.

    Since 9/11, an estimated 280,000 volunteers have graduated from basic training at Fort Jackson and entered the Army, Reserve and Army National Guard. Overall, about 800,000 men and women have joined the Army since 2001.

    "It's absolutely extraordinary that these soldiers have such a desire to serve this nation," said Lt. Col. Dan Beatty, commander of the training battalion that produced Friday's new troops.

    Beatty noted that a number of the soldiers were just in fourth or fifth grade when the attacks occurred.

    "They have grown up only knowing conflict," Beatty said. "Their commitment and resolve are absolutely remarkable."

    Pfc. Naswana Moon of Dillon, S.C., remembers that day in 2001.

    The school day had just started when the teacher turned on the classroom TV to watch the live reports from New York City, said Moon, 18, who plans to work in Army human resources.

    "We saw the twin towers falling down," Moon said. "I couldn't understand it then, but as I grew up, I realized that there were people out there willing to kill themselves to harm everyone in the United States."

    Pvt. Sean Randall of Piedmont, S.C., also was in fifth grade when the attacks happened. "The teacher came in and turned on the TV, and we just spent the rest of the day watching," said the 18-year-old, who will be a mechanic in the S.C. Army National Guard. "It was hard to believe it really happened."

    Pvt. Deborah Adams, 19, said she didn't know about the attacks until she got home from school. The teachers in her Texas school wanted to "have a normal school day," Adams said.

    So no one turned on the TVs and no one mentioned the attacks. "When I got home and heard about the attacks, I didn't think it was real," said Adams, who will be a cook.

    Adams, though, said she has always wanted to join the Army. At home, she has a picture of herself at age 5 sitting in a Blackhawk helicopter. "I was ready to fly that thing," she said.

    Adams' father is a retired Army master sergeant who enlisted in 1969 during the Vietnam War.

    "I'd rather do this than be in 'Aggieland,' " Adams said, referring to her hometown college of Texas A&M.