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« Last Word on Schiavo | Main | Meanwhile » March 23, 2005
Camp Eggers
Posted by Bill Blackfive covers the renaming of a base in Afghanistan to honor the memory of Capt. Dan Eggers. My previous post about Dan is here. UPDATE: Dan's mother e-mailed me the text of this Army release: COMBINED FORCES COMMAND - AFGHANISTAN For Immediate Release Kabul Compound Renamed in Honor of Fallen Soldier By Sgt. 1st Class Darren D. Heusel KABUL, Afghanistan — He may be gone, but U.S. Army Capt. Daniel W. Eggers is not forgotten. Senior military officials here made sure of that Sunday when they renamed the Kabul Compound “Camp Eggers” in honor of the former Green Beret who was killed May 29, 2004, near Kandahar after the vehicle in which he was riding struck an improvised explosive device. He was 28. Also killed with Eggers were Sgt. 1st Class Robert J. Mogensen, Spc. Joseph A. Jeffries and Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Brian J. Ouellette. The four men were fatally wounded while returning to their base as they tried to avoid another IED in the road. “Capt. Eggers was killed leading his Special Forces A Team in Zabul Province…a truly joint team working hard to help secure a critical part of this country and provide support to the Afghan government in a highly contested area,” Barno said. “Their loss struck all of us here at the time particularly hard, as it was such a grievous loss of life in a single incident. “At their memorial service in Bagram, we were all struck at the pain suffered by the unit at the loss of so many men from such a tight group – clearly a ‘Band of Brothers.’” Eggers, a native of Cape Coral, Fla., was commissioned in May 1997 after graduating from The Citadel Military College in South Carolina where he majored in history. He completed Special Forces training in 2002 and was assigned to the 1st Bn., 3rd SFG in May 2003. Following his first deployment to Afghanistan in March 2003, Eggers was assigned to Company A as a detachment commander. He is survived by his wife, U.S. Army Capt. Rebecca Lynn Eggers, and his sons, John Joseph Eggers, 6, and William Howard Eggers, 4. The two met in the summer of 1996 during military training at Fort Bragg and stayed in touch through their senior year of college. The couple married May 20, 1997, in Charleston, S.C., after graduation. “I was extremely honored to hear that Lt. Gen. Barno wanted to rename the Kabul Compound in Danny’s honor,” she said in an e-mail from her office at MacDill. “I was a bit shocked ... there are so many people who have lost their lives. I never imagined that something like this would be happening.” Mrs. Eggers said her husband had a unique gift when it came to relating to people and that he could make anyone feel at ease. She said he was extremely good at adapting to other people’s environments, which made him “a great SF officer.” “Capt. Eggers is remembered as a dedicated Special Forces Soldier and consummate professional,” Barno said. “His deployment as an ODA commander in the south was a key component of our overall strategy last year to open that part of the country up to registration for the Afghan presidential elections – a move designed to provide the Afghan people the opportunity for each of them to choose their own future, free from oppression. “The sacrifice of these brave men is a tribute to all of our coalition forces who risk their lives daily. Their missions – carried on by their teams and thousands of other troops here – turned the tide in Afghanistan last year, made clear by the huge success of the Afghan election, which set the course of this country’s future. Capt. Eggers’ legacy is that freedom, that success in this rugged land so far from his home.” The ceremony concluded with the crowd observing a moment of silence for all those who have lost their lives in Afghanistan and the playing of the “Ballad of the Green Beret.” -30- KABUL, Afghanistan – Capt. Daniel W. Eggers, who was killed with three other service members May 29, 2004 near Kandahar after the vehicle in which they were riding struck an improvised explosive device, was remembered Sunday by those closest to him after a ceremony that renamed Kabul Compound in his honor. “He reached out to those less fortunate without making them feel embarrassed by their situation,” Mrs. Eggers said in an e-mail from her office at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., where she is serving as the chief of the Actions Branch at U.S. Army Special Operations Command Headquarters. “He was humbled by the handicapped,” she continued. “He was an extremely spiritual person that let his faith guide him.” Kris Mitchell of Columbus, Ga., went to school with Eggers and was a sophomore while he was a junior at The Citadel Military College in South Carolina. “As a cadet, I knew him from ROTC; as a lieutenant, I knew him as a ‘Cottonbaler;’ I also knew him as a friend – admired and respected by all,” he wrote in another e-mail posted on the Web site. “I was proud to see him in his Green Beret, it was him. “At the 2003 Homecoming, I asked him about Special Forces and how he liked it. He told me that it was the best place for him and he loved it! Dan was a great man! I am honored to know him.” Brian Ouellette of Uxbridge, Mass., a brother of Michael Ouellette, wrote in another e-mail, “My brother was surrounded with the best of the best.” Mrs. Eggers said she and her husband came into the military in 1997 and being half of a dual-military couple was much like being half of any dual-income family. “You learn to split everything, to include cooking dinner, picking up the children and doing the housework,” she wrote in the e-mail. “Since we both worked the same amount of time, there was never an expectation that one of us would pull more of the load at home. Mrs. Eggers went on to say they were fortunate in that they didn’t have to leave their two children, John Joseph Eggers, 6, and William Howard Eggers, 4, at the same time, “something that happens more and more often now.” “So, for us having two military members in the same family was not nearly as difficult as I know some people’s situations are,” she wrote. “He was a wonderful husband and father and we miss him dearly.” Posted by Bill at March 23, 2005 10:22 AM | TrackBack (0) |
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