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i believe the LT in charge that died was from Providence RILots of pizza delivered to the Pentagon that week!
Fair winds and following seas to the nineteen U.S. service members who died in that operation; especially the four Navy SEALs whose bodies were never recovered.
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According to the Navy SEAL Museum the four enlisted SEALs lost in Grenada were:i believe the LT in charge that died was from Providence RI
Damn, I stand corrected.According to the Navy SEAL Museum the four enlisted SEALs lost in Grenada were:
Machinist Mate 1st Kenneth J. Butcher.
Quartermaster 1st Kevin E. Lundberg.
Hull Technician 1st Stephen L. Morris.
Senior Chief Engineman Robert R. Schamberger.
Also from the SEAL Museum:Damn, I stand corrected.
pretty sure the story was the night before the invasion the Seals went in to secure whomever and the seas were too rough. The author - Dick Marcinko
or I got it wrong I apologize
Delays in an airborne insertion caused their daytime calm-sea insertion to be pushed back to nighttime and a bad storm. One of their two transport planes missed its drop zone, and four SEALs were lost in a rain squall off the island’s coast. Their bodies were never recovered.
Damn, I f***ed that whole thing up.Also from the SEAL Museum:
Don’t sweat it brother, we’re all getting old and memory gets fuzzy on details, your heart’s still in the right place.Damn, I f***ed that whole thing up.
Damn, I f***ed that whole thing up.
Don’t sweat it brother, we’re all getting old and memory gets fuzzy on details, your heart’s still in the right place.
Yup, me too! I can't remember what I had for breakfast or if I even had breakfast!Damn, I f***ed that whole thing up.