 President George W. Bush and Mrs. Laura Bush participate  in a military appreciation Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009, at Ft. Myer, Va., in honor of  the President's tenure as Commander-in-Chief. The First Couple was honored for  their outstanding public service by the Department of Defense.
President George W. Bush and Mrs. Laura Bush participate  in a military appreciation Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009, at Ft. Myer, Va., in honor of  the President's tenure as Commander-in-Chief. The First Couple was honored for  their outstanding public service by the Department of Defense.White House photo by Joyce N. Boghosian
Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, joined Defense  Secretary Robert M. Gates in praising Bush during the armed forces farewell  ceremony at Fort Myer, Va.
"In my 44 years of wearing this uniform, I  have never seen the American public and our military as bonded in understanding,  purpose and spirit as I do right now," Mullen told Bush. "For this, Mr.  President, we owe you our greatest gratitude."
Gates said Bush fostered  that close relationship throughout his presidency.
"The president's deep  regard and affection for our service members and their families has played out in  ways big and small," he said. Gates pointed to examples: "surprise visits to  Iraq and Afghanistan to shake hands and high-five [troops], ... personal phone  calls to those deployed over Thanksgiving, and even the occasional chest bump to  unwary cadets."
As he sent troops into harm's way, Bush never hid from  the human consequences of his decisions, Gates said. He made countless visits to  wounded warriors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the National Naval Medical  Center and other military hospitals. He and first lady Laura Bush also met with  thousands of family members of wounded and fallen troops.
Gates recalled  Bush's visit with Army Staff Sgt. Michael McNaughton, a Louisiana National  Guardsman being treated at Walter Reed after losing his leg to a land mine in  Afghanistan. The president suggested that the two go for a run after McNaughton  received his prosthetic leg, and carried through with the plan several months  later on a track around the White House's South Lawn.
"A single promise  to a single soldier. A small act that reflects President Bush's commitment to  care for and honor every member of the armed forces," Gates said.
"Mr.  President, every day these volunteers execute your orders with courage and  determination - facing down danger for the greater good of America," he  continued. "On behalf of more than 2 million men and women in uniform, we are  deeply grateful for your leadership and service to America in a time of war."
Mullen thanked the president and Mrs. Bush for embracing the military  family, and particularly those who have sacrificed heavily in the war on terror.
"You have proven that how well we care for our wounded and the families  of the fallen defines who and what we really are as a nation," he said. "You  made it personal, and that has made all the difference."
Some of the  most powerful accolades during the ceremony came not from the leaders, but from  the troops themselves.
Mullen shared thoughts penned by several deployed  service members in a journal he and his wife, Deborah, carried with them during  recent troop visits overseas.
"Mr. President, thank you and your family  for your service. I am proud to serve under you, sir," wrote Army Staff Sgt.  Ward from Queens, N.Y. Like several who signed the journal, he did not include  his first name.
"You are awesome, and made a difference in the world,"  Ward wrote.
Army Lt. Col. Scott Raney, deployed to Baghdad, extended his  thanks to Mrs. Bush. "Your class and dignity were an inspiration to us all," he  wrote.
The writing of Air Force Master Sgt. Michael Fraser brought  levity to the ceremony as he referred to a shoe-throwing incident in Iraq last  month.
"Sir, nice to see that our president is still quick on his feet  after eight years in office," Fraser wrote, bringing an outburst of laughter as  Mullen read it at the ceremony. "Next time, pick up the shoe and throw it back,"  he continued. "We got your back." 
Army Sgt. 1st Class Claude Cory from  Waco, Texas, turned the tone serious. "Sir, you truly set the standard to uphold  the peace and our very way of life so our kids can grow up in a peaceful world,"  he wrote. "We will always stand tall, one great nation and one great state,  Texas." 
Other service members, who signed the journal simply as "Your  soldiers," thanked Bush for his "service, example and leadership."
"We  have not faltered. We will not fail," the anonymous service member continued.  "With greatest respect and honor, we serve." 
Mullen called the troop  messages a sign of the deep mutual respect between Bush and the 2.4 million  military men and women, as well as their families.
"Those voices are an  answering volley to you for your high regard and great respect for every single  man and woman who serves this nation," he said.
Gates presented the  president and Mrs. Bush several awards in appreciation of their service. To  Bush, he presented the Department of Defense Distinguished Public Service Award,  U.S. Army Decoration for Distinguished Civilian Service, U.S. Navy Distinguished  Public Service Award, U.S. Air Force Decoration for Exceptional Civilian  Service, and U.S. Coast Guard Distinguish Public Service Award.
The  secretary presented Mrs. Bush the Department of Defense Outstanding Public  Service Award.
American Forces Press Service
4 comments:
I watched the entire ceremony on C-SPAN and was just overwhelmed with feelings, nearly all of them good. The one bad taste in my mouth? C-SPAN felt compelled to put a lil blurb on the screen saying something to the effect of "the military does this for all outgoing CinCs." Yeah... and your point is? What?
Other than that: brilliant. Especially Dubya's remarks. I'll miss him terribly.
I missed it - darn...
And, they may do it for all CinCs, but I doubt they have all of the books of gratitude from the soldiers for everyone....
I will miss him, too... and Laura.
I missed this as well. History will no doubt write a chapter, my prayer is that it is written fairly. He is a good man, Laura is a gracious First Lady. I pray our new CinC and his wife show the same respect for our troops.
~AirmanMom returning to her blog...
Airman Mom ~
I could not ahve said it better than you did - Thank You!
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