Khi lính Mỹ tử trận
Tháng 9 nãm 2008 một chiến sĩ Mỹ gốc VN ở Tigard Oregon tử trận tại Afghanistan. Lễ an táng anh Ngô Quốc Tân ðýợc quân ðội và chính quyền tiểu bang cử hành rất trang trọng. Cứ mỗi lần có một con dân tiểu bang tử trận là cờ Mỹ và cờ tiểu bang ðýợc treo thấp xuống tại tất cả các cột cờ trên toàn tiểu bang.
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/index.ssf/2008/09/son_of_vietnamese_refugee_want.html
Lần này trong tang lễ của chiến binh gốc Việt cấp bậc binh nhất, có Thống ðốc tiểu bang và những týớng lãnh cao cấp nhất của National Guards. Khi quan tài di chuyển ðến mộ phần, thống ðốc ðã nhýờng xe của mình cho gia ðình ngýời tử trận. Thiếu týớng David B. Enyeart ðại diện Vệ Binh Quốc Gia Oregon ðã quỳ xuống dâng lá cờ Mỹ của anh Tân cho mẹ anh.
Ðiều ðáng buồn là trong tang lễ của anh Tân không có bóng dáng của một cựu quân nhân VNCH nào cũng không có sự hiện diện của ðại diện cộng ðồng VN. Cả ông chủ tịch hội cựu chiến sĩ Việt Nam toàn nýớc Mỹ là ngýời cý ngụ tại Oregon cũng không có mặt. Trong lúc ấy thì các cựu sĩ quan VNCH ðang có một buổi họp riêng, nhiều ngýời trong số mặc quần áo trận mang lon, ðội mũ.
Nhận xét này là do 2 ngýời ðýợc gia ðình tử sĩ nhờ chụp hình cho biết. Cả hai ðều nói là sau chuyện này họ mất cảm tình với những buổi họp của các ông mặc ðồ lính.
Có lẻ Quý Ông mặc ðồ lính trận ðang dự tiệc & nhảy ðầm !!!!
Tan Quoc Ngo tried and tried to join the Army. But his asthma kept him out.
On his third or fourth try, after a year in the Job Corps, his health must have improved because the Army finally made his wish come true. Ngo (pronounced "No") became infantry, on the front lines. Not only that, he volunteered to be a turret gunner and earned the nickname "Ngo Go."
Tan Quoc Ngo
He was the oldest of four sons, born in Portland and raised in Beaverton, whose parents were Vietnamese refugees. Being in the Army was his way of repaying his nation.
"He wanted to protect his country. He didn't want another 9/11," said his mother, Binh Thanh Sam, 39. "He said, 'This is our home now, I want to take care of it.' This is the age that they enjoy life. But he didn't even think of himself."
Ngo, 20, was killed Aug. 27 in Afghanistan when his unit came under fire from small arms and rocket-propelled grenades. As his Humvee passed an orchard, Ngo was exposed as the turret gunner and the enemy directed fire at him, said Brigadier Gen. William Rapp.
On Friday, incense wafted, a bagpiper played and monks in saffron robes prayed as Ngo's body was brought to Willamette National Cemetery by a military honor guard.
"Words are certainly no match for our collective grief that this brave son of Oregon is gone," Gov. Ted Kulongoski told his parents and mourners.
William Vuong, an adviser for the Vietnamese Community of Oregon, addressed Pvt. 1st Class Ngo.
"Your mission is complete," Vuong said. "You are truly a Vietnamese and American hero."
Thomas Boyd / The OregonianBinh Thanh Sam is led to her seat during Friday's service for her son, Tan Quoc Ngo, who died in combat in Afghanistan.
Sam, who still calls her oldest son by his childhood nickname "Mikey," said Thursday that he was dutiful and never complained. He walked his younger brothers to school. He volunteered through Key Club at school.
"He always said, 'Mom, I love you,'" Sam said. "He was a big boy, but a little kid at heart."
Ngo attended Elmonica Elementary School, Five Oaks Middle School and graduated from Westview High School in 2006.
He liked nothing better than playing pickup basketball or football, or playing cards with friends in his Beaverton neighborhood, even when he came home from the Army.
"He had lots of moms, he was a neighborhood boy," Sam said. "They called him the neighborhood soldier boy."
He also liked video games, including Grand Theft Auto and Halo, said his 15-year-old brother, Tien "Timmy" Ngo.
Another of Tan Ngo's hobbies was cooking. He could turn anything, even potatoes and eggs, into a meal as long as it was super spicy, Timmy Ngo said.
"He could put anything together and make it taste good," Timmy Ngo said.
After graduating, Tan Ngo entered the Job Corps, first working to become a chef and then as a house painter.
But he still wanted to be a soldier. Sam didn't believe it was really happening until the day he left home. She looks at a photo of her son before he entered basic training at Fort Benning, Ga., and sees a worried boy. The photo after he graduated shows a proud man.
Thomas Boyd / The OregonianBrigadier General David B. Enyeart presents the flag to Binh Thanh Sam, mother of Private 1st Class Tan Quoc Ngo, at Friday's service at Willamette National Cemetery.
He went to Afghanistan on June 23, his 20th birthday. He called or e-mailed friends and family just about every day, but he clearly didn't want anyone to worry. He said little more about his mission than he was "keeping the peace." The wildest story was about the crazy haircuts the guys in his unit got, Timmy Ngo said.
In Afghanistan, Tan Ngo adopted a dog he named Outlaw. It would disappear during the day, but come around at night, when Ngo would feed him.
After his three-year enlistment was up, Ngo planned to re-enlist, Sam said. He wanted to be a sergeant. Beyond that, he thought about studying medicine so he could help soldiers injured in battle.
The last time Sam talked to her son was Aug. 23, when the family was camping at Devil's Lake State Recreation Area near Lincoln City. It was like any other day for Ngo. He was getting ready to go out on patrol.
Ngo told them the first thing he wanted do when he got home was go camping.
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