from the arena’s ceiling, shout-outs to servicemembers and
videos featuring troops and hockey pros projected onto some
18,000 fans attending the Capitals-New York Islanders contest.
At a pre-game reception in the Dewar’s Club, with fat
snowflakes visible through the window behind the podium,
Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England spoke to a crowd of
about 100 VIP guests. England, using themes of inclement
weather and the night's main event, took a playful swipe at
his boss, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who injured his
shoulder last week a
fter
slipping on an icy pathway near his home.
“You know, the secretary is on injured reserve now because he
encountered some ice outside,” he said. “So it's nice to be
here with an ice rink where it all belongs.”
On a serious note, England said military appreciation nights
are significant because they bring together Pentagon
civilians, military members and business people for one common
cause: to thank those who serve the United States to preserve
American freedom and liberty. “We are absolutely blessed to
have these men and women who serve and all of those who serve
for them,” he added.
England was introduced by Allison Barber, deputy assistant
secretary of defense for internal communications and public
liaison. Barber is the founder of America Su
pports
You, a program that connects citizens and corporations with
military personnel and their families serving at home and
abroad, which organized the military-themed evening.
“America Supports You is a DoD program that makes it easy for
everyone in America to find a way to support our troops and
our families,” she added.
Before the puck dropped, Marine Gen. James E. Cartwright, vice
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited with America
Supports You home-front group members tending to kiosks and
booths in the main concourse. As Cartwright made his rounds,
fans ogled the shiny brass stars on the general's shoulders.
“Who's that four-star?” one former Marine, who later
introduced himself to the vice chairman, was overheard to say.
Asked how valuable efforts by networks like America Supports
You groups are for channeling public support for the military,
the general said the benefits are three-fold.
“It makes the troops and their families aware of what
opportunities are available to them and it gives people an
opportunity to contribute in a way that may not be in a
foxhole, and to be given the booth space and acknowledged
makes all the difference in the world,” he said. “(Events)
like this bring all the pieces together.”
The general said that American support for troops -- perhaps
at a historic low when he joined the Marines during the
Vietnam War era -- is critical to men and women in uniform.
“To understand what you're doing makes a difference and that
it’s appreciated by somebody is 90 percent of what we go out
there and fight for is that feeling,” he said. “And to lose
that feeling is to lose the motivation that you have in the
foxhole day in and day out.”
Army Staff Sgt. Gary Heffernan, a veteran of Operation Iraqi
Freedom and a member of the Defense Department's “Why
We
Serve” speakers outreach program, was on hand for the game.
The Boston native, who said his father played goalie in the
National Hockey League, acknowledged that Americans aren't
obliged to display their support for the military.
“So when businesses like the Capitals reach out to the
military, it's enormous,” he said. “Even when little
businesses or schools reach out and say, 'Hey, we support
you,' it’s enormously meaningful, because the reason why we
fight is for the people.”
Asked why he thinks they choose to show their support,
Heffernan said, “Because they love us. There's no other reason
for it.”
Capitals owner Ted Leonsis told guests gathered at the
pre-game reception that this is the sixth year the Capitals
have held military appreciation night. The Caps had won four
of the five previous ones, but on this night the Islanders
topped the Capitals 3-2 in a shootout.
Leonsis' father, who came to America from Greece, spent seven
years in the U.S. Navy, serving on the USS Bunker Hill.
Leonsis told the crowd his last memory of his father, who died
at age 95 in September, was when Navy sailors honored his
memory at the cemetery during his burial.
The flag that was laid over Leonsis' father's casket and
presented to the Leonsis family is on display in the Capitals
owner's office.
“My father was an American first and foremost, and instilled
in all of us the spirit of competitiveness and what a great
country this is,” Leonsis said. “We should never lose sight
that our country is made up of individuals, and the men and
women who serve our country really deserve our respect and our
thanks, and this is our small way of doing it.”
Army Lt. Col. Steve Szewc, who works at the Pentagon as an
assistant to the director of the Army staff, said the military
appreciation night is a good way to show support for military
members of all ranks.
“I think this is a great opportunity for the senior leadership
to mix with the troops. It's a good, casual forum, and it also
lets servicemembers know there are people out there supporting
them,” he said. “It's more than what you see in the day-to-day
news.”