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Paul J. Darga—March
2007 Shipment Honoree
Little Creek petty officer
killed by bomb in Iraq
Source: by
Kate Wiltrout, The Virginian-Pilot (August 24, 2006)
Karie Darga
's husband was gone more than he was home the past few years—which made the few months they had together this spring with their young daughter extra special.
Paul
J. Darga, a chief petty officer based at Little
Creek Naval Amphibious Base in Virginia Beach, headed back to
Iraq in June for his fourth
Middle East tour. He was killed by a homemade bomb Tuesday in
the Al Anbar province, the
Department of Defense
announced Thursday. Darga was 34.
"The few
months he was home before this deployment we were closer than
we've ever been," said Karie Darga, who met her future husband
in high school in Alpena, Mich. "If this had to happen, my
last memories of him are the best they could be."
Married since
1994, the couple has a 2-year-old daughter, Kailey Rose.
The past 12
months had been momentous for Paul Darga, who was born in
Spain and lived in Japan as an Army brat before his father
retired and the family moved to Michigan.
Last
September, Darga was promoted to chief petty officer. He was a
member of the Navy's Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit
Two.
Early this
year, he spent more than two weeks of leave from the Middle
East visiting his mother, who was dying of cancer. He'd been
given the option of going to Michigan to see her while she was
still alive, or returning to the United States for her
funeral, family members said.
"He needed
the time with her when she could talk," Karie Darga said from
her Norfolk home. "They had some wonderful conversations. He
treasured that time." His mother died in March.
On May 26,
less than a month before he returned to Iraq, Darga was one of
about 20 members of the Little Creek unit awarded a Bronze
Star for Valor for their work disposing of bombs, unexploded
weapons and weapons caches while in combat. "It meant a lot
for him to be honored, but he truly believed he was doing his
job," Karie Darga said.
During a
six-month deployment that ended in February 2005, the award
citation said, Darga oversaw 163 ordnance disposal missions.
He supervised the disposal of more than 6,000 pounds of
captured explosives, and his team defused 40 IEDs, or
improvised explosive devices. "His outstanding performance,
dedication to duty and courage while performing his duties
under hostile fire were critical to the success of coalition
operations under the most extreme and austere conditions," the
citation says.
His father
and stepmother traveled from Michigan for the ceremony. Jack
Darga said Thursday that he had a feeling while saying goodbye
to Paul that weekend that he wouldn't see his youngest child
again. "For the last six months I just had a premonition,"
Jack Darga said from his home in Cheboygan, Mich. "I knew it
was going to happen."
Lt. Jim Hoeft,
a spokesman for the Navy's Expeditionary Combat Command, said
Darga is the second Navy explosive ordnance disposal team
member to be killed in combat in
Iraq.
His team had been responding to a strike Tuesday when a second
IED exploded, according to the Department of Defense.
Karie Darga
said her husband believed completely in the U.S. mission. He
knew the risks and was fully trained and confident in his
abilities, she said.
Paul Darga
started his 16-year Navy career as a Seabee, then went to
diving school and joined an underwater construction team at
Little Creek. After a number of assignments and 12 months of
rigorous EOD training in Florida, Darga and his wife returned
to Hampton Roads in April 2002, when he joined Little Creek's
EOD Mobile Unit Two.
Two years
later, Karie Darga gave birth to their daughter. "His heart
began to melt the day I found out that I was pregnant," she
said.
In his little
free time, Paul Darga enjoyed woodworking and tinkering on his
beloved green 1995 Mustang. Karie Darga would work with him
under the hood; the couple did everything together, she said.
On Saturday,
she said, they spent a few hours on the phone, talking about
everything and nothing, reveling in their newfound closeness.
They last spoke on Monday, the day before he was killed, for
about 15 minutes.
Now her
thoughts have turned to planning his memorial service—and figuring out a way to preserve her husband's memory for their
daughter. She's decided to create a box in which she and
others who loved Paul can place items that help explain to
Kailey who her father was.
Bomb technician attached to
Pendlton unit killed in Iraq
Source: by
MARK WALKER, Staff Writer,
North Country Times
A U.S. Navy
chief petty officer who specialized in detecting and removing
explosives died in a roadside bomb attack in the Anbar
province of Iraq, the Defense Department announced.
Chief Petty
Officer Paul J. Darga was killed while responding to an
earlier roadside bombing when his team was struck by another
improvised explosive device, the military's term for the
weapons responsible for a majority of the combat deaths and
injuries in
Iraq.
Darga was on
his second tour of duty in Iraq and was attached to the 1st
Marine Logistics Group based at Camp Pendleton. Married and
the father of one, he was assigned to the Little Creek Naval
Amphibious Base in Norfolk, Va.
In May, Darga
was awarded a Bronze Star with Combat Valor for his actions
during a previous deployment to Iraq… When he was awarded the Bronze Star, Darga was cited
for his actions in
Iraq from
August 2004 to February 2005. During that time, he and his
team of specialists identified and rendered safe 40 roadside
bombs and a wide array of other explosives, according to the
citation accompanying the award.
Darga was a
native of
Lansing, Mich. He
joined the Navy in 1992 and became a chief petty officer in
September 2005.
In addition
to the Bronze Star, he had three Navy Marine Corps Achievement
medals, two Good Conduct medals and a Humanitarian Service
Medal.
The members of
Landstuhl Hospital Care Project were honored to
remember Paul during the month of March 2007
with our shipments to the Landstuhl Regional Medical
Center in Germany, and U.S. military hospitals in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Our thoughts and prayers
remain with Paul's family and friends today and in
the years to come.
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