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Specialist Sergio S. Abad - July 2009 Shipment
Honoree
21, of Morganfield, Ky.; assigned to the
2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment (Airborne), 173rd
Airborne Brigade Combat Team, Vicenza, Italy; died July 13 of
wounds sustained when his outpost was attacked by small-arms
fire and rocket-propelled grenades from enemy forces in Wanat,
Afghanistan. Also killed were 1st Lt. Jonathan P. Brostrom,
Sgt. Israel Garcia, Cpl. Jonathan R. Ayers, Cpl. Jason D.
Hovater, Cpl. Jason M. Bogar, Cpl. Matthew B. Phillips, Cpl.
Pruitt A. Rainey and Cpl. Gunnar W. Zwilling.
Military
Times:
http://www.militarycity.com/valor/3630796.html

Hard-hit C Company suffers
another agonizing blow
By Michelle Tan
Staff writer
It was the single deadliest attack
since the beginning of the war in Afghanistan.
More than 200 enemy fighters swarmed
a small, remote combat outpost near the village of Wanat, near
the country’s porous border with Pakistan.
They brought with them machine guns,
mortars and rocket-propelled grenades. The U.S. and coalition
soldiers were outnumbered by at least 2 to 1.
The battle was fierce. Enemy fighters
fought their way onto the newly established base known as
Combat Outpost Kahler. The Americans and Afghans, numbering
fewer than 100, fought back, defending their post and calling
in airstrikes.
When the fighting stopped, the enemy
had suffered heavy casualties, with reports of more than 100
killed or wounded.
But the Americans had suffered, too.
Nine U.S. soldiers were killed and 15
others were wounded. Apart from helicopter crashes, the bloody
July 13 battle inflicted the deepest wound on a single U.S.
battalion of any attack since the beginning of the war in
Afghanistan almost seven years ago.
The soldiers, from 2nd Battalion,
503rd Infantry Regiment, 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team,
of Vicenza, Italy, were supposed to be coming home soon. The
brigade deployed to Afghanistan in June 2007 and about 680
soldiers are already home in Vicenza, with the last of the
soldiers expected home by the first week of August.
But this final attack on the
battalion’s C Company soldiers would make it the hardest-hit
company to have served in Operation Enduring Freedom. The
company has lost 15 men since deploying to Afghanistan, the
most for one Army company in both operations Enduring Freedom
and Iraqi Freedom. In total, 24 men from the battalion have
been killed during this deployment.
After the fierce combat that 2nd
Battalion, 503rd Infantry endured in the past 15 months,
several of its soldiers earned valor awards including the
Silver Star, the third highest award for valor, and the Bronze
Star with V device, said Maj. Nicholas Sternberg, spokesman
for the 173rd.
Specific information on the awards
was not available at press time.
The nine soldiers killed July 13
brought to 42 the number of soldiers from the 173rd killed
during this deployment. Since the beginning of the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan through July 16, nine soldiers from the
173rd have been killed in Iraq, 58 in Afghanistan.
The men killed July 13, all of them
from C Company, are:
• 1st Lt. Jonathan P. Brostrom, 24,
of Hawaii. Brostrom, who led the company’s 2nd Platoon, was a
ROTC graduate from the University of Hawaii. He received his
commission in June 2006 and arrived at the 173rd in June 2007.
• Sgt. Israel Garcia, 24, of Long
Beach, Calif. Garcia had been in the Army since October 2002.
He was assigned to 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry
Regiment at Fort Bragg, N.C., before reporting to the 173rd in
July 2006.
• Cpl. Jonathan R. Ayers, 24, of
Snellville, Ga. Ayers joined the Army in April 2006 and went
straight from basic and advanced individual training at Fort
Benning, Ga., to the 173rd, where he had been assigned since
September 2006.
• Cpl. Jason M. Bogar, 25, of
Seattle. Bogar deployed twice with the National Guard before
coming into the active Army in October 2007, and he had been
with the 173rd since November 2007.
• Cpl. Jason D. Hovater, 24, of
Clinton, Tenn. Hovater joined the Army in February 2006. His
first assignment after initial entry training at Fort Benning
was the 173rd. He had been with the unit since July 2006.
• Cpl. Matthew B. Phillips, 27, of
Jasper, Ga. Phillips joined the Army in November 2005. The
173rd was his first assignment; he arrived at the unit in May
2006.
• Cpl. Pruitt A. Rainey, 22, of Haw
River, N.C. Rainey joined the Army in August 2005. He arrived
at the 173rd, his first assignment, in February 2006.
• Cpl. Gunnar W. Zwilling, 20, of
Florissant, Mo. Zwilling had been in the Army since February
2006. After basic training, AIT and airborne training at Fort
Benning, he reported to the 173rd in July 2006.
• Spc. Sergio S. Abad, 21, of
Morganfield, Ky. Abad joined the Army in January 2006. His
first unit of assignment was the 173rd, where he had been
since August 2006.
Previously, the single deadliest
incident to claim multiple U.S. lives in Afghanistan,
excluding helicopter crashes, was Jan. 29, 2004, when a
weapons cache explosion in Ghazni killed eight soldiers.
A memorial service for the nine C
Company soldiers on July 18 in Vicenza drew an overflow crowd
that included many of the 680 soldiers who had just returned
from Afghanistan, said Sgt. Maj. Kimberly Williams, a
spokeswoman for Southern European Task Force. Officials
estimate about 900 people participated, including about 500
who crowded into the theater on post because the chapel was
full.
“This was an especially emotional
ceremony,” she said, “because [in attendance were soldiers who
had just returned.”

Ky. soldier among 9 killed in
Afghan base attack
The Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A Kentucky soldier
was among nine who were killed when their remote outpost in
eastern Afghanistan was attacked, the military said Wednesday.
The Defense Department said Pfc.
Sergio S. Abad, 21, of Morganfield, died Sunday in the
deadliest incident for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since June
2005, when 16 American soldiers were killed as a
rocket-propelled grenade shot down their helicopter.
The soldiers died from wounds
suffered when their newly built outpost in Wanat was attacked
before dawn by small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades.
They were assigned to the 2nd
Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment (Airborne), 173rd Airborne
Brigade Combat Team based in Vicenza, Italy.
A former provincial governor in the
region said scores of attackers included a mix of Afghan- and
Pakistan-based militants, some with al-Qaida links.
A NATO official said they used
houses, shops and a mosque for cover during the hours-long
battle before American soldiers managed to drive out the
attackers and call in air support from attack helicopters. The
official said dozens were killed and about 40 were wounded.

Miami Herald
19 July 2008:
Private First Class Sergio S.
Abad planned to be married on August 24, 2008, at the South
Miami Elks Club -- an Oriental-themed affair certain to
feature music by the 21-year-old soldier's favorite singer:
Frank Sinatra.
Instead, he'll be buried next
week at Arlington National Cemetery, as an Army bugler plays
taps.
Abad died July 13, 2008, in a
firefight that killed nine soldiers at Wanat, a remote base in
eastern Afghanistan. He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion,
503rd Infantry Regiment (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade
Combat Team.
He had been scheduled to head
home the next day.
waiting his return: His
fiancée, Christina Parra, and a huge extended family -- a
family not bound by blood but by the love of a young man who
had adopted them.
Abad was a bright, funny,
hyperactive 7-year-old when the Florida Department of Children
& Families removed him from an abusive home and placed him
with a relative.
By middle school, he had been
absorbed into two unrelated households: the Popkos of Coral
Gables and the Pittses of Riviera Estates, each with children
his age.
Through him, the families
became what Marilyn Popko calls "a kinship group.''
Abad called Marilyn Popko and
Lori Pitts ''Mommy,'' their husbands ''Dad,'' and his high
school ROTC mentor, CSM Oliver R. Hoggard, "Pops.''
He'd stay awhile with one
family, then with the other, though sometimes he would
withdraw and camp out in Tropical Park.
''He was one of the kids,''
said Lori Pitts, whose daughter, Krystine Pitts Flagg,
befriended Abad at Homestead Middle School.
Pitts' husband, Coral Gables
police Lieutenant Paul Pitts, "would throw him $20 to go to
the movies. He had chores around the house. He had to help out
with laundry and feed the dog.''
Abad ''absorbed love like a
sponge,'' Pitts said. "He never wanted to disappoint us.''
Clinical psychologist Stephen
Popko said he and Paul Pitts ''set down the rules firmly,''
giving Abad the structure he craved.
He attended South Miami High
School with the class of 2003, then earned a GED at the Job
Corps center in Morganfield, Kentucky.
The Army mistakenly listed
Morganfield as his hometown in the news release announcing his
death.
Toward the end of high school,
Abad moved in with Marilyn Popko's sister's family on a
five-acre horse farm in the Redland -- ideal for a youngster
who loved animals and hard work.
Marybeth Klock-Perez, her
sister, and husband Diego Perez, run Better Families Though
Tae Kwan Do, a Bird Road martial-arts studio. Abad excelled at
karate. He had a lot of energy and a knack for teaching
children.
''He was really athletic and
could knock out hundreds of push-ups with no problem,''
Marybeth said. "He always had something positive or funny or
naughty to contribute.''
For a youngster who had ''been
dealt really unfair cards in life, he was absolutely never
bitter,'' Klock-Perez said. "He never used excuses or acted
like the world owed him.''
At school, Abad developed a
passion for acting, directing and Junior ROTC, where he found
another father figure: Hoggard, who ran the program.
Retired from the Army, Hoggard
is now working for a defense contractor in Iraq.
Colonel Eddie Santana took
over the ROTC program shortly before Abad left but remembers
him as ``an outstanding young leader -- very disciplined and
committed. He always knew what he wanted to do: join the
Army.''
A 2003 Miami Herald story
described Abad climbing a 45-foot fire tower during a summer
ROTC boot camp:
"Abad practically flew up the
50 steps to get to the top of the tower. . . . About 10
seconds later, Sergio was back on the ground. He took a swig
of water and got in line for the next rappel.''
He told the reporter: "You
gotta die some day, right? You cannot compare this experience
to anything else in the world.''
After completing the Job Corps
program, Abad entered basic training at Fort Benning, Georgia.
He was then stationed in Vicenza, Italy, for a year.
''It was one of the best times
he ever had,'' Marilyn Popko said. ''He went to Germany,
Switzerland, France. And he loved jumping out of airplanes. He
came home after a year for a month, then went to the Agham
Korengal Valley,'' a Taliban stronghold in northeastern
Afghanistan on the Pakistani border.
He was apprehensive about
combat, Stephen Popko said. "He knew from the beginning that
he might not come home, but this was his thing. It was high
energy, and he was going to make it. . . . He was sent on
classified missions.''
After a month's leave in
March, Abad deployed to Camp Blessing, an eastern Afghan base.
By July 13, he and his comrades had gone to Wanat, a new
forward-operating base in Kunar province that Stars & Stripes,
the Army newspaper, says is the size of a football field.
At 4:30 a.m., a
rocket-propelled grenade landed in the base's mortar pit, the
opening salvo of a two-hour battle that proved the deadliest
for U.S. troops in Afghanistan since 2005.
Abad's loved ones say he was
hit in the femoral artery.
''This was not a haphazard
attack,'' Stars & Stripes opined. Some 200 insurgents "fought
from several positions. They aimed to overrun the new base.
The U.S. soldiers knew it and fought like hell.''
A wounded survivor told the
newspaper: "It was some of the bravest stuff I've ever seen in
my life, and I will never see it again because ... normal
humans wouldn't do that. You're not supposed to do that --
getting up and firing back when everything around you is
popping and whizzing and trees, branches coming down and
sandbags exploding and RPGs coming in over your head -- It was
a fistfight then, and those guys held 'em off.''
Abad would have become a
father in December. He died not knowing his child is a girl.
Fiancée Christina Parra plans
to give her the name that Abad chose: Lorelai Rocio Abad --
after Lori Pitts and Christina's mother.
He wanted a daughter, said
Krystine Flagg.
"He wanted to give her the
life he never had. A mother and father who stayed together.''
Other survivors include
''siblings'' Katheryn, Zachery and Leo Pitts, and Catherine
Popko.
26 July 2008:
Courtesy of NBC-6 (South Florida)
A South Florida soldier, and
father-to-be, was killed in a firefight with Taliban forces in
Afghanistan -- one day before he was to return home.
Now, family members are
mourning and remembering 22-year-old Sergio Abad.
"I saw two Army guys and as
soon as I saw them, I was like they are here for Sergio, I
know it. They came to our door and told us the news," his
adoptive sister, Catherine Popko said.
It's the message that every
military family dreads most, the news that their loved one has
been killed in the line of duty.
When he was a boy, Abad was
removed from an abusive home and raised by two foster families
in South Florida, the Pitts and the Popkos.
"He was a really kind, strong
boy," Catherine Popko said.
After attending South Miami
High and getting a GED, Abad joined the Army.
On July 13, 2008, the young
soldier was just one day away from heading back to the states
when a firefight broke out between Army soldiers and Taliban
insurgents.
He was going out to rescue
another unit that was under fire," said Marilyn Popko, his
adoptive mother. "We are told there was like 200 of the other
guys and not that many of us. He went down fighting."
Nine soldiers were killed in
the battle.
Abad had plans to marry his
girlfriend, Christina Parra, when he returned. And the two
were expecting their first baby.
His family said that he always
wanted to have a little girl. He didn't know it when he died,
but his fiancé is expecting a daughter.
For Abad's family, the loss is
painful but his legacy lives on.
"He was just an amazing,
amazing man. And I am really going to miss him,"
Catherine Popko said.
Abad will be buried in Arlington
National Cemetery near Washington next week.
Private Sergio S. Abad is to be laid
to rest in the Columbarium on the hallowed grounds of
Arlington National Cemetery on 6 August, 2008. The interment
services will follow a memorial service to be held on 5 August
at Murphy's Funeral Home, 4510 Wilson Blvd, Arlington,
Virginia.
Note: Private Abad was posthumously
promoted to Specialist.
Additional
Websites:
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/ssabad.htm
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