14.6K posts

[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado

🇺🇸🐕 This is K-9 Flag — the German Shepherd who became a legend in honoring our fallen heroes.
He carried the folded American flag in his mouth at 47 military funerals. Never missed one. Purple Heart around his neck. Pure determination in his eyes.
He wasn’t just doing a job.
He had decided — completely, permanently — that these warriors deserved to be honored by one of their own.
A fellow fighter. A brother in arms with four legs and a heart bigger than most humans.
This photo hits different. Respect to every handler, every K-9, and every service member who gave everything.
Thank you for your service. Never forgotten.
English
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado

Nicholas Irving, known across the Ranger battalions as “The Reaper,” was one of the deadliest snipers the U.S. Army ever produced.
Through the glass of his SR-25 rifle, lovingly nicknamed “Dirty Diana”, he ended insurgent after insurgent with cold, surgical precision. In a single deployment he racked up dozens of confirmed kills, a number that climbed faster than most snipers manage in an entire career. To the men on the ground with him, he was a guardian angel perched on a rooftop & to the enemy, he was a ghost they never saw coming.
But every trigger pull left a mark that bullets never could. The faces stayed with him. The sounds replayed on loop. When he finally came home, the war didn’t end. It just changed battlefields. Nightmares, rage, alcohol & suicidal thoughts. He fought them all and battled to hold his own life together.
Then, in 2016, his son was born.
That tiny heartbeat gave him something the battlefield never did. A reason that outweighed the pain. He got sober. He started talking, really talking about what he’d seen & what it had done to him. He wrote books, spoke to veterans, mentored younger troops carrying the same invisible wounds. He turned the same relentless focus that once tracked targets across Iraqi rooftops into rebuilding himself, one day at a time.
#TheIraqWar #PTSD #Military #Snipers #USArmy

English
[email protected] retuiteado

Please help me honor US Navy Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator SEAL Kyle Milliken, 38, of Falmouth, Maine.
Milliken died May 5, 2017, during an operation against the Islamist militant group Al-Shabaab in a remote area west of Mogadishu, Somalia. He was assigned to a US East Coast-based special warfare unit.
Kyle was an amazing father, husband, son, brother, and friend, whose passion for life was contagious. He is survived by his wife, two children, father, mother, brother, and countless other family, friends and teammates.

English
[email protected] retuiteado
[email protected] retuiteado
























