[Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 9 (Friday, January 30, 2004)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E83]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING SGT. EDMOND L. RANDLE, JR. OF 2ND BATALLION, 20TH FIELD
ARTILLERY REGIMENT, 4TH INFANTRY DIVISION
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HON. KENDRICK B. MEEK
of florida
in the house of representatives
Friday, January 30, 2004
Mr. MEEK of Florida. Mr. Speaker, President George Bush made his
highest profile re-election pitch yet with his annual State of the
Union speech. His aides said that President Bush planned to defend the
war in Iraq unapologetically. He was likely also to talk ``at length''
about the Middle East and Afghanistan and assure Americans that their
Government is winning the global war on terrorism.
Oddly, unlike last year, the President's aides had not described what
the President would say about Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction--the
chemical and nuclear weapons that President Bush so confidently and
urgently assured us last year that Iraq was developing and stockpiling;
The weapons of mass destruction President Bush said threatened the
very lives and homes of the American people;
The weapons of mass destruction that President Bush told us last year
was the reason this Nation had to go to war.
But on Saturday in Iraq, a remote-controlled bomb, planted on an
access road and made up of two 155 mm artillery rounds and other
explosives, was detonated killing three fine U.S. soldiers, two Iraqi
civil defense workers, and wounding two other American soldiers. The
blast was so powerful that it flipped the 30-ton Bradley over and set
it afire.
The number of U.S. service members who have died since the Iraq
conflict began on March 20th reached 500 with that blast.
The 500th young American to die was from my district in Miami,
Florida, Sergeant Edmond Randle, Jr.
Pentagon officials reported to me that Sgt. Randle of 2nd Battalion,
20th Field Artillery Regiment, 4th Infantry Division died with two
others of his comrades in Taji, Iraq. He has joined 502 other Americans
who have given their lives in defense of our country, and on behalf of
its citizens.
I visited Karla Randle-West, Edmond's mother and Hattie Hightower,
his grandmother, in Carol City, Florida where Edmond grew up. I prayed
with them, and they told me a little about the son who would have
turned 27 this coming Saturday. Like many of our courageous soldiers,
he was pragmatic and ambitious, joining the Army 3 years ago to raise
money in order to continue studying at Florida A&M University, my Alma
Mater.
He was a pharmacy student in one of the most challenging programs in
the Nation. His mother told me that he also played the trumpet in the
Marching 100, one of the best marching bands in the world. He gave up
his music scholarship to pursue a degree in Pharmacy and took a job in
order to pay his tuition and expenses.
He found out that the Army would pay for college tuition if he joined
and served for 4 years. He signed up, and though initially worried,
embraced his deployment to Iraq as a means to help out his fellow man.
His family described him as a caring and sympathetic person who often
looked for ways to help out other people.
On Saturday, that was exactly what he was doing, helping people. He
and his mates were conducting a surveillance sweep for roadside bombs
north of Baghdad when the attack occurred. He died alongside a fellow
Floridian, Private First Class Cody Orr, and a Texan, Specialist Larry
Polley, Jr. They were all brave soldiers, soldiers who put themselves
in harm's way to honor their commitment to the United States of
America. They were soldiers who chased an often faceless enemy to
protect men, women, and families they will never know. Unfortunately,
they were among 503 Americans who gave the ultimate sacrifice while
proudly defending the Red, White, and Blue.
Reaching that threshold underscores the dangers still facing U.S.
forces in Iraq as President Bush's administration prepares to seek help
from the United Nations in building a new Iraq, after shunning the
world organization for months.
Sgt. Randle was to return home to his family in March, when another
mother's son would likely replace him. As it is, his cousin is soon to
be deployed himself. Certainly, it would make Sergeant Randle's death,
the death of the other 502 soldiers; the wounds and injuries of 2,893
others, and the countless civilian casualties of no importance were we
to pull out of Iraq without an established government with some form of
democratic identity.
But, we should expend every energy, every diplomatic means, and every
world resource to make the turn-over of power to the Iraqis happen as
quickly as possible, so that we can bring our troops home. In the
meantime, I would continue to hope that the supplemental appropriations
given to the Pentagon last Fall would purchase the jammers that might
have prevented the remote detonation of the bomb that killed Sgt.
Randle.
Edmond Randle represented everything about the American soldier that
we look up to--he was a talented musician, dedicated student, and much-
loved son and grandchild. He was also a brave and honorable soldier in
the United States Army. He will be missed by his family, his friends,
and his fellow troops.
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