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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 3, 2017
A
tearful Carryn Owens, the widow of U.S. Navy SEAL William "Ryan" Owens
who died in a raid in Yemen, received a standing ovation from Congress
when President Trump acknowledged her husband's bravery. (Photo: Melina Mara, The Post/Reuters)
By Dan Lamothe March 3 at 12:43 PM
The families of U.S. service members who have died while serving their country are split on how they see President Trump’s recognition of a recent military widow at his first joint address to Congress, but they almost universally support her decision to accept Trump’s invitation to attend in the Capitol.
The families of U.S. service members who have died while serving their country are split on how they see President Trump’s recognition of a recent military widow at his first joint address to Congress, but they almost universally support her decision to accept Trump’s invitation to attend in the Capitol.
The moment was the emotional apex of Trump’s speech Tuesday night, in
which he said Senior Chief William “Ryan” Owens, a member of the elite
SEAL Team 6, “died as he lived — a warrior and a hero, battling against
terrorism and securing our nation.”
The following moments sparked an outcry among critics of Trump, as he
insisted that the Jan. 29 raid in Yemen in which the SEAL was killed
“generated large amounts of vital intelligence that will lead to many
more victories in the future against our enemy,” contradicting other
U.S. officials briefed on the operation. The overlaying of grief and
politics prompted allegations that Trump had politicized and exploited
the situation for his own gain, rather than simply honoring the Owens
family.
The moment also put Carryn Owens, a mother of three from Virginia Beach,
in the spotlight. As Trump recognized her husband’s sacrifice, tears
poured down her cheeks and she cast her eyes skyward while standing on a
balcony and apparently speaking some private words to her late husband.
The widow, who did not respond to requests for an interview, had not
spoken publicly following her husband’s death but was invited to attend
the speech by Trump. The president wanted to respect “her wishes and
privacy” and sought approval before including her in his address, said
White House press secretary Sean Spicer.
Hundreds of miles away in North Carolina, the scene deeply struck Jenna
Kemp, whose elite Marine Raider husband, Staff Sgt. Kerry Kemp, was
killed in a helicopter crash two years ago off the coast of Florida. At
this point, Kemp said, the new widow is “on autopilot,” recalling how
she had an 11-month-old infant with a second child on the way when her
husband died.
“It looked like she mouthed, ‘I love you baby,’ ” Kemp said. “That
brought tears to my eyes. I uttered those exact words over my husband’s
casket. I just felt such a connection to her, and such respect for her
being there.”
Carryn Owens, center, the widow of Senior Chief Petty Officer William
“Ryan” Owens, reacts Tuesday as President Trump recognizes her husband’s
sacrifice during a joint address to Congress. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
Trump’s moment with Carryn Owens immediately lit up social-media
networks, and was complicated in part by Trump’s remarks in a Fox News
interview aired that morning in which he declined to accept
responsibility for the mission, in which numerous civilians were also
killed. The generals, Trump said, had “wanted to do” the operation and
had “lost Ryan” — remarks that struck some as the president abdicating
his role as commander in chief.
One critic on Twitter, Dan Grilo, said that Carryn Owens was “not
helping yourself or your husband’s memory by standing there and clapping
like an idiot. Trump just used you.” Grilo, who listed himself as a
volunteer for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, apologized and
later made his profile page private. His listed employer on LinkedIn,
Liberty Advisor Group of Chicago, later announced that it was aware an employee had made “an inoffensive or inappropriate tweet” and had fired him. He could not be reached for comment.
Several conservative websites accused some Democrats, such as Rep.
Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), Rep. Keith Ellison (R.-Minn.) and
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), of refusing to stand and
applaud in respect as Trump led applause for the Owens family. A review
of video of the address shows virtually all lawmakers standing within
seconds and applauding at some point, although some eventually sat down
as Trump continued to clap and did not return to his podium for more
than two minutes.
Bonnie Carroll, a Gold Star widow who was recognized by President Barack
Obama in 2015 with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for leading the
nonprofit Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), watched the
address and decided to issue a statement afterward thanking the
president and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis for “recognizing the
sacrifices that our military families make every day to keep our nation
free.”
TAPS, which has supported tens of thousands of family members since it was established in 1992, called for more civility in politics after
Trump verbally attacked the parents of fallen Army Capt. Humayun Khan
during the presidential campaign. In the case of Carryn Owens, however,
Carroll said the president of the United States has long played an
integral part in helping the survivors of military fatalities with their
grieving, and appeared to do so this week.
“I saw this as an appropriate acknowledgment to service and sacrifice to this nation,” Carroll said.
As the wife of a Special Operations service member, Carryn Owens knew
that her husband would be in danger and likely was trying to honor him
in the best way she could,” said Destiny Flynn, an Army veteran whose
Marine Raider husband, Staff Sgt. Liam Flynn, died in the same crash as
Kemp. Most people who questioned the widow’s thought process haven’t
gone through the same kind of grief, Flynn said.
“I just feel like if I was in her position I would have done the same
thing because I don’t want people to forget,” she said. “That’s what
people don’t see. I saw strength and grace and beauty. I felt like she
wasn’t there crying for herself. It wasn’t about her. It was about her
husband.”
In Pennsylvania, Jessica Charles watched and drew a distinction between
Trump’s potential motives and the desires of Carryn Owens. Charles’s
brother, Army Cpl. Joshua Harton, was killed in Afghanistan in September
2010, and she said the first month afterward was “hell.” Backlash
against the wife, she added, is unfair.
“Whether she is being used for political favor or not, she is a wife who
recently lost her husband. She grieves. We who grieve those killed in
combat want to know it was not a sacrifice in vain,” Charles said. “Wanting
to hear the POTUS acknowledge her husband’s sacrifice is not wrong. In a
way, we all want that level of recognition. The way that desire is
being used is questionable.”
The scene in the Capitol disgusted Silvia Earhart, a Gold Star wife and
Army veteran. Trump’s actions, she said, showed once again that he likes
using U.S. service members and their families as props. Earhart’s
husband, Staff Sgt. Leslie Martin, was killed in a helicopter crash at
Fort Bragg, N.C., in July 1997, and she said she struggled afterward
even to attend a memorial service on base in honor of her husband and
seven other soldiers who were killed.
“I don’t think he recognized Ryan Owens at all,” Earhart said of the
president. “He was recognizing the widow, and me personally as a widow, I
never wanted the attention like that. I always wanted it directly on my
husband and what he did and what he sacrificed. I kept saying, ‘Why are
you showing her grief like that?’ It’s still so raw for her, and to be
put up there on national television, I don’t think Trump was being
genuine and authentic.”
Two Gold Star mothers who have met with Trump said they have found him
genuine and sincerely concerned about their pain in private meetings.
Susan Price, whose son Gunnery Sgt. Aaron Kenefick was among five
Americans killed in an ambush in Afghanistan in September 2009, said she
was amazed at the ignorance some people showed toward Carryn Owens.
Price, who spoke last year on behalf of a rally in Tampa, Fla., said
that she cried as she watched the recent widow recognized and believes
she felt compelled to appear before Congress.
“I don’t know if he was looking for extra fame or glory by bringing the
wife into the ceremony,” Price said. “But I do know that he does care
about our military and our heroes, and that’s what matters to me.”
Debbie Lee, whose son Marc Lee was the first Navy SEAL killed during the
Iraq War, said she had no problem with how Trump handled recognizing
Owens, and found him very respectful when she met him before the
Army-Navy college football game in December. He asked “deep questions”
about her grieving process and how she has coped with her loss, she
said.
“You could see it in his eyes,” Lee said of her meeting with Trump. “He
wasn’t looking away at his security detail or looking at those who had
been in the car with him. He was totally focused on me and what I shared
about Marc.”