Forester, Mark Andrew, SrA

Fallen
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Senior Airman
Last Primary AFSC/MOS
1C2X1-Combat Control
Last AFSC Group
Command & Control
Primary Unit
2009-2010, 1C2X1, 21st Special Tactics Squadron
Service Years
2007 - 2010
Enlisted srcset=
Senior Airman

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

20 kb


Home State
Alabama
Alabama
Year of Birth
1981
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by SSgt Robert Bruce McClelland, Jr. to remember Forester, Mark Andrew, SrA.

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Casualty Info
Home Town
Haleyville and/or Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Last Address
Pope AFB, North Carolina &
Uruzgan Province, Afghanistan
Casualty Date
Sep 29, 2010
 
Cause
KIA-Died of Wounds
Reason
Gun, Small Arms Fire
Location
Afghanistan
Location of Interment
Winston Memorial Cemetery - Haleyville, Alabama

 Official Badges 

Combat Control Team Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) Air Commando Military Free Fall Jumpmaster




 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Combat Control AssociationGWOT Fallen
  2010, Combat Control Association
  2013, GWOT Fallen


 Ribbon Bar


Parachutist (Basic)
Scuba Diver


 
 Unit Assignments
Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC)21st Special Tactics Squadron
  2008-2010, 1C1X1, Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC)
  2009-2010, 1C2X1, 21st Special Tactics Squadron
 Combat and Non-Combat Operations
  2001-2001 Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)
  2009-2010 Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)
 Colleges Attended 
University of Alabama
  2002-2006, University of Alabama
 Other News, Events and Photographs
 
  notes
  Sep 29, 2014, Other/Notes/Link(s)
 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

From Air Force Times:

Combat controller killed in Afghanistan

 
 
By Jill Laster - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Oct 1, 2010 12:31:43 EDT
 

An Alabama airman has become the service?s fourth fatality in Iraq and Afghanistan in two weeks.

Senior Airman Mark A. Forester died in the Uruzgan province Sept. 29 while conducting combat operations in the area. The 29-year-old worked with the 21st Special Tactics Squadron of Pope Air Force Base, N.C.

Forester, of Tuscaloosa, Ala., was a devout Mormon with a close-knit family, said his friend Michael Andrew. The airman also believed he was put on earth to defend the U.S.

He was an unusual combination of characters in that he had this desire to kill the bad guys, but he was the most compassionate, kind, mild-mannered person you'd ever meet, Andrew said.

The 21st Special Tactics Squadron plans to honor Forester during a memorial service, but a date and time had not been set by Sept. 30. Maj. Edmund Loughran, the squadron's acting commander, said in a news release that Forester "believed with all his heart in serving his God, his country and his family."

The unit mourns his loss, but we could not be more proud of his devotion to defending what he believed in most,? Loughran said.

Forester's death in Afghanistan follows those of Senior Airman Daniel R. Sanchez, a combat controller who died Sept. 16 conducting combat operations, and Senior Airman Michael J. Buras, a bomb technician killed Sept. 21 in a bomb explosion.

Senior Airman James A. Hansen, an airfield management operations coordinator, died in Iraq on Sept. 15 during a controlled detonation.

Forester and Sanchez will be honored during the Walk for the Fallen, an 860-mile trek beginning Oct. 9 from Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, to Hurlburt Field, Fla.

The walk originally commemorated 12 fallen special tactics airmen, but Forester and Sanchez were added after their deaths. Each of the 15 active-duty airmen scheduled to participate in the walk will carry 50-pound rucksacks and batons, each with the name of one of the 14 fallen airmen.

Master Sgt. Kenneth Huhman, one of the event's organizers and chief of the combat control selection course at Lackland, said deaths often hit home in such a small career field.

One of the walking airmen will escort Forester's remains home, and another was close to Sanchez. But Huhman said the deaths will help motivate the airmen honoring fallen colleagues.

"We're always going to want to be motivated and remember the guys we lost," he said. "The fact we lost them so close to the walk, it does give a little additional inspiration."


 

   
Comments/Citation:

Sources:
http://www.veterantributes.org/TributeDetail.php?recordID=1563

   
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