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Soldier

I received the question "In what war did you fight?" by email.
This was my answer.
The short answer to your question is the Cold War. Except for a brief
two or three months in the Naval Aviation Officer Program (Air Intelligence) and a one
year enlistment with the Kentucky Army National Guard, my twelve years or so was spent
with the United States Army Reserve. During the last three years of my career, my unit was
attached to the armor brigade of an airborne corps. Our sister units were two
airborne divisions and a mechanized infantry division. That was the rapid deployment force
of the Gulf war. However, I ended my tour of service about a year and a half before the
war started.
Now for the long answer.
I
was a soldier of the Cold war. I was involved with the cold war from early childhood. When
I started the first grade in 1954, my father was a worker at the Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant near Piketon, Ohio. The plant produced nuclear weapons grade uranium and
his job required him to have an extremely high security clearance. When I was in the third
grade, someone in my father's department left the plant with a piece of one of the highest
classified items at the plant. A "no holds barred" investigation was conducted
by the FBI. Although my father had nothing to do with the incident, he was a member of the
department and was investigated along with the other members of the department. During the
investigation, an FBI agent came to my school and interviewed me (an eight year old third
grader) in the presence of my principal. The agent asked me to identify various terms.
Unfortunately, I identified the name of the missing item. It was a term that I had heard
in a history class taught by the principal the previous day. The agent then grilled me
concerning various aspects of my father's private life and friends. That was my first
contact with the cold, cruel, and dirty aspects of the Cold War.
When I was in the fifth grade, my father accepted a job at the Metropolis, Illinois,
plant of the Allied Chemical Corporation. That plant processed uranium for the Paducah
Gaseous Diffusion Plant (PGDP) which processed uranium for the Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant. The family moved to Paducah, Kentucky, and lived a few blocks from my
mother's brother, a worker at PGDP. I grew up "in the business" of the Cold War
and became an Eagle Scout in the process.
I
was seventeen years old when I graduated from high school in 1966 and was half way through
my freshman year of college before I was old enough to join the military. I signed up for
the draft and started talking to the recruiters. The navy offered me a six-year
electronics program. My uncle, a World War II airman, called from the center of
the central control facility of PGDP and came up with a counter offer. He had
a friend who worked with him and was a major in an army reserve unit who had a friend that was the commanding
officer of an intelligence army reserve unit. Several positions were available in the unit
for linguists and I was given one of those positions. Thus, on May 18, 1967, I entered the
Cold War as a participant. After basic training, I was trained in the Russian language at
the Defense Language Institute and received other intelligence training in Maryland. I
left the unit in 1973, near the end of the Vietnam War.
About five years later, I enlisted in an armor company of the Kentucky Army National
Guard for a year.
 In 1984, I returned to my original unit. I
found that the unit had been reorganized and that it was necessary for me to return to
active duty for ten weeks to receive training for another job in the intelligence
community. After I completed that school, the requirements for that job changed and I was
required to return to the language school for a year. When I returned home, the army
deactivated my unit and created another type of intelligence unit in its place. I was then
required to go to another active duty school for six months to train for a third job in
the intelligence community.......a job which extended to the highest levels of the
government. Finally, my unit was moved about 200 miles from my home. After a year of
flying (at government expense) to a training location over 400 miles from my
home one weekend a month, I terminated my
connection with the military.
A few months afterward, in 1989, I continued my efforts in
the Cold War when I became an employee at PGDP, following in the footsteps of my father
and my uncle.
I grew up in and became a participant in the Cold War.....both in the military and as a
civilian. Except for the radio talk show links, I have a direct connection to every link
on my personal page. The two sentences at the bottom of the page tell a specific story.
However, it takes a person who has been where I have been to decode the story.
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