Brothers Killed in Action in USMC Helicopters or while assigned to
USMC Helicopter Squadrons in Iraqi Freedom
040728 HMLA-775 Iraqi Freedom
Incident Date 040728 HMLA-775 AH-1W 163954+ / WR-734 Hostile Ground Fire - Al Anbar Province
[CREW] Greene, David S. LtCol Pilot HMLA-775 MAG-16/ 3rd MAW 000000
GREENE, DAVID S. : LTCOL : O5 : MOS : 39 : RALEIGH : NC : 040728 : Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 775, Marine Air Group 16, MCAS Miramar, CA : died due to enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq
LtCol David S. Greene:
LtCol David Greene, HMLA-775, USMCR was killed in action on 28 July 2004 when hit by small arms fire on a combat mission in his Super Cobra over Al Anbar Province west of Baghdad. LtCol Greene was the squadron Maintenance Officer and was a graduate of the US Naval Academy.
Official USMC Source - Memorial Ceremony:
Deployed Marines say goodbye to fallen HMLA-775 pilot
Submitted by: 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing
Story Identification #: 20048614819
Story by Staff Sgt. A.C. Mink
Al Taqqadum, Iraq- (Aug. 6, 2004) -- “…If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with kings – nor lose the common touch;
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you;
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run –
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And – which is more – you’ll be a Man my son!”
These words from Rudyard Kipling’s poem, “If,” greeted hundreds of Marines, Sailors and Soldiers as they gathered at the chapel here Aug. 2 to pay homage to Lt. Col. David S. “Rhino” Greene, an AH-1W Super Cobra pilot and aviation maintenance officer with Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 775, Marine Aircraft Group 16, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing. Greene was killed July 28 while providing cover for casualty evacuation of critically injured Marines and close air support to his fellow Marines on the ground.
The blow to this close-knit Marine aviation community was evident, though there were few outward displays during the service.
“The squadron’s stoic acceptance of a loss of a fellow warrior is indicative of her drive to complete a righteous and important mission,” said Col. Guy M. Close, commanding officer, MAG-16, under whom HMLA-775 falls while deployed to Iraq. “They’re well-led, once again demonstrating that they are among the best America has to offer.”
A platoon of Marines from Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, the infantry unit Greene was providing air support to when he was killed, were also on hand to pay their respect during the memorial ceremony.
Greene was a Marine reservist, who graduated from the Naval Academy in 1986. A native of Illion, N.Y., he lived with his wife and two children in Shelburne, Vt., while assigned to Detachment A, HMLA-775, a reserve squadron based in Johnstown, Pa. He was known for his down-to-earth personality, good humor and judicious, well-considered counsel.
Lt. Col. Karl F. Frost, executive officer, HMLA-775, spoke of Greene’s “unassuming nobility.”
Voice cracking with emotion, he said, “If I could say one thing right now, it would be ‘thank you.’”
Greene, a project manager for B.F. Goodrich Aerospace in Vermont, was scheduled to return to the United States in just a few weeks.
“He had humor, wit and a perpetual smile for all around him,” said Lt. Col. Bruce S. Orner, commanding officer, HMLA-775. “He effortlessly enriched the lives of all with whom he came in contact.
“Our prayers go out to his family,” he added. “His ‘final’ mission was complete, and it was his time to go home.”
He is survived by his wife, Sarah, and children, Wesley and Jena. Submitted by LtCol Jacques Naviaux II, Commanding Officer, HMM-764
Official USMC Source - GREENE FIELD:
Marines dedicate Al Taqaddum airfield to fallen aviator
Submitted by: 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing
Story Identification #: 200482772511
Story by Sgt. Nathan K. LaForte
AL TAQADDUM (GREENE FIELD), Iraq (Aug. 22,2004) -- A group of Marines recently gathered on the flightline of Al Taqaddum, Iraq to pay tribute to their fallen brother.
In the late afternoon sun Aug. 22, they dedicated the airfield at TQ to Lt. Col. David S. Greene, a reserve Marine AH-1W Super Cobra pilot with Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 775, Marine Aircraft Group 16, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, killed in action July 28.
Greene was flying a mission in support of I Marine Expeditionary Force when he was killed by small arms fire. However, news of the event didn't reach most of the squadron immediately, claimed Cpl. Jacob S. Dahlin, flightline mechanic, HMLA-775.
"I was testing aircraft and we got a call that said we had an aircraft that had taken battle damage," said the 21-year-old Marine from Clinton, N.Y. "The other pilot came up to us and said that he had been hit."
Some Marines did not take the news well, claimed Sgt. Eric G. Frank, avionics technician, HMLA-775.
"That afternoon I woke and came to work," the 30-year-old Bristol, Conn., native said. "On the way there, someone said that one of the pilots had gotten killed. I got angry and was in denial at first. When I got to work they were cleaning and fixing the aircraft."
The loss to the squadron did not just equate to a lost pilot, Marine or an officer, noted Lt. Col. Bruce S. Orner, HMLA-775 commanding officer. Greene's passing impacted the squadron much more heavily than that.
"We lost a quality maintenance officer and a highly experienced and respected pilot," the California State University graduate continued, "but for many of us, we lost a good friend."
From his leaders to his Marines, all the Marines have mourned the loss, added Dahlin.
"We lost an amazing person, leader and family man," he said. "He cared about everything he did. He had a genuine love for everything did and the people he worked with."
"Lt. Col. Greene led us in a way that we would want to impress him and inspired us to work for him," Dahlin remembered about the squadron aviation maintenance officer. "He spent countless hours motivating us to get the aircraft up to defend those guys on the ground. Because of that, he probably saved countless lives. He was an amazing person and a hell of a Marine."
It was his selflessness which shined through to the Marines and anyone who met him, claimed Staff Sgt. Brian A. Sanchez, quality assurance chief, HMLA-775.
"His whole goal was to make sure everything was fine here and to fly and provide support for evacuation or escort," the 31-year-old from Pittsburgh said. "He never thought of himself and held very high morals."
It is for this reason that the airfield was dedicated to the man who dedicated his life to the Marines around him, claimed Orner.
"He would take the time to find out about his Marines," he said. "It wasn't fake, he has a genuine concern. This is an opportunity for the Marines to see that he'll be remembered even when we leave."
"It's also an opportunity for us to pay tribute and pass on his memory to other people," he added.
On hand for the tribute was Brig. Gen. Harold J. Fruchtnicht, 4th MAW commanding general, who said he was honored to be there for the dedication to the fallen reserve officer.
The squadron has since carried on with what they think Greene's wishes would be in his absence, Orner said.
"I think he'd want us to carry on like we always have," he said. "We were asked if we needed any (operational tempo) relief but we declined. We wanted to stay focused and stay on the job. I think that's what he would've wanted."
Dahlin, who was one of Greene's Marines, agreed with his commanding officer. Supporting the Marines is what they should continue doing, he claimed.
"Lt. Col. Greene was very particular about maintenance," he noted. "He believed in what we do. He knew the sacrifices and would want us to continue to get up aircraft and finish the battle."
So the "Coyotes" of HMLA-775 have decided to carry on without him while in Iraq, but none will ever forget him as they walk onto to his airfield, Orner said. Submitted by Alan H Barbour, Historian, USMC Combat Helicopter Association