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This link is posted in memorial to LTC Kim Orlando. Many knew him as he was at one time
stationed at Ft Bragg.
Three Fort Campbell
soldiers were killed Friday in Iraq
during a firefight with gunmen guarding the headquarters of a Shiite
cleric. The soldiers were killed
while attempting to negotiate with the armed men, who were gathered after the 9
p.m. curfew on a road near a mosque in the Shiite holy city Karbala in southern Iraq,
according to a statement from Fort
Campbell released Friday.
The Iraqis opened fire,
killing the three soldiers and wounding seven others, Fort Campbell
officials said. Two Iraqi policemen were also killed in the gun battle. Eight
of the Iraqi gunmen died and up to 18 were wounded in the battle, which started
about midnight Thursday and continued intermittently until late Friday morning.
The soldiers were
members of the 101st Airborne Division. The deaths bring Fort Campbell's
death toll in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom to 26. Thirteen of those
deaths were the result of enemy fire.
Killed in the gun battle
were Lt. Col. Kim S. Orlando, 43, of Tennessee; Staff Sgt. Joseph P. Bellavia, 28, of Wakefield, Mass.; and Cpl. Sean R. Gilley,
24, of San Bernardino, Calif. The three were all members of the 716th Military
Police Battalion.
Orlando was the commander of the battalion. He
also served in Desert Shield and Desert Storm. Orlando is one of three Army lieutenant
colonels killed in the war, the highest rank of any American military personnel
killed, according to a list of American war dead compiled by Bloomberg News
Service.
Orlando joined the Army in 1982
and in June 2002 came from Fort
Bragg, where he was the
executive officer of the 18th Airborne Military Police Command. Orlando
was a master parachutist, a formal designation the military gives for its most
experienced paratroopers. He was
also a recipient of the Bronze Star, which is given for heroic or meritorious
achievement or service in connection with military operations against an armed
enemy or during military operations involving conflict with an opposing armed
force.
Since May 1, when
President Bush declared that major combat operations in Iraq had ended, 198 U.S.
soldiers have died in Iraq,
according to the latest Defense Department figures. Of those, 20 have been from
Fort Campbell.
This illustrates the
dangers the military and its MPs increasingly face in Iraq.