Memorial honors fallen Northwest IA

More than 1,200 Sailors and guests attended the Commander, Navy Region Northwest memorial, June 4, at Naval Base
Kitsap, Bangor, to honor a fallen Northwest Sailor.
Lt. Jeffrey Ammon, 37, was killed in an improvised explosive device attack in the Aband district of Afghanistan, May 20.
Rear Adm. James Symonds, commander, Navy Region Northwest said during the memorial that peace does not preserve
itself and that freedom isn’t free, and added that the work of building a better tomorrow for all humanity entails sacrifice.
“Tragically, that sacrifice has touched the Northwest Navy family,” said Symonds. “We lost a shipmate and a friend, a Sailor
working to preserve peace, to build a better tomorrow for the people of Afghanistan, and for the people of America.”
Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRT) are responsible for supporting the government of Afghanistan’s efforts to improve
security and democratic governance by providing essential services and helping expand economic opportunity.
Cmdr. Scott Cooledge, who served as the commanding officer of PRT Ghazni, Afghanistan for a year, said Ammon was also
an American Soldier and a statesman.
“He was my field engineer who did the quality control inspections, additionally he managed all the local nationals who worked
for the PRT and finally, and most importantly, he was a statesman for the U.S. government and an infantryman in the 82nd Airborne,
always ready to run and gun on any mission,” said Cooledge. “Like all my men, he earned an 82nd Airborne combat patch that he
wore on his shoulder and an Army combat action badge on his chest.”
Ammon extended his tour and remained in Afghanistan because, Coolidge said, he believed he was making a difference.
“Jeff had no regrets because he had learned, as we all had, that even one day spent as a lion was far better than a lifetime lived as
a lamb,” said Coolidge. “Jeff was a selfless leader who always went first, taking the danger head on so others didn’t have to. That’s
why he volunteered for every mission that rolled out the gate … that’s why he stayed for a second tour.”
Symonds went on to emphasize the meaning of Ammon’s service.
“Freedom, opportunity and prosperity are precious blessings; they were not left to us in perpetuity, they were not gained without
great sacrifice, and they will not be preserved without purpose and without valor,” Symonds said. “Jeff was working with purpose,
working with valor, to maintain those things we hold most precious, and to give them as a gift to a nation not his own.”
More than 10,100 Navy individual augmentees are deployed on the ground around the world in support of the global war on terror,
of which, nearly 1,500 are in Afghanistan.
Ammon is survived by his wife and two children.
© 2008 Sound Publishing, Inc.