By Nick Simeone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 9, 2014 – For the second time since a mass
shooting at Fort Hood, Texas, five years ago, President Barack Obama returned
to the Army post today to again pay tribute to soldiers cut down by one of
their own, offering condolences to the families of those killed by an Army
specialist last week and acknowledging that “part of what makes this so painful
is that we’ve been here before.”
“Once more, soldiers who survived foreign war zones were
struck down here at home, where they are supposed to be safe,” Obama told
mourning families and members of the Fort Hood community. “This tragedy tears a
wound still raw from five years ago,” the president said during a ceremony held
at the same location where he eulogized the 13 people killed by Army Maj. Nidal
Malik Hasan in November 2009 in what stands as the worst mass shooting on a
U.S. military base in history.
“It was love for country that inspired these three Americans
to put on the uniform and join the greatest army the world has ever known. …
They lived those shining values of loyalty, duty, honor that keep us strong and
free.”
Obama recalled how all three of those killed -- Sgt. 1st
Class Daniel Michael Ferguson, Staff Sgt. Carlos Lazaney Rodriguez and Sgt.
Timothy Wayne Owens -- served in Iraq or Afghanistan, and that Ferguson and
Owens were cut down while trying to prevent the gunman, Spc. Ivan Lopez, from
claiming further victims.
“As we’ve heard, when the gunman tried to push his way into
that room, Danny held the door shut, saving the lives of others while
sacrificing his own,” the president said. “And it’s said that Timothy, the
counselor, even then gave his life walking toward the gunman trying to calm him
down.”
As this second shooting at Fort Hood has shown, the
president said, it will never be possible to eliminate the risk of such
incidents. “But as a nation, we can do more to help counsel those with mental
health issues, to keep firearms out of the hands of those who are having such
deep difficulties,” he added.
He pledged that as commander in chief he is determined that
“we will continue to step up our efforts to reach our troops and veterans who
are hurting, to deliver them the care that they need and to make sure we never
stigmatize those who have the courage to seek help.”
While Obama said the exact motive for last week’s shootings
is still not known, investigators have said Lopez had argued with members of
his unit just prior to opening fire and also was being evaluated for mental
health issues, although mental illness has not been identified as a factor in
the rampage.
As he wrapped up his solemn remarks, Obama said the three
soldiers were “members of a generation that has borne the burden of our
security in more than a decade of war,” calling them extraordinary citizens in
an era when fewer Americans know someone in uniform.
“Like the 576 Fort Hood soldiers who have given their lives
in Iraq and Afghanistan, they were taken from us much too soon,” he said. “Like
the 13 Americans we lost five years ago, their passing shakes our soul.” Yet,
he noted, the people affected somehow bear what seems unbearable.
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