Thursday, December 14, 2017

Face of Defense: Brothers End Guard Service in Joint Retirement Ceremony



By Eric Durr New York National Guard

LATHAM, N.Y., Dec. 14, 2017 — Two brothers who deployed to Iraq together in 2005 marked the end of their service in the New York Army National Guard during a joint retirement ceremony at New York National Guard Headquarters here Dec. 2.

Lt. Col. Joseph Claus, a Cropseyville, New York resident, will end his military service after 30 years tomorrow.

His brother, Master Sgt. Leonard Claus, from Grafton, New York, ended his military service on Nov. 15 after 33 years in uniform.

The brothers were awarded the Meritorious Service Medal by Army Col. David Martinez, the director of intelligence for the New York National Guard.

Both brothers started their careers in the active Army and worked in military intelligence units during the Cold War before they joined the Army National Guard. In Tikrit, Iraq, both men worked in the intelligence operation of the 42nd Infantry Division; Len Claus as intelligence fusion cell noncommissioned officer in charge and Joe Claus as the intelligence collection management officer.

“We’ve been through a lot in thirty years,” Joe Claus said.

“And it’s good to know that no matter what you always have somebody who has got your back,” Len Claus added.

The fact that they deployed together caused some worry for their families, but “being there together we were able to lean on each other a little bit and use that to calm not just ourselves but our families as well,” Len Claus added.

‘Magnificent Careers’

“This is pretty amazing that between the two of them they have 63 years of service,” Martinez said.

Both brothers have had “magnificent careers,” he added.

It’s not that unusual to have family members serving together in the National Guard, Joe Claus said.

“I think the New York Army National Guard is a family business. There have been a lot of families that have worked with us, so it is not that we are that unusual,” he said.

The National Guard itself often feels like one big extended family, Joe Claus added. Soldiers get to know each other well through exercises, training deployments and state emergency call-ups, he explained.

From Farm Country to San Francisco

Len Claus enlisted in the Army in 1984 as a signals intelligence specialist and attended the Defense Language Institute, where he learned German. After completing his military education he joined the 108th Military Intelligence Battalion in Wildflecken, Germany, where he monitored East German communications.

“Here I was straight off the farm in Grafton, 17 years old, and 12 weeks later I’m doing [physical training] under the Golden Gate Bridge [at the Presidio of San Francisco], Len Claus said. “ You couldn’t get any better than that. I may have peaked early.”

After leaving active duty in 1989, Len joined the New York Army National Guard in 1991 and was assigned to the intelligence section of the 42nd Infantry Division in Troy, New York. In 2001, after another break in service due to his civilian job, he joined the 642nd Military Intelligence Battalion, which provided intelligence information to the 42nd Division.

He deployed with the 642nd to Iraq as part of the battalion, where he worked as an intelligence analyst in the division’s intelligence collection center.

Len Claus remained in the 42nd Infantry Division until 2011 when he was assigned to Bravo Company, 27th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, where he served as the signals intelligence platoon sergeant.

In 2012 he deployed to Afghanistan with the 174th (Forward) Stability Transition Team/Security Force Assistance Team, a New York Army National Guard special unit which worked with the 3rd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division to train Afghan security forces.

After returning from Afghanistan he was assigned to the New York National Guard intelligence directorate, where he served as senior intelligence and security noncommissioned officer.

His awards include the Bronze Star, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Achievement Medal, the Iraq Campaign Medal, the Afghanistan Campaign Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, the Army Overseas Service Ribbon, the Noncommissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon, and the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, the National Defense Service Medal and the NATO Medal.

Len Claus currently works as the Rensselaer County Department of Public Health emergency preparedness coordinator.

Traveling the World

Joe Claus joined the Army in 1987 and served in military intelligence like his brother. He left active duty in 1991 and joined the New York Army National Guard’s 42nd Infantry Division in the intelligence section.

In 1994 the division headquarters went through its first warfighter exercise, he recalled. There was a lot of pressure to perform well so the division would not be disbanded, he said, but the division did well.

In 1995 Joe Claus decided to go back on active duty. He served another three years in the active Army, which included a deployment to Saudi Arabia in 1997-1998 as a military intelligence instructor for the Royal Saudi Land Forces.

After leaving active duty he rejoined the New York Army National Guard and received a direct commission as a second lieutenant.

One of his first missions was the division headquarters response to the Sept. 11 attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center towers in New York City. Joe Claus and other members of the division were on duty to assist in the recovery operation in lower Manhattan.

In 2005, Joe Claus served as the intelligence collection cell manager for the 42nd Infantry Division in Iraq.

He did great work in that job, according to Lt. Col. Christopher Ciccone, deputy director of intelligence for the New York National Guard.

“I can tell you story after story of Joe Claus interdicting bad guys on the battlefield, and collecting information that had operators maneuver on them to take them off the battlefield,” Ciccone said. “He is a fantastic military intelligence officer.”

From 2010-2013, Joe Claus commanded the headquarters detachment of the New York Army National Guard’s Joint Force Headquarters. He’s also served as a logistics planner and mobilization officer.

During his service in the 42nd Infantry Division, he traveled to Japan and Australia and other missions took him to Germany, Kuwait and Great Britain, Joe Claus said. He was also part of the National Guard headquarters cell during the presidential inauguration this year.

Claus is a graduate of several military intelligence officer schools and Army Command and General Staff College.

His awards include the Bronze Star, the Army Commendation Medal, the Joint Service Achievement Medal, the Army Achievement Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, the Iraq Campaign Medal, the Noncommissioned Officer Professional Development Medal and the Air Force Commendation Medal.

In civilian life Joe Claus serves as the emergency services chief for the police and fire departments at the Watervliet Arsenal, the Army’s cannon manufacturing plant just north of Albany, New York.

“The Army has been great to me. It is pretty much everything I wanted, “Joe Claus said. “ I walked straight out of high school into the military. It has given me opportunities you can’t find anywhere else.”

Navy to Commission Littoral Combat Ship Little Rock



The Navy will commission its newest Freedom-variant littoral combat ship (LCS), the future USS Little Rock (LCS 9), during an 11:00 a.m. EST ceremony Saturday, December 16, at the Canalside waterfront in Buffalo, New York.

The future USS Little Rock, designated LCS 9, is the tenth littoral combat ship to enter the fleet and the fifth of the Freedom-variant design. It is the second warship named for the Arkansas state capital and will be commissioned alongside the first USS Little Rock (CL 92), which serves as a museum at the Buffalo and Erie County Naval and Military Park.

Arkansas Senator John Boozman will deliver the ceremony’s principal address. Mrs. Janée L. Bonner, spouse of the Honorable Josiah “Jo” Bonner, a former U.S. representative from Alabama, is serving as the ship’s sponsor. In a time-honored Navy tradition, she will give the order to “man our ship and bring her to life!”

“The future USS Little Rock represents much more than the state capital of Arkansas, it represents service,” said Secretary of the Navy Richard V. Spencer. “This ship would not exist without the dedicated service of the men and women of Marinette Marine, who can be proud of the accomplishment of putting another warship to sea. Once commissioned, this ship will provide presence around the globe for decades to come.”

LCS is a modular, reconfigurable ship, designed to meet validated fleet requirements for Surface Warfare (SUW), Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW), and Mine Countermeasures (MCM) missions in the littoral region. An interchangeable mission package is embarked on each LCS and provides the primary mission systems in one of these warfare areas. Using an open architecture design, modular weapons, sensor systems, and a variety of manned and unmanned vehicles to gain, sustain, and exploit littoral maritime supremacy, LCS provides U.S. joint force access to critical areas in multiple theaters.

The LCS-class consists of the Freedom variant and Independence variant, designed and built by two industry teams. The Freedom variant team is led by Lockheed Martin (for the odd-numbered ships, e.g. LCS 1). The Independence variant team is led by Austal USA (for LCS 6 and follow-on even-numbered ships). Twenty-nine LCS ships have been awarded to date: 11 have been delivered to the Navy, five are in various stages of construction, and three are in pre-production states.

Haley Says Iran Must Stop Destabilizing Behavior



By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Dec. 14, 2017 — Standing in front of an Iranian rocket fired at an international airport in Saudi Arabia, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said Iran must stop all its destabilizing behavior.

“We are not just focused on [Iran’s] nuclear program,” the ambassador said during a press conference at a Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling hangar where the illegal Iranian equipment is on display.

The display is hard evidence that Iran is seeking to destabilize the Middle East. Haley stressed that Iran is engaging in many other illegal behaviors that are causing suffering from the Arabian Peninsula, to Central Asia, to the Levant.

The United States is going beyond Iran’s nuclear weapons program, which the theocracy agreed to halt only after overwhelming international pressure. “We are not just focused on the nuclear program,” Haley said. “We’re also taking a hard look at Iran’s ballistic missile program, its arms exports, its support for terrorists, proxy fighters and dictators.”

And Iran’s behavior is growing worse, she said. “The nuclear deal has done nothing to moderate the regime’s conduct in other areas,” the ambassador said.

The instance of missile and weapons systems being sent from Iran’s Revolutionary Guard to militias and terror groups is increasing. “It’s hard to find a terrorist group in the Middle East that does not have Iran’s fingerprints all over it,” she said.

Iran is “fanning the flames” of conflict, Haley said.

United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231 deals specifically with Iranian arms transfers and its ballistic missile program. Iran has repeatedly violated the resolution.

The report shows Iran arming Houthi rebels in Yemen with missiles and advanced weaponry, and that is what brought Haley to a hangar near the Defense Intelligence Agency here. The displays in the hangar are irrefutable, concrete proof of Iran’s violations. Missiles, unmanned aerial vehicles, antitank weapons and a Shark-33 boat used to attack a Saudi frigate are among the displays. Examination of the weapons trace them back to Iran and industries owned and operated by the Iranian government or Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

“This evidence demonstrates a pattern of behavior in which Iran sows conflict and extremism in direct violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions,” she said.

The United States has invited all members of the U.N. Security Council and all members of Congress to view the display. “This evidence is part of what led the U.S. Intelligence Community to conclude -- unequivocally -- that these weapons were supplied by the Iranian regime. The evidence is undeniable -- they might as well have had ‘Made in Iran’ stickers all over them.”

Haley called on all nations of the world to join the United States in resisting Iran as the nation has become “a global threat.”