CyberWire Daily - CSO Perspectives Bonus: Veterans Day special.
Episode Date: November 10, 2023Rick Howard (The Cyberwire’s Chief Analyst, CSO, and Senior Fellow), and the cast of the entire Cyberwire team, honor our U.S. veterans on this special day. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit m...egaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hey everybody, Rick here. I enlisted in the U.S. Army in the summer of 1977. I went to basic training at Fort Dix, New Jersey, the home, as far as I can remember, of the dive bomber Mosquito, but eventually became an officer.
I served until 2004, some 27 years. My younger sister, Tracy, enlisted in the military too, Air Force, you know, but the family still talks to her. She served 10 years, and one of my fondest memories is that I had the honor
to pin on her sergeant stripes at her promotion ceremony. We both followed in the footsteps of
our dad and both of his brothers who fought in the Korean War. And as I'm saying this out loud,
my wife is yelling at me from the other room. No, served in the army in three wars, World War II,
Korea, and Vietnam, but he was the luckiest soldier on the planet. He was sick with pneumonia on a
hospital boat when his unit fought at the Battle of Anzio, was stationed in Germany during the
Korean War, and was stationed in Korea during the Vietnam War. In three wars, he never fired a shot in anger. Amazing. And she had a gaggle of cousins and
uncles that did their time as well. We never talk about it much, but serving in the military kind of
runs deep in my family. And I've noticed that's true for many families. There's typically a branch
of the family tree that has served in some capacity somewhere. When I polled the Cyber Wire team, we have a lot of veterans.
And for those who weren't in the military, many are actively supporting family members who are.
So, as November is the traditional month that the United States celebrates Veterans Day,
we thought we would take a beat and honor all the veterans in our lives.
My name is Rick Howard,
and I'm broadcasting from the CyberWire's secret Sanctum Sanctorum studios,
located underwater somewhere along the Patapsco River near Baltimore Harbor,
Maryland, in the good old U.S. of A. And you're listening to CSO Perspectives, my podcast about the ideas, strategies, and technologies that senior security executives wrestle with
on a daily basis.
According to the USO, which stands for the United Service Organizations, who knew?
Veterans Day is a U.S. federal holiday that always falls on the 11th of November.
The holiday's impetus was the end of fighting in World War I between Germany and the Allied and Associated Nations.
That day ended four years of fighting that had resulted in the deaths of 8 million soldiers and 13 million civilians. The following year, the war officially ended with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles.
Following the United Kingdom's example of honoring unidentified World War I soldiers,
the U.S. buried four of its own at the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery in 1919.
The Army assigned guards to the tomb in 1926 to discourage visitors from damaging it,
and in 1937, according to the Department of Defense, guards became a permanent continuous
presence standing watch. There has been a sentinel on duty ever since, which is appropriate since
this quote from an anonymous poet captures the sentiment exactly. Quote, Our flag does not fly because the wind moves it.
It flies with the last breath of each soldier
who died protecting it.
End quote.
One of my favorite stories about the watch
happened in 2003 as Hurricane Isabel
landed in the vicinity of Washington, D.C.
According to the Washington Post,
the watch commander gave permission to the guard detail
for the first time in its history to seek shelter if the weather got bad enough.
They'd remain in view of the tomb, but not on the traditional black mat in front of it,
where they typically march 365 days a year, 24 hours a day.
Sergeant First Class Frederick Geary, the details commander for the night,
made the decision to keep the watch on the mat throughout the storm.
I love that he did that.
In my mind, I hear him say, not on my watch.
Not on my watch.
In 1938, Congress made the day a legal national holiday in recognition of World War I veterans.
Quote, a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace
and to be thereafter celebrated and known as Armistice Day.
But in 1954, after the country had been through two more wars,
World War II and the Korean War,
Congress amended the holiday to honor American veterans of all wars.
Later, in an effort to create a standard three-day holiday for federal
employees, Congress passed a law in 1968 to ensure that four national holidays fell on a Monday.
Washington's birthday, Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and Columbus Day. But many states didn't agree with
the consolidation and continued to celebrate Veterans Day on its original date. And as you
can imagine, that caused quite a bit of confusion. So in 1975, President Ford signed the law that put Veterans Day officially back on 11
November. And just to be clear, it's Veterans Day, not Veterans Day, not plural. As the U.S.
Department of Veteran Affairs says, it's not a holiday that veterans own. It's a holiday, quote, for honoring veterans directly
in front of us right now, end quote. But not just for the veterans themselves. We honor the entire
system of family and friends who have supported the soldiers in the field since the first days
of the American Revolution. As Abraham Lincoln said, quote, honor also the citizen who cares
for his brother in the field and serves as best he can
the same cause, end quote.
Brandon Karp joined the Cyber Wire in September 2021. We're a startup, so we don't really have official titles for everybody.
He's kind of a jack-of-all-trades guy for the Cyber Wire business.
Think of him as the COO to the CEO, Peter Kilpie.
He's a Naval Academy grad, did 10 years in the Navy, got his master's degree from MIT.
Did I mention that he's really smart?
Anyway, he and I were talking on Google Meet the other day about what it meant for each of us to be a veteran. Here's what he had to say. Volunteering to serve
is a very positive thing. It's ultimately optimistic. It means you believe things can
get better and you're willing to take on some responsibility of actually making it better.
Our country would be better if we had a mandatory year of service for everybody.
Whether it's military, public service, Peace Corps, doesn't matter.
Just some program like that.
I joined the military because of 9-11.
I'm from New Jersey.
That was a day that severely impacted my community.
I was a child at the time,
and it's seared in my memory as something incredibly traumatic.
But that's not why I continued to serve after I joined.
It became about my sailors.
Incredible young men and women,
all trying to make their way in the world, and most from incredibly different backgrounds. They made that job and those sacrifices well worth doing.
The experience was not all peaches. I did have some hard times in the service. I lost a few teammates, sailors, friends.
That's a burden that me and my peers, we all share. But I also made the greatest friends of my life.
Men and women who I today consider to be true family, including, of course, my wife,
who I got to know first as a fellow naval officer
when she totally whisked me off my feet.
So today is a chance to reflect on service
and to celebrate peace.
Despite the grief that I still carry today for lost friends,
I'm a better man, a better husband,
and I think a better citizen for having served my country and my sailors.
It was the greatest honor of my life.
Listening to Brandon, it reminded me of an essay I wrote back in 2000
when I was stationed at the Pentagon
called Reborn at Arlington.
I was at the end of my military career
and a simple fun run,
something that soldiers have been doing for decades,
made me realize the significance and honor
of being part of the military tradition.
As Brandon said,
giving back to the country in some manner,
either in the military or some other public service, a country that provides so much to each of us, is a real
calling. As General George Patton said, the soldier is also a citizen. In fact, the highest obligation
and privilege of citizenship is that of bearing arms for one's country. That's my feeling exactly.
is that of bearing arms for one's country.
That's my feeling exactly.
After the break, for a special treat,
Elliot Peltzman, the Cyber Wire sound engineer, and I will try to dramatize my essay, Reborn at Arlington.
1,500 U.S. Army soldiers stood on the misty parade field at Fort Myer, Virginia, waiting for the sun to rise.
The leadership had scheduled another morale-building-yet-mandated fun run,
where once a quarter the entire unit comes together to do PT, physical training, and a show of esprit de corps and unit cohesion.
Since we were all stationed at the Pentagon,
many of us had been in the Army for a while. We were a little broken down in the body department and had seen our fair share of these types of events. There we were at the twilight of our
careers, huddled in small groups during the dawn of one more PT morning. Of course, there was the
usual grumbling between the old soldiers, asking one another if we were motivated yet and if we had a cup of esprit de corps to spare.
But there was a sprinkling of young soldiers among us, too, and their shiny new faces kept us old-timers from getting too cynical and fussy.
As the sun poked up above the horizon, the Army's Command Sergeant Mater called the gaggle to attention.
And the formation began to run. The non-commissioned officers, the NCOs, led the assemblage in rousing voice
and extolled the virtues of Granny, My Girl, and the C-130.
Below the roar of the singing, just in the background,
you could hear the footsteps of the 1,500 strong pounding the pavement in syncopated rhythm.
One, two, three, four, three, four.
One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four, three, four. rhythm. The formation crested the hill overlooking Arlington Cemetery and the Vista of Washington,
D.C. opened up before us. The Army colors at the front of the formation started their descent
towards the cemetery just as the rising sun reached the top of the Washington Monument several miles distant.
And still, the singing and the pounding drove the formation
as it snaked down the hill towards the front gates.
As the colors passed the cemetery, like a line of dominoes falling, the singing faded away.
One platoon after the other fell silent in mute honor of our fallen comrades-at-arms,
laid to rest in the National Cemetery.
As the voices muted, the only sound you could hear was the constant beat, beat, beat of the run
and the Army colors whipping in the slight breeze.
Nobody spoke, except the occasional NCO,
keeping everybody in step with a solid but quiet
1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4 It was serene. It was sublime.
Midway through the run, the command sergeant major called the formation to a halt
and commanded us to execute a right phase towards the middle of the cemetery.
The morning sun had burned off the last vestiges of mist from the manicured lawns.
The breeze trickled through the formation's silence and the army colors at the front.
And then we all heard it.
That mournful sound of a single bugler playing taps.
He began low at first, almost whispering the sound through the horn.
But slowly his crescendo wrapped the listener into a cocoon of sadness, memory, and gratitude
about the lives that could have been or that was.
On that misty morning, young and old soldiers alike shed mutual tears as the bugle played on.
When it was done, and the silence greeted the end of the song, a chill went down my back.
It occurred to me that we were not merely taking a morning jog anymore.
We were actually passing in review.
These fallen soldiers, some of whom had given the ultimate sacrifice for their country,
and others who were prepared to do so, were watching us and sizing us up.
I hoped that we could pass muster.
I had this great desire to let them all know that we had the guide on now and it was in good hands.
We would not let them down. I stood a little taller then. My old muscles didn't ache so much.
As we began to run home, the burden was a little lighter. As 1,500 boarded the buses to head back to the
Pentagon, I realized that this old soldier was less cynical today, less worn for wear. Although
I may not have that shiny face of one of those new soldiers, I was reborn this morning, together,
both old and young. We will carry on.
And that's a wrap for all of you veterans out there who have served in whatever country you hail from and the family members and friends who support you.
Happy Veterans Day from the folks here at the Cyber Wire.
We thank you for your service.
The Cyber Wire CSO Perspectives is edited by John Petrick and executive produced by Peter Kilby.
Our theme song is by Blue Dot Sessions, remixed by the insanely talented Elliot Peltzman,
who also does the show's mixing, sound design, and original score.
And he absolutely killed it for my Reborn at Arlington essay.
And I am Rick Howard.
Thanks for listening.