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Fort Bragg's Special Forces, Psychological Operations, Civil Affairs induct honorary members

The Special Forces, Psychological Operations and Civil Affairs community named 20 new soldiers, civilians and veterans as distinguished and honorary members during induction ceremonies this month.

The inductees have built the organization through military and civilian endeavors from conflicts in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Somalia, Desert Storm, Grenada, Panama and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, said Maj. Gen. Patrick Roberson, commander of Fort Bragg's U.S John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School.

“They are pillars of our organization because they helped really develop our organization and adopt these structures, training and every aspect in making this organization great,” Roberson said.

The inductees are committed to improving opportunities for men and women in uniform, through "their selfless actions over the years to promote the warfighting ethos and unwavering sense of pride and selfless service,” Col. Charles Burnett, deputy commander of the JFK Special Warfare Center and School said.

Special Forces Regiment Distinguished members

Sgt. Maj. Matthew Williams is welcomed by Lt. Col. Richard Woolshalger as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Sgt. Maj. Matthew Williams is welcomed by Lt. Col. Richard Woolshalger as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Sgt. Maj. Matthew Williams

Sgt. Maj. Matthew Williams served with the 3rd Special Forces Group and received the Medal of Honor recipient for his actions on April 6, 2008, as part of an assault element inserted into Afghanistan.

After the lead element was attacked by an enemy machine gun, sniper and rocket-propelled grenade fire in the Nuristan Province, Williams helped lead a counter-attack up a mountain and across a valley of ice-covered boulders and a rapid, ice-cold, waist-deep river.

Williams moved a wounded team sergeant down the mountain, then went back up to defend the other soldiers, directing suppressive fire and exposing himself to enemy fire.

He helped lead Afghan commandos in a counter-attack that lasted hours, and continually exposed himself to enemy fire as the wounded were evacuated.

Retired Lt. Col. Bennet Sacolick is recognized as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Lt. Col. Bennet Sacolick is recognized as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Lt. Gen. Bennett Sacolick

Retired Lt. Gen. Bennett Sacolick joined the Army as a private in 1981, later commissioning as an officer and joining the 3rd Battalion, 7th special Forces Group.

He is also a former troop commander of 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta at Fort Bragg, serving during Operation Restore Hope-Somalia and Operation Desert Storm.

Sacolick’s other assignments include those as Chief of Current Operations for the Joint Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg with service during Operation Iraqi Freedom; deputy director for defense of the Counter-Terrorism Center at the Central Intelligence Agency; deputy commanding general and commander of the JFK Special Warfare Center; director of Force Management and Development at the U.S. Special Operations Command at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida; and deputy director of Strategic Operational Planning for the National Counterterrorism Center in Washington, D.C.

Lt. Col. Eugene McCarley is recognized as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Lt. Col. Eugene McCarley is recognized as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Lt. Col. Eugene McCarley

Lt. Col. Eugene McCarley enlisted in 1955, serving 12 years in the North Carolina Army National Guard and Army Reserves, before volunteering for the regular Army in 1967 during Vietnam.

In Vietnam, he served with the top-secret Military Assistance Command-Vietnam Studies and Observations Group, a joint-service special operations unit.

He participated in Operational Tailwind, a cross-border penetration mission leading a company force into enemy-occupied territory in Laos.

He later testified in a Department of Defense investigation in the late 1990s, after CNN and Time Magazine falsely reported that nerve gas was used and alleged that women and children were killed during the previously classified operation.

The news reports were retracted, and the DOD investigation found that Operation Tailwind was conducted in accordance with rules of engagement, nerve gas was not used and the operation did not target American defectors.

Wounded twice, McCarley secured sensitive information and lead his fellow fighters to secure a crash site in Vietnam.

McCarley’s service continued past 1970, as he served with the National Guard and Army Reserves until 1995.

McCarley died Nov. 19, 2018, in Wilmington.

Retired 1st Lt. Phillip Gonzales is welcomed by Lt. Col. Richard Woolshalger as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired 1st Lt. Phillip Gonzales is welcomed by Lt. Col. Richard Woolshalger as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

1st Lt. Phillip Gonzales

Retired 1st Lt. Phillip Gonzales enlisted in the Army Security Agency in 1958 as a trained Morse Code inceptor. After completing airborne school in 1969, he was assigned to the 403rd, Special Operations Detachment, 5th Special Forces Group in Vietnam.

Gonzales completed two tours in Vietnam, from 1969 to 1971, and was assigned to the 3rd Mobile Strike Force and various “A-teams” scattered from Northern Highlands to the Mekong Delta.

He received a Special Forces flash tab with 8th Special Forces in 1972.

While serving, Gonzales held jobs as a medical sergeant, intelligence sergeant and communications sergeant.

He’d continue service as a contractor with the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs’ Counternarcotic and Aerial Eradication program, working in Columbia for 20 years to develop medical and security areas of study, as well as trained guerilla armies, and participated in counter-narcotic and medical operations in war zones in Burma, Cambodia, Columbia, Sarajevo, Salvador and Panama with the Nicaraguan Contras.

Gonzales also worked as a medical officer in Iraq and Afghanistan after military retirement and has served as an advanced medical instructor with Joint Special Operation Medical Training Center for the past eight years.

Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terry Peters is recognized as the outgoing honorary sergeant major of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terry Peters is recognized as the outgoing honorary sergeant major of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Sgt. Maj. Terry Peters

Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terry Peters entered the Army on Sept. 14, 1983, and was assigned as an infantryman. to the 101st Airborne Division's 4th Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment.

He held various positions as a gunner, M60 gun team leader, fire team leader and weapons squad leader, before being reassigned to Korea during the summer of 1986. After completing the Special Forces Qualification Course in 1988 as a weapons sergeant, Peters was assigned to the 5th Special Force Group.

Peters has deployed in support of numerous missions, including Operation Desert Storm and Operation Desert Shield, before being reassigned to the Special Warfare Center and School.

In 2002, he deployed with Company B, 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Force Group in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

In 2003, he was responsible for all training at Camp Mackall as the 1st Battalion command sergeant major.

In 2004, he was assigned to the Special Warfare Center’s 3rd Battalion, becoming responsible for Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations training courses and the special operations language training program.

Peters served as the senior enlisted advisor to the Joint Special Operations Task Force-Philippines as it conducted a mission in support of Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines from January to July 2007, and in support of Operation Enduring Freedom as the senior-enlisted advisor under 3rd Special Forces Group for Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force-Afghanistan from October 2007 to May 2008 and January 2009 to August 2010.

Peters is the regiment’s outgoing honorary command sergeant major.

Retired Master Sgt. Larry Townsend is welcomed as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Master Sgt. Larry Townsend is welcomed as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Master Sgt. Larry Townsend

Retired Master Sgt. Larry Townsend served in the Army from 1972 to 1992, with 17 of those years with Special Forces.

Following completion of the Special Forces Qualification Course in 1978, he was assigned to the operational detachment under the 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Force Group as a radio operation supervisor. After serving with a Special Forces Demonstration team, he was selected to serve with a Delta operational detachment in 1982 as a base station radio operator and promoted to section crew chief and also participated in the invasion of Grenada to complete a mission to rescue American hostages.

Townsend became wounded when an aircraft was shot down.

From March 1985 to May 1989, he was the principal drill instructor for an Army ROTC Battalion at East Carolina University.

He was later selected by the Special Forces commander to serve as a senior Special Forces doctrine and training analyst to review curriculum and doctrine used by Special Operation Forces units. He retired from the Army in 1992.

Townsend continued to serve as a civilian for the Directorate of Training and Doctrine at Special Warfare Center and School and Joint Special Operations Command, 1st Special Forces Command and deputy director of Operations Support Office and Sensitive Activities Officer for the Office of Special Warfare.

Retired Master Sgt. Joe Walker as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Master Sgt. Joe Walker as a distinguished member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Master Sgt. Joe Walker

Retired Master Sgt. Joe Walker graduated from Special Forces training in 1967, qualifying as an operations and intelligence and weapons specialist.

He deployed to South Vietnam conducting reconnaissance operations with a 5th Special Forces Group detachment.

After a year-long tour, he volunteered for another year in combat with the Military Assistance Command Vietnam-Studies and Observations Group, a top-secret action unit that conducted operations behind enemy lines in Laos and Cambodia.

After his second year in combat, he joined the 46th Special Forces Company in Thailand, serving as an instructor for a then-classified CIA program that trained Thai military volunteers and Laotian irregulars for combat against North Vietnamese forces in Laos.

Walker rejoined the observation group for a third year in combat and insisted on finishing his tour when wounded Jan. 15, 1971.

After four continuous years in Southeast Asia, he was reassigned to a Special Forces unit stateside in 1971 and continued to spend more than a decade with Special Forces assignments until retiring in 1982.

After military retirement, Walker worked alongside U.S. and allied special operations personnel and foreign irregulars on six continents and served another 21 years as a civilian with the nation’s premier intelligence and paramilitary operations organization.

This year's Honorary Members of the Special Force Regiment are:

Retired Navy Capt. Chuck Deleot is recognized as an honorary member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Navy Capt. Chuck Deleot is recognized as an honorary member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Capt. Chuck Deleot

Retired Navy Capt. Chuck Deleot was an active-duty naval intelligence officer from 1967 to 1972 and retired as a captain in Naval Reserve in 1990.

In 1972, he joined the commander-in-chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet staff as a computer specialist and became the technical director and deputy director for the Pacific Fleet Command, Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence.

Deleot retired from the federal service in 2001, working as an occasional defense consultant for Science Applications International Corp. as a chief scientist and engineer.

In 2003, he volunteered for the Pinehurst-based Patriot Foundation as its president and chairman.

The organization provides scholarships to children of the conventional Army and Army Special Operation Forces servicemen and women who have been killed or wounded from the Global War on Terrorism.

Jim Moriarty is recognized as an honorary member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Jim Moriarty is recognized as an honorary member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Jim Moriarty

Jim Moriarty is a Marine veteran and Gold Star father who has served the military and Special Forces for four decades as a lawyer and advocate for Green Berets.

He was part of a team that sought to have the Army review the Medal of Honor nomination packet for Lt. Col. Paris Davis, one of the first Black officers in Special Forces.

He also advocated for Medal of Honor recipient Gary Rose, who was previously defamed for his role in Operation Tailwind.

Moriarty has undertaken several pro-bono cases for Gold Star families.

In November 2016, Moriarty’s son, Staff Sgt. James “Jimmy” Moriarty, was a 5th Special Forces Group soldier killed in Jordan along with staff sergeants Kevin McEnroe and Matthew Lewellen.

Staff Sgt. James Moriarty is credited with mortally wounding the shooter, saving another soldier’s life.

His father advocated for the U.S. and foreign governments for a full investigation after the host nation initially blamed the Americans.

Teresa Nugent is welcomed by Lt. Col. Richard Woolshalger as an honorary member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Teresa Nugent is welcomed by Lt. Col. Richard Woolshalger as an honorary member of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Teresa Nugent

Teresa Nugent is a former Army telecommunications specialist who was assigned to the Air Defense Artillery Patriot Missile Battalion from 1985 to 1988.

In the 1990s, she started working in the medical nursing field and has spent the past 15 years involved in injury and illness cases involving active-duty special operations personnel.

She’s served as the U.S. Army Special Operations Command’s nurse consultant since 2012 and has cared for more than 400 special operations soldiers, coordinating 30 medical evacuations of deployed soldiers and managing 10 Army Special Operation Forces amputees.

She is credited with recommending a streamlined process for traumatic brain evaluation and coordinating with Army Special Operation Forces and the Intrepid Spirit Center at Fort Bragg, along with developing treatment plans for Army Special Operation Forces amputees, traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder patients.

Outgoing and incoming honorary regiment leaders

Retired Col. Fredrick Dummar is recognized as the outgoing honorary colonel of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Col. Fredrick Dummar is recognized as the outgoing honorary colonel of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Also honored was retired Col. Fredrick Dummar, a former Special Forces operational detachment commander of the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group; a deputy commander of Special Operations Task Force, Kandahar, Afghanistan; deputy commander of 7th Force Group; chief of staff and deputy commander combined Joint Special Operations Task-Force Afghanistan; executive officer of the U.S. Army Special Forces Command; chief of staff Special Operations Joint Task Force-Fort Bragg; and commander of the Afghan National Army Special Operations Command-Special Operations Advisory Group at Camp Morehead Afghanistan from May 2014 to June 2015.

Dummar is the outgoing honorary colonel of the Special Forces Regiment.

Retired Col. David McCracken is recognized as the incoming honorary colonel of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Col. David McCracken is recognized as the incoming honorary colonel of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

The incoming honorary colonel is retired Col. David McCracken.

McCracken is a former executive officer of the 7th Special Force Group who’s participated in Operation Just Cause and is a past commander of the 1st Special Warfare Training Group company and battalion, and 3rd Special Forces Group. He retired in 2004.

He is credited with developing the National Counter-Terrorism Center.

Retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 Douglas Frank is recognized as the outgoing honorary chief warrant officer of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 Douglas Frank is recognized as the outgoing honorary chief warrant officer of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

The regiment’s honorary outgoing warrant officer is retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 Douglas Frank.

Frank previously served as the 7th Special Forces Group warrant officer, leading teams during Operations Just Cause, Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.

He’s served as chief warrant officer at brigade and command levels, including the 7th Special Forces Group, the 1st Special Warfare Training Group and the U.S. Special Operations Command's Special Operations Joint Task Force-Bragg.

He is credited with spearheading an Army-level study that led to the JFK Special Warfare Center and School becoming one of two organizations in the Army authorized to appoint warrant officers.

Retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 James Korenoski is recognized as the incoming honorary chief warrant officer of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 James Korenoski is recognized as the incoming honorary chief warrant officer of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

The regiment's incoming warrant officer is retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 James Korenoski. Korenoski previously served with the 5th Special Forces Group and has served as a weapons sergeant, intelligence sergeant, assistant detachment commander, detachment commander, company, battalion and group operations warrant officer and warrant officer institute instructor.

He was first selected as command chief warrant officer for the 1st Special Warfare Training Group and spent 31 years as 5th Special Forces Group’s command chief warrant officer, with deployments during Desert Shield and Desert Storm, Somalia and operations Iraqi Freedom, Enduring Freedom and Inherent Resolve.

Retired Command Sgt. Richard Lamb is recognized as the incoming honorary sergeant major of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Command Sgt. Richard Lamb is recognized as the incoming honorary sergeant major of the special forces regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

The regiment's incoming honorary command sergeant major is retired Command Sgt. Maj. Richard Lamb. Lamb deployed with the 1st Ranger Battalion during the Operation Eagle Claw 1980 mission attempt to free American hostages in Iran.

He served with Ranger battalions, two infantry battalions, four Special Forces Groups, two theater special operation commands and Joint Special Operations Task Force-Horn of Africa.

He was wounded during the Battle of Mogadishu, Somalia, attempting to rescue American soldiers and had deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Lamb is credited with negotiating an assignment for a Republic of Korea exchange officer to the U.S Special Operations Command and assisting Republic of Korea Special Operation Forces in transforming force structure and airlift capabilities.

He is also credited with developing an international directorate within the U.S. Special Operations Command to integrate 24 allied officers and 17 partner nations in trans-regional planning initiatives.

Psychological Operations Distinguished Members

Retired Col. Dorothea Burke is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Col. Dorothea Burke is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Col. Dorothea Burke

Retired Col. Dorothea Burke commissioned as a military police officer in May 1982 and served on active duty for 30 years, including more than 15 years as a psychological operations officer. She retired in May 2012.

As a military police officer for the 502nd Transportation Battalion in Germany, Burke managed deployment and redeployment of U.S. Forces to Desert Shield and Desert Storm.

As a psychological operations detachment commander with Company B, 6th Psychological Operations Battalion, she led program development in support of the Department of Defense’s response to the Rwanda genocide.

Burke later deployed to Panama to plan and lead a psychological operations task force supporting Joint Task Force Safe Haven and Cuban migrant operations.

She also deployed to Haiti, leading a task force in support of U.N. missions.

Following the events of 9/11, Burke balanced competing requirements to support plans, exercises and operations throughout the area of operations, as well as operations in the Middle East.

When assigned to the Special Operations Command as chief for the Psychological Operations Concept Development Branch, she coordinated plans and programs supporting Department of Defense information operations during the War on Terror.

She later served as chief for the plans and program division of Joint PSYOP Support Element and deployed as chief of staff for Combined Task Force Fervent Archer, leading a mission in the Balkans in support of Special Operations Command-Europe.

Retired Col. Michael Seidl is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Col. Michael Seidl is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Col. Michael Seidl

Retired Col. Michael Seidl commissioned in the Army in May 1979 as an armor officer and was assigned to the 4th Psychological Operations Group in June 1994. He served the next 15 years in psychological operation positions including at the Pentagon as the director for military information support operations and psychological operations.

In December 1995, Seidl deployed to Bosnia as the first operations officer for the Combined Joint Implementation Force information campaign task force for implementation of the Dayton Accords, a peace agreement among the presidents of Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia, ending the war in Bosnia.

He took command of the 6th Psychological Operations Battalion in 1999 and was the first psychological task force commander to the NATO Headquarters in Kosovo.

From 2001 to 2003, he served as deputy commander for the 4th Psychological Operations Group and was assigned to operations for the U.S. Army Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations Command in 2003.

Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Neil Heupel is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Neil Heupel is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Sgt. Maj. Neil Heupel

Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Neil Heupel entered the military in August 1975.

He served in the Marine Corps for four years before joining the North Dakota National Guard in 1982, where he served for seven years before joining the Army Reserve.

Heupel served as command sergeant major for several units including the 13rth Psychological Operations Battalion, 353rd Civil Affairs Command and U.S. Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations Command.

He is a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, deploying with the 353rd Civil Affairs Command from September 2004 to May 2005.

His last military assignment with the Psychological Operation’s Commandant’s Office at the U.S. Army Special Warfare Center and School’s U.S. Army Reserve liaison.

Heupel also worked as an architect for 20 years and as a Department of the Army civilian serving as a strategic panner for Psychological Operations at the U.S. Civil Affairs Operations Command at Fort Bragg.

Retired 1st Sgt. Donald Barton is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired 1st Sgt. Donald Barton is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as a distinguished member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Retired 1st Sgt. Donald Barton joined the Army in June 1974, serving in various positions — from assistant gunner to a platoon sergeant and serving with the 1st Armored Division and 1st Cavalry Division.

In 1981, Barton reenlisted Army Reserve and reclassified as a psychological operations specialist.

In 1993, he returned to active duty and was assigned at the JFK Special Warfare Center and School and served two years as a psychological operations collective training developer and writer.

In 1997, he was assigned to Pacific Command Battalion, 4th Psychological Operations Group and served as the battalion's first operations sergeant.

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In 2001, he was assigned to 8th Army Headquarters in Seoul, Korea, followed by a 2002 assignment to the Pacific Command as a battalion operations sergeant.

In 2003, Barton served in the JFK Special Warfare Center School’s Career Management Field in the Directorate of Special Operations Proponent, where he initiated several proposals that contributed to the health of the force.

He retired after 36 years of service and currently serves as a civilian management analyst in the personnel proponent of the Civil Affairs commandant's office.

Psychological Operations honorary members

Master Sgt. Aubrey LaFosse is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as an honorary member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Master Sgt. Aubrey LaFosse is welcomed by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Souther as an honorary member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Master Sgt. Aubrey LaFosse

Master Sgt. Aubrey LaFosse joined the Army in May 2007 and is assigned as a clarinetist to the Army Band, Pershing’s Own, where she’s spent her Army career.

She’s provided musical support for full honor funerals at Arlington Cemetery and military and diplomatic ceremonies in Washington D.C, including the White House and Pentagon.

Ronald Archer is welcomed as an honorary member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Ronald Archer is welcomed as an honorary member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Ronald Archer

Ronald Archer joined the Southern Command’s Strategic Studies Detachment, 4th Psychological Operations Group at Fort Bragg, in 1997.

He has written classified studies represented in the 4th Psychological Operations Group and 8th Psychological Operations Group.

He is currently a senior psychological operations intelligence analyst, with responsibility for Columbia and Ardean Ridge countries of Latin America, as well as Panama and Afghanistan.

In 2013, he became the deputy chief of the 1st Military information Support Battalion Cultural Intelligence Cell.

In 2018, he became the chief of the 1st Psychological Operations Battalion Cultural Intelligence Cell.

He has deployed more than 100 times since 1997 for nearly 2,300 days to Columbia, Afghanistan, Panama, Central America and the Caribbean in support of psychological operations.

Master Sgt. James Kazik is recognized as an honorary member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Master Sgt. James Kazik is recognized as an honorary member of the psychological operations regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Master Sgt. James Kazik

Master Sgt. James Kazik is the chief arranger and music support group leader of the Army Band, Pershing’s Own.

Kazik enlisted in the Army in 2001 and has written more than 400 arrangements and compositions in support of high visibility missions including five presidential inaugurations, three presidential state funerals and general officer retirement ceremonies.

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In 2004, he wrote original music in support of the commemoration of the World War II memorial in Washington D.C.

Kazik has written several pop arrangements in support of the sergeant major of the Army’s “Hope and Freedom” tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Kazik also composed original music regimental marches to the Joint Task Force Civil Support, 21st Theater Sustainment Command, and the Psychological Operation Regiment March and song “Libertas et Veritas.”

Distinguished Members of Civil Affairs Regiment

Retired Brig. Gen. Ferdinand Irizarry II is welcomed by Col. Charles Burnett as a distinguished member of the civil affairs regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Brig. Gen. Ferdinand Irizarry II is welcomed by Col. Charles Burnett as a distinguished member of the civil affairs regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Brig. Gen. Ferdinand Irizarry II

Retired Brig. Gen. Ferdinand Irizarry II served in the military for 36 years, retiring in August 2015.

He’s served as deputy chief of staff for the U.S. Army Reserve Command and Chief, Readiness Office of the Chief of Army Reserve.

His other assignments include executive officer for the undersecretary of the Army; commander of the 95th Civil Affairs Brigade; chief of staff for the Army Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations Command; director of Army Special Operations Forces Proponency; and chief of civil affairs-civil affairs military operations training and doctrine development.

Irizarry also served as deputy commanding general for the JFK Special Warfare Center and School where he was responsible for coordinating the accreditation and recognition of the school as a training Center of Excellence.

His tour in support of contingency operations includes those to Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan with joint and multi-national units.

Brig. Gen. Cornelius Wickersham, represented by Lt. Col. Chad Hutchins, is recognized by Col. Charles Burnett as a distinguished member of the civil affairs regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Brig. Gen. Cornelius Wickersham, represented by Lt. Col. Chad Hutchins, is recognized by Col. Charles Burnett as a distinguished member of the civil affairs regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Brig. Gen. Cornelius Wickersham

Brig. Gen. Cornelius Wickersham enlisted in the New York National Guard in July 1915 and commissioned as a second lieutenant Sept. 13, 1916.

He served on the Mexican border in 1916 then deployed to France in February 1918.

Wickersham’s assignments included those with the 27th Infantry Division and Reserves.

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In March 1942, he became the first commandant of the School of Military Government at the University of Virginia, where he pioneered the Army’s first professional civil affairs education that continues today at the JFK Special Warfare Center and School.

In January 1944, Wickersham deployed to England and served as a U.S. military representative to the European Advisory Commission which planned the post-war occupation of Germany.

He was deputy commander of the U.S. Group Control Council in 1944 and assistant deputy military governor until May 1945.

He continued to serve as a lieutenant general in the New York National Guard until his retirement in June 1948.

Wickersham died Jan. 31, 1968.

Retired Col. James Wolff is welcomed by Col. Charles Burnett as a distinguished member of the civil affairs regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.
Retired Col. James Wolff is welcomed by Col. Charles Burnett as a distinguished member of the civil affairs regiment during a Nov. 4, 2021, ceremony at Fort Bragg.

Col. James Wolff

Retired Col. James Wolff commissioned as a military police officer in 1987 and served as a platoon leader in the 101st Airborne Division during operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm.

He was assigned to the 96th Civil Affairs Battalion after attending Naval Post Graduate School in 1994.

Wolff served as a civil affairs team leader, company operations officer, delta company commander and battalion executive officer, before serving on the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Enduring Iraqi Freedom.

He deployed to Iraq as chief of operations for the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance Southern Region and served as chief of civil administration for the Coalition Provisional Authority South-Central Region.

Wolff returned to Fort Bragg to command the 96th Civil Affairs Battalion from June 2004 to June 2005, followed by becoming the 95th Civil Affairs Brigade’s deputy commanding officer and commanding the brigade from June 2010 to June 2012.

He also had assignments with the U.S. Special Operations Command with duty as the operations officer in the Office of Military Affairs, U.S. Agency for International Development.

Wolff was commandant for the Civil Affairs Regiment in 2014 and was the U.S. Army Special Operations Command’s chief of staff for strategy and plans the same year.

He also served as a senior advisor for the Iraqi Counter-Terrorism Service from February 2016 to March 2017.

Staff writer Rachael Riley can be reached at rriley@fayobserver.com or 910-486-3528.

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This article originally appeared on The Fayetteville Observer: Special Forces and other Fort Bragg units induct honorees