Previously Held NEC 00E-Unknown NEC/Rate
8380-UH-1N System Organizational Maintenance Technician
AD-8327-A-7E Organizational Maintenance, Powerplant and Related Systems
MA-9545-Law Enforcement Specialist
AD-6421-TF-34 Turbofan Jet Engine First Degree/IMA Mechanic
AD-8342-F/A-18 A/B/C/D Systems Organizational Maintenance Technician
9571-Safety Technician
AD-8341-F/A18E/F Organizational Maintenance Technician Career
ABF-0000-Aviation Boatswain's Mate Fuels
AD-6425-F414 Turbofan Third Degree
FRC West, (AIMD) Lemoore, CA. Power plants Division (400 Division). Department of the Navy Federal Employee (WG8602-10), performs maintenance, inspections and mentors, instructs and directs Active Duty Navy personnel on F414-GE-400 (F/A-18 Super Hornet) aircraft engines and components. Working on my SECOND RETIREMENT
"Ever feel like regardless what you do......It is never good enough"?
"If YOU don't work........YOU don't eat"!
"You're NEVER a LOSER until YOU QUIT TRYING!"
RULE #1 CONCERNING MONEY:
"It is NOT about how "Much Money" you make...."It is about what you DO with what you make!"
RULE #2 Concerning money.........
"The LOVE of money.........Is the ROOT of all kinds of evil"!
LIFE'S STRUGGLES & HURDLES TO OVERCOME - In & Out of the military
"People you work with - Attitudes, personalities, traits & habits".
Traits or habits I personally dislike in others:
1. Drama.
2. Attitudes.
3. Complaining - With NO REAL solutions.
4. Liars.
5. Lazy People.
6. People who "Run for Governor" - Play the POLITICS GAME.
7. People who ONLY want to do something to make themselves LOOK GOOD.
8. "Back-stabbers".
9. Hypocrites.
10. Arrogant people.
11. Braggers.
Other Comments:
Taking one day at a time........Trying to LEARN from life's experiences......Not to do the same thing again! "Keep on keeping on!"
United States Marine Corps (1978-1982) MOS 6114 (UH-1N and AH-1J Helicopter Mechanic)
HMH-463 & HML-267
POWER/LINE DIVISION
My daughter CS1(SW/IW/AW) Crystal A. Bargar, COMPACFLT, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii - Admirals Enlisted Aide!
Gulf War/Defense of Saudi Arabia /Operation Desert Shield
From Month/Year
August / 1990
To Month/Year
January / 1991
Description
In 1990, fellow Arab Gulf states refused to endorse Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's plan to cut production and raise the price of oil, leaving him frustrated and paranoid. Iraq had incurred a mountain of debt during its war with Iran that had lasted for most of the previous decade, and the Iraqi President felt that his Arab brothers were conspiring against him by refusing to raise oil prices. Therefore, after weeks of massing troops along the Iraq-Kuwait border and accusing Kuwait of various crimes, Hussein sent seven divisions of the Iraqi Army into Kuwait in the early morning hours of 2 August 1990. The invasion force of 120,000 troops and 2,000 tanks quickly overwhelmed Iraq's neighbor to the south, allowing Hussein to declare, in less than a week, that Kuwait was his nation's nineteenth province. The United Nations responded quickly, passing a series of resolutions that condemned the invasion, called for an immediate withdrawal of Iraqi troops from Kuwait, imposed a financial and trade embargo on Iraq, and declared the annexation void.
Regarding Iraq's actions as a threat to a vital interest of the US, namely the oil production capability of the Persian Gulf region, President George Bush ordered warplanes and ground forces to Saudi Arabia after obtaining King Fahd's approval. Iraqi troops had begun to mass along the Saudi border, breaching it at some points, and indicating the possibility that Hussein's forces would continue south into Saudi Arabia's oil fields. Operation DESERT SHIELD, the US military deployment to first defend Saudi Arabia grew rapidly to become the largest American deployment since the Southeast Asia Conflict. The Gulf region was within US Central Command's (CENTCOM) area of responsibility. Eventually, 30 nations joined the military coalition arrayed against Iraq, with a further 18 countries supplying economic, humanitarian, or other type of assistance.
Carriers in the Gulf of Oman and the Red Sea responded, US Air Force interceptors deployed from bases in the United States, and airlift transports carried US Army airborne troopers to Saudi Arabia. Navy prepositioning ships rushed equipment and supplies for an entire marine brigade from Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean to the gulf. During the next six months the United States and its allies built up a powerful force in the Arabian peninsula. The navy also began maritime intercept operations in support of a US-led blockade and United Nations sanctions against Iraq.
Coalition forces, specifically XVIII Airborne Corps and VII Corps, used deception cells to create the impression that they were going to attack near the Kuwaiti boot heel, as opposed to the "left hook" strategy actually implemented. XVIII Airborne Corps set up "Forward Operating Base Weasel" near the boot heel, consisting of a phony network of camps manned by several dozen soldiers. Using portable radio equipment, cued by computers, phony radio messages were passed between fictitious headquarters. In addition, smoke generators and loudspeakers playing tape-recorded tank and truck noises were used, as were inflatable Humvees and helicopters.
On 17 January 1991, when it became clear that Saddam would not withdraw, Desert Shield became Desert Storm.