[I have just returned from five days at Guantanamo Bay. I was expecting to be blown away at the quality of the people I would meet there, but I was not prepared for how far they went beyond my high initial expectations. I'll have a Veteran's Day Afterburner about the experience by Wednesday morning. Until then, please conside this a small token of my undying respect and admiration for our retired and active duty military personnel. They are beyond my ability to describe. But I will try.
This was the first thing I ever posted online. It originally appeared through the kindness of Steven Den Beste at USS Clueless. Steven was writing about the American military, and I wrote this to him as soon as I returned from my father's funeral at Arlington. I'm very grateful to Steven for having published it in its entirety (and his subsequent support of Eject! Eject! Eject!), because this small essay, and the response it received from you fine people, is what got me writing.
Thanks, Steven -- you are missed. And thanks especially to all of you for the support and encouragement. I never knew life could be this good, and I owe that to all of you. -- BW]
On October 7th, 2002 I returned to Los Angeles from Arlington National Cemetery where we interred my father, 2nd Lt. William Joseph Whittle, who died from what may have been sheer joy during a fishing trip in Canada.
My dad served in the US Army in Germany, from 1944 through 1946. He was an intelligence officer, and was responsible for recording the time of death of the convicted War Criminals at Nuremburg after the war. He saw them hanged — he stood there with a stopwatch. He was 21 years old.
My father spent two years in the U.S. Military. He spent a lifetime in the corporate world. After twenty years as a world-class hotel manager, turning entire properties from liabilities into assets, he was let go without so much as a thank-you dinner or a handshake. Twenty years of service. He was a four-star general in the corporate world for two decades, and that was his reward.
Monday afternoon, at 1 pm, I stood underneath the McClellan arch at ANC. There were 13 family members there. There were also 40 men in uniform. I was stunned.
They took my dad’s ashes, in what looked like a really nice cigar box (what a little box for such a big man, I thought at that moment), and placed it in what looked like a metallic coffin on the back of a horse drawn caisson. His ashes were handled by other twenty-one year old men, men whose fathers were children when my dad was in uniform. Everything was inspected, checked, and handled with awesome, palpable, radiating reverence and respect.
As we walked behind the caisson, the band played not a dirge, but a march…a tune that left me searching for the right adjective, which I didn’t find until the flight home. It was TRIUMPHAL. It was the sound you make when you bring a hero home. It was the only time during the service that I really began to cry.
My father received a military funeral: the folded flag, the 21 gun salute, the honor guard, and a Chaplain named Crisp who declared a grateful nation was welcoming their brother William home to rest among heroes.
My dad served for two years. He wrote on the back of his Army officer class graduation photo that he expected to die fighting for his country within a few months. Most everybody who signed his photo wrote the same thing.
The chaplain said, looking my stepmom in the eyes like this was the first time he’d ever said the words, that the men and women buried here had agreed to lay down their lives for their country and each other, and that THIS, not rank, or social status, or length in service, is what entitled them to be buried in America’s most sacred ground.
Before the ceremony, I was looking at the headstones, and it’s sad how each area of Arlington is like a forlorn vintage: here are buried the veterans who died around 1995, there is the 1982 vintage, the mid-fifties crop over on yonder hill. And standing between a Major and a Lt. Colonel, I saw a headstone for a PFC who was born in 1979, the year I entered college, and who had died in 1998. This young man, not even twenty, couldn’t have been in the service for more than a few months, and yet there he lay, with the same headstone as colonels and majors and the many, many sergeants that cover those fields.
That is American honor, and no where else in the world does it exist in such a naked, magnificent form. Each of these men and women, this band of brothers, receiving the same heartfelt respect. For my father, who died at age 77, it was the honoring of a contract he had signed more than half a century before, defending Europe and helping bring those criminal bastards to justice. It was a contract paid in full, one that has given my family and me an indescribable sense of comfort and pride.
As we were leaving, it dawned on me that the ugly brown-grey building I had been looking at across the road looked suddenly familiar. I asked the funeral coordinator if that was, in fact, the Pentagon, and he replied that it was…indeed, it was the side that the aircraft struck.
On September 11, 2001, this man was about to conduct a morning service on a hill about 1/2 mile from that brown-grey wall. He heard a roar and a whine, saw a silver blur fifty feet above his head, and watched as a 757 immolated itself against the side of the Pentagon. It was my unpleasant duty to inform him that a book claiming that the plane crash never happened, but was rather an intelligence service plot, had become one of the best-selling books in France, the country my father and millions of other American’s were willing to die for in order to liberate as young men.
My mother remains, to this day, a proud British Subject, the daughter of a man Awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1954 for his service in the Royal Marines. She, my grandfather and uncle were nearly murdered by Egyptian mobs during the Suez crisis, and she is fiercely proud of both of her native country and the one she married into. Yet she said that nowhere in the world do ordinary servicemen or women receive anything like this level of honor and respect and reverence, and she is right. All nations honor their generals and heroes. This nation honors privates and sergeants in indistinguishable fashion.
Walking behind the flag-draped caisson of an Army 2nd Lieutenant that day, I felt that my father was receiving the funeral of the President of the United States. And, number of people on the parade route aside, as a matter of fact, he was.





PJM Home

Pajamas Media appreciates your comments that abide by the following guidelines:
1. Avoid profanities or foul language unless it is contained in a necessary quote or is relevant to the comment.
2. Stay on topic.
3. Disagree, but avoid ad hominem attacks.
4. Threats are treated seriously and reported to law enforcement.
5. Spam and advertising are not permitted in the comments area.
The clause regarding "hate speech" has been deleted because readers criticized it as being too loosely defined. We agreed.
These guidelines are very general and cannot cover every possible situation. Please don't assume that Pajamas Media management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment. We reserve the right to filter or delete comments or to deny posting privileges entirely at our discretion. If you feel your comment was filtered inappropriately, please email us at story@pajamasmedia.com.
11 Comments
1. Rick Hall:Thank you so much for re-posting Honor. I’m looking forward to your new Afterburner. Keep up the excellent work! I remember from some of your earlier posts on Eject that your father used to work at a hotel in Bermuda. Were you born there?
Nov 9, 2009 - 2:16 pm 2. Ronnie:The 40th president of the United States of America would have approved of your father — and given a true salute to his casket right there. Amen for people like John Whittle! And amen for his hunting down those Nazi bastards — the same vermin socialists in the White House, in the Swiss banks, in the UNATCO offices who threaten our children today!
Nov 9, 2009 - 2:36 pm 3. Jim Cline:Bill, I read this for the first time when Steven Den Beste posted it on his blog. I’ve read it several times since. It is just as powerful and moving THIS time as it was the very first time. Thank you for posting it again.
Nov 9, 2009 - 6:44 pm 4. Warren Jewell:As has happened to me countless times before, to read the story of one more American hero made every cell of me offer a salute. Too often it seems, what I have read was eulogy to a hero now gone ahead of the rest of us. It’s difficult to keep a hero from taking the point.
I hope that that is what you were hoping to cause in me, and others. It is a sensation full of the pride for the honors our heroes deserve.
And, permit me to end with brief prayer not only for our heroes, but for all of us for whom they faced giving their all :
Hear! Hear! America! God shed His grace on thee.
Nov 9, 2009 - 7:31 pm 5. physics geek:Thanks for reposting this, Bill.
Nov 10, 2009 - 11:29 am 6. Fritz:Thank you, Bill.
Nov 11, 2009 - 5:40 pm 7. jee:Thank you, Bill, for posting this again. Something’s wrong, though, because every time I read this darned piece, it makes my monitor go all blurry…
My personal thanks to your father for his service to our great nation – his time in the military defending her, his time in the workforce building her, and his time as a parent producing responsible, right-thinking offspring.
“Well done soldier – mission complete. Welcome home.”
Nov 12, 2009 - 3:58 am 8. Stephen J.:“On September 11, 2001, this man was about to conduct a morning service on a hill about 1/2 mile from that brown-grey wall. He heard a roar and a whine, saw a silver blur fifty feet above his head, and watched as a 757 immolated itself against the side of the Pentagon. It was my unpleasant duty to inform him that a book claiming that the plane crash never happened, but was rather an intelligence service plot, had become one of the best-selling books in France, the country my father and millions of other Americans were willing to die for in order to liberate as young men.”
I think this one paragraph encapsulates one of the great tragedies of our age.
God bless your father, Mr. W.
Nov 12, 2009 - 6:59 am 9. Douglas:At Nicedeb’s place, I told about how I was in the honor guard during my short time in the Marine Corps, and how ANYONE can’t be overcome with emotion at how the US military treats it’s warrior dead is someone who’s soul has vacated them.
Nov 13, 2009 - 8:56 pm 10. Douglas:My brother was also a service member and unlike me he served in war. Also unlike me, he wasn’t a true believer.
I was a true believer, not “like your father.” but with the same intention. My life was the Corps, not a resume’ filler.
I joined with the intention and expectation that I would die in service, and I made a point of telling everyone I cared about, about my intentions.
I was CRUEL to the love of my life and chased her away with my false cruelty, I lied to her, and I told everyone I cared about other lies so that they didn’t have to suffer the pain of my (planned) eventual death.
Let them suffer once at my funeral if they still remember any kindness for me when that time occurs.
A thing about servicemembers there are the cloaking members, they are generally pieces of crap. They just want a veil of respectability.
I was a true believer.
The veiling players and maskers of their true nature are pieces of crap, as the Marines call them “Birds.” SCREW them, I feel nothing for them.
I was a True believer, I was an engineering major college attendee, (mechanical with extra focus on aeronautical whatchimacallits (it’s been 18 years)) and I dropped out of college to join the Marines.
My best friend, my VERY BEST FRIEND, a guy I knew since I was 5 years old, tells this quip. “Doug is the only guy I have known or read about that joined college TO join the Marine Corps.”
I’m a true believer. I was rare at the time I served, ten years ago, but now? I’m a nothing, these guys now are AMAZING!
I have axiety attacks because I’m not there any more.
Being a civvy isn’t much easier than being an in theater glory seeker who finds that they are wrong.
Nov 14, 2009 - 1:23 am 11. tomthesubmariner:Bill,
If you wish, let me know where your father is in the Columbarinum. I get close a few times a year in Section 60 to visit with my Mom and Dad and other friends.
I’d be honored to visit your Dad.
Nov 15, 2009 - 1:00 pm