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The 19th Annual General Douglas
MacArthur Leadership Awards were presented to 27 U.S. Army leaders in a May 17,
2006, ceremony in the courtyard of the Pentagon. Speaking at the ceremony and
presenting the awards was General Peter J. Schoomaker, Chief of Staff of the
Army, and G. Conoly Phillips, member of the Board of Directors of the General
Douglas MacArthur Foundation.
Accompanying Director Phillips at the award
ceremonies were Colonel Bill Davis and Mrs. G. Conoly Phillips.
The ceremony was powerful and profoundly moving. One of the
recipients had a prosthetic hand, another a prosthetic leg; and Mrs. Mary
Cahill, the widow of Captain Joel E. Cahill, stood with the other recipients to
receive the award for her husband who was killed in action in Iraq.
The Award recognizes company grade officers and warrant officers, both men
and women, in the Active Army, the Army Reserve, and the Army National Guard who
demonstrate the ideals for which General MacArthur stood and are embodied in his
credo of Duty, Honor, Country. Selection for the award is based on overall
leadership performance and potential for future service to the Army and the
nation. Award recipients receive a handsome engraved 15 pound bronze bust of
General MacArthur that is sculpted exclusively for this program.
During the three days of the program, recipients and their families
participate in special activities and events culminating with the presentation
ceremony at the Pentagon. During this year’s program, the Foundation’s Executive
Director was the featured speaker at the welcoming reception and the Army
Reserve reception conducted at the Sheraton-National Hotel in Arlington. Following
the award presentations the recipients were honored at a luncheon sponsored by
the Association of the United States Army, and hosted by Lieutenant General
James L. Campbell, Director of the Army Staff.
Beginning his remarks, General Schoomaker said that "Upon
reading the nomination packets it made me proud to serve alongside these gifted
Soldiers and it reassured me that the future of our Army is in good hands."
Continuing his remarks, General Schoomaker noted that "the 27 finalists in this
year’s General Douglas MacArthur Award competition are truly an amazing group."
He said "they have earned the right to lead our Army’s most valued resource, our
Soldiers."
Beginning his remarks, Mr. Phillips said he was "honored to stand before such
a magnificent group of young officers who carry forward the legacy of General
Douglas MacArthur. These officers represent the best our Army and our nation
have to offer." Director Phillips spoke of the changing mission of our military.
Addressing the award recipients, he said, "During your active duty service you
will be part of the greatest transformation our Armed Services have ever
experienced. Our enemy has changed; the threat to our national security has
changed. Therefore the mission of our military must change and is changing."
Director Phillips referred to a briefing this past January he had received from
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on the 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review. He remarked
that the 2006 QDR "reflects a process of change that has gathered momentum and a
great deal more is underway, all in the midst of a continuing Global War on
Terror." He noted that of the 17 initiatives outlined in the report, only two
named any branch of our Armed Forces; and both named the U.S. Army.
General Peter J. Schoomaker, Captain Joel E. Cahill’s widow and Foundation Director Conoly Phillips
"This says to me that the biggest transformation will take
place in the Army, and you will have the opportunity to help plan, develop,
integrate and execute the transformation of the U.S. Army."
The 2005 recipients of the MacArthur Army Leadership Awards
are:
CPT Kevin S. Beagle, Forces Command
CW2 Douglas M. Berg, Georgia Army National Guard
CPT Rhett A. Blackmon, Forces Command
CPT Robert G. Born, Forces Command
CPT Javontka R. Branch, Virginia Army National Guard
CPT Joel E. Cahill, Forces Command
CPT Michael E. Child, Forces Command
CW2 James A. Clark, USAR, 77th Regional
Readiness Command
CPT Russell F. Dubose, USAR, 81st
Regional Readiness Command
CPT Robert C. Eldridge, U.S. Army Special Operations Command
CPT Daniel J. Glanz, USAR, U.S. Army Civil Affairs &
Psychological
Operations Command
CPT Caroline K. Horton, U.S. Army Criminal Investigation
Command
CPT Doug A. Houston, Iowa Army National Guard
CW2 Jason W. Latteri, U.S. Army Special Operations Command
CPT Todd M. Lindner, Kentucky Army National Guard
CPT William J. Miller, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
CPT James A. Moyes, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command
CPT Timothy R. Mungie, U.S. Army Pacific Command
CPT Neil O. Oscarson, Nevada Army National Guard
MAJ Matthew S. Palmer, U.S. Army Europe
CPT Hugo F. Santillan Rosado, USAR, 65th
Regional Readiness Command
CPT Darrell S. Schuster, USAR, 88th
Regional Readiness Command
CPT Jeffrey C. Searcey, Nebraska Army National Guard
CPT Scott H. Southworth, Wisconsin Army National Guard
1LT Brady A. Spees, USAR, 88th Regional
Readiness Command
CPT Virginia J. Venturi, Forces Command
1LT Matthew P. Verett, USAR, 108th Division
(Institutional Training)

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