http://www.eucom.mil/english/fullstory.asp?article=NATO-forces-march-Kosovo-Iraq-Afghanistan-memory

United States European Command
June 8, 2010

NATO forces march in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan in memory of fallen
Sgt. 1st Class Michael Hagburg, 116th Public Affairs
Detachment

CAMP BONDSTEEL, Kosovo: Stepping off at precisely 4:38 p.m., soldiers at Camp 
Bondsteel marched together June 6 to remember those who have died serving in 
the Global War on Terrorism and all conflicts.

The march was held in conjunction with a memorial march in Bismarck, N.D. 
Together, the marches mark the date and time two members of the North Dakota 
National Guard's 1-188th Air Defense Artillery Security Forces were killed in 
2006. Army Sgt. Travis Van Zoest, 21, Bismarck, N.D., and Army Spc. Curtis 
Mehrer, 21, Bismarck, N.D., died when their vehicle struck an improvised 
explosive device in Afghanistan.

The first memorial march was held in Bismarck in 2007 to honor Van Zoest, 
Mehrer,  Army Cpl. Nathan J. Goodiron, Mandaree, N.D., and Army Cpl. 
Christopher K. Kleinwatcher, Wahpeton, N.D., all 1-188th members who were 
killed in Afghanistan.  It has since evolved into an event that honors all 
fallen servicemembers.
....
Army Chief Warrant Officer Kevin Mehrer, Bismarck N.D., the father of Army Spc. 
Mehrer, led the march at Camp Bondsteel.  His wife, Joyce, led the march in 
Bismarck, while members of the 1-188th deployed in Afghanistan and Iraq held 
simultaneous marches in their locations.

Chief Mehrer, who is deployed to Kosovo and works in the MNBG E logistics 
section, said that it was a beautiful day for the march and that the turnout, 
both by American and multinational soldiers, was "awesome."

"I didn't expect to see so many multinational countries involved," he said. 
"It's a very good tribute because it's not just for the four soldiers in the 
ADA, it's for all the soldiers."

Army 1st Lt. Jay Sheldon, a MNBG E staff officer who headed up the group that 
organized the march, said more than 400 people participated, including 
servicemembers from the United States, Poland, Turkey, Denmark, Ukraine and 
Switzerland.

"There were more people here than I thought there would be, especially from the 
multinational countries," said Army 1st Lt. Janet Masseth, Minot, N.D., who 
helped organize the march. "It was nice to see that we all have something in 
common and we can lean on each other."

At the opening ceremony, Dohrmann noted that June 6 was an important day in 
military history, the anniversary of the D-Day invasion in 1944 and the opening 
of the World War I Battle of Belleau Wood in 1918.

"There's a lot of significance to the day and that's what makes it all the 
better," said Army Lt. Col. David Skalicky, Bismarck, N.D.  "It was incredible 
to see our multinational partners and to share with them over the course of the 
march."

Skalicky said that he knew Mehrer and Van Zoest from their earliest days as 
recruits in the Guard, and the Danish soldier he marched with had lost one of 
his comrades in Afghanistan only five days ago.
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