Friday, December 14, 2007

At 61, Father Joins Navy to Honor Son who Died in Iraq

By Ted Roelofs, Newhouse News Service, from the Houston Chronicle:

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. — Bill Krissoff [above, right] never figured to be in a position to look President Bush in the eye and ask a favor.

But there he was, sitting in a room in Reno, Nev., with Bush and several other families who had lost soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan.

His son, Marine Lt. Nathan Krissoff, 25, [above, second from right] had been killed in a December 2006 roadside bomb explosion in Iraq.

Months later, Krissoff came to a carefully considered decision: He would honor his son by leaving a flourishing orthopedic practice, a comfortable life, to join the Navy as a combat surgeon.

But his application for an age waiver was mired in paperwork.

So, on that August day in Reno, when Bush went around the room and asked if there was anything he could do, Krissoff spoke up.

A request for help

"I said, 'Yeah, there is one thing. I want to join the Navy medical corps and I gotta get some help here,' " recalled Krissoff, 61, who lives in California, near Reno.

Three days after that meeting, the Navy called.

His waiver had been granted.

Krissoff was commissioned as a lieutenant commander Nov. 18, and he expects to attend officer development school in January. Attached to the 4th Medical Battalion, he plans to join a combat surgical team and hopes to serve in Iraq.

It is a story of loss and sacrifice being told on national media outlets. But Krissoff considers himself anything but a hero. He reserves words like that for people such as his son.

"The loss of a son puts a certain perspective on things.

"It's my turn to serve. I'm honored and privileged that the Navy will have me in the medical corps," Krissoff said. [ . . . ]

more from Tony Perry of the Los Angeles Times: [ . . . ]

Krissoff concedes a kind of role-reversal is at play. "Usually it's the father who tries to lead the sons by example," he said. "In this case, my sons led me."

And what would his son Nathan think of his desire to enlist and deploy to a war zone?

"He'd just say, 'Way to go, Pops,' " said Krissoff, a slight quaver edging into his voice.

OYE Comment: Wow.

Operation Yellow Elephant salutes the entire Krissoff family, including son Austin [above, left], also a Marine officer, Mrs. Christine Krissoff [above, second from left], LCDR Krissoff's wife and the mother of both, and his mother, Mrs. Sylvia Krissoff. We thank them for their dedication and service to our nation and wish them all the best.

2 Comments:

At 14 December, 2007 15:55, Anonymous Anonymous said...

And all the while, our super-manly "real" American warrior friends Jonah Goldberg, Matthew Continetti, Jason Mattera, and Ben Ferguson continue to believe that military eligible college brats fighting the "battle of ideas" and "the war at home" while letting others risk their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan is heroic and patriotic.

They have a lot to learn from the Krissoffs.

 
At 16 December, 2007 20:58, Blogger Mad Man Mikey said...

While I am sure it has been said in this place one hundred times before I will say it again -

Not marshalling a draft to fight this was on the scale they want to fight it on is an attempt by those in power to not saddle their next generation of "leaders" with the mantle of "draft dodger" that may hamper their future runs for office.

My personal peave aside, may Heaven protect and keep the Krissoff and its soldiers.

 

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