Remembering 9/11 ... Strengthens Employees' Patriotism
by Beth Reece, Defense Logistics Agency
September 8, 2021
United Airlines Flight 93 was soaring over
Pennsylvania en route to Washington, D.C., on September 11, 2001,
when then-Defense Logistics Agency Director Navy Vice Adm. Keith
Lippert ordered an announcement for all McNamara Headquarters
Complex employees to shelter in the auditorium.
Planes had already crashed into the twin
towers of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and where the
fourth plane was headed only God knew.
The World Trade Center burns in the background of New York City’s Empire State Building
on September 11, 2001. Both World Trade Center towers were attacked as a result of a highly coordinated al-Qaida plot. (U.S.
Department of Defense photo)
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"The size of our building was a concern to
me. It could've been a target," Lippert said two months shy of the
attack's 20th anniversary.
Fear flooded the building's
basement as workers crowded together, some openly sobbing with worry
that loved ones working at the Pentagon or on temporary duty at the
World Trade Center had been caught in the horror. Others gazed in
shock at overhead TVs, wondering how such tragedy and blood could
spill over American soil.
John Morris, the former supervisor
of the Document Automation Printing Service at the Pentagon, was
watching news anchors report on the devastation in New York City
when he and his staff heard what sounded like heavy furniture moving
on the floor above. Stepping outside the office, Morris saw
employees running, one warning of a bomb explosion. It was the
hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 slamming into the building's
southwest corridor.
Back at DLA Headquarters, Shirley
Bergman, then a contract specialist for alternative fuels, agonized
and wept knowing her husband was at a Marriott between the two
110-story World Trade Center towers interviewing senior economists
for the U.S. Census Bureau. And Matthew Woodruff, now a general
supply specialist at DLA Distribution San Joaquin, California, was
just a sophomore in high school. All but one of his teachers halted
class as students watched the horrific story unfold via news
broadcasts.
"I still remember how vivid it was. There was a lot of stuff my
parents wouldn't even let me watch on TV because of the nature of
the event," he said, admitting that, like most Americans, he'd never
even heard the word al-Qaida until that day.
Lippert made
another announcement that employees should go home soon after Flight
93 crashed in a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Most were eager
to return the next day even as the nation mourned and despite delays
from increased security.
"We always talked about warfighters
first, but this really brought it home," he said. "The whole country
responded more patriotically than we'd seen in the past, and I think
everyone felt the importance of what they were doing."
Homeland
Response
The Customer Interaction Center, where agents help
callers place orders and find details like supply availability and
delivery status, went to 24/7 operations on 9/11. Shamon Pratt, a
customer service specialist who was then an agent, remembers the
phone lines being eerily quiet for a couple of days before they rang
off the hook, forcing management to hire more agents to handle the
influx of calls.
Customer Interaction Center agents help Defense Logistics
Agency customers track down details on supply availability
and delivery status. The center went to 24/7 operations on
September 11, 2001. (U.S. Department of Defense photo by
Beth Reece)
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Employees across the agency scrambled to assist first
responders. James Burke, a driver at DLA Distribution Norfolk
volunteered to drive cots to the Pentagon for rescue crews working
around the clock. Workers at DLA Distribution San Joaquin,
California, and DLA Distribution Susquehanna, Pennsylvania,
immediately began supplying items like boots, first aid kits and
tents. And DLA Disposition Services staff provided gear including
flashlights, shirts and sleeping mats requested by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency for recovery teams in New York and
Washington.
When the U.S. launched airstrikes Oct. 7 at
al-Qaida and Taliban training camps in Afghanistan, acquisition
specialists were already working with manufacturers to meet
anticipated needs for aircraft parts, food and other items. DLA's
business doubled from $16 to $32 billion within a year of the
attack, then $40 billion a year later. On the Front Lines
The agency took logistics to the battlefield by deploying DLA
Support Teams to work alongside uniformed customers. By the height
of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2008, more than 40 employees
worked on DSTs in Afghanistan, Iraq and Kuwait to provide fuel,
contract management, disposal services and asset visibility while
fielding the latest body armor.
Marian Hunter, a weapons
systems support manager for DLA Aviation, deployed nine times before
retiring in 2017. Being able to attend unit maintenance meetings and
talk face-to-face with troops helped her better solve issues.
Marian
Hunter (left) and Air Force Lt. Col. Darlene Sanders pose for a
photo while serving together on the Defense Logistics Agency
Contingency Support Team-Afghanistan in 2008. (Defense Logistics Agency photo)
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"The end result is what we all want — well-equipped,
well-protected warfighters," she said then.
Woodruff is
another of the hundreds of DLA employees who've since left home to
support forces in harm's way. He deployed for eight months in April
2011 to DLA Distribution's theater consolidating shipping point at
Forward Operating Base Deh Dadi II, where he helped distribute the
material to units on the ground.
The nation celebrated a
victory during Woodruff's time in the warzone, and again, he saw it
unfold via television. At breakfast in the chow hall On May 2, he
watched President Barack Obama announce that U.S. Navy Seals had
killed Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of 9/11.
"I could have
helped deliver the helicopter part that was used to transport those
who found him. It was the littlest things — screws, washers, o-rings
— that had the biggest impact there," he said. "When you realize the
part you help provide means there's one less helicopter down, it
becomes more than just a job."
The Human Toll
Twenty years
after the tragedy that tested DLA's ability to support simultaneous
wars, Lippert still remembers stepping into the Pentagon one day
after the attack. He was there to meet with senior officials on the
amount of money DLA would have for the next year, a meeting he was
originally scheduled to attend the afternoon of 9/11.
"You could hear a pin
drop. You could still smell the smoke, and there were armed guards
all over the place with rifles and machine guns, something I never
thought I'd see," he said.
DLA employees who've been in Iraq
and Afghanistan in the past 20 years say their pre-deployment
training left no doubt their lives would be at risk. They deployed
anyway, and all but two came home alive. Stephen Byus and Krissie
Davis were both killed while serving in Afghanistan.
The
Promise: Never Forget
The vicious, unprovoked attacks that
ripped apart Americans' sense of security 20 years ago resulted in
the death of almost 3,000 people, 125 of them service members or
Defense Department civilians and contractors. Those attacks remain
the deadliest terrorist act in America's history, and aftershocks of
the atrocity ripple through lives even today.
A section of the Pentagon lies in
ruins following the deadly terrorist attacks in which
hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the
Pentagon on September 11, 2001. The attack killed all 58
passengers and six crewmembers on the flight and 125 people
in the Pentagon. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 1st Class
Michael W. Pendergrass)
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Like Lippert, current DLA Director Navy Vice
Adm. Michelle Skubic points to employees' courage, patriotism and
resilience.
"Just like the workforce of today, they
understood that on America's worst day, DLA must be at its best,"
she said this week in a message to the agency.
The sharp memories of 9/11 urge
employees like Woodruff to continually rededicate themselves to
DLA's mission. American pride is alive and strong among DLA's
members.
"9/11 taught us that we need to be resilient and not
become complacent," Woodruff said. "It's like a game of chess. We
need to be steps ahead of our adversaries."
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