Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Iowa father, son serve together in Afghanistan

    Iowa father, son serve together in Afghanistan

    Courtesy Photo | U.S. Army Pfc. Andrew Starkey and his dad U.S. Army Spc. Steve Starkey, both of...... read more read more

    PAKTYA PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN

    01.05.2011

    Courtesy Story

    Combined Joint Task Force 101

    By: 1st Lt. Nicholas Rasmussen

    PAKTYA PROVINCE, Afghanistan – Most soldiers who are deployed miss their homes. But for U.S. Army Spc. Steven Starkey and U.S. Army Pfc. Andrew Starkey, a large part of what the word “home” represents is just a five-minute walk up the hill.

    Steven, a 40-year-old mechanic by trade in Council Bluffs, Iowa, works as a wheeled-vehicle mechanic attached to Company A, 1st Battalion, 168th Infantry Regiment, which currently falls under 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division. His son Andrew works in Company A’s kitchen preparing breakfast, lunch and dinner seven days a week. Both Starkeys are assigned to Company F, 334th Support Battalion out of Red Oak, Iowa.

    For both Starkeys, joining the Iowa Army National Guard was a choice they made to serve their country and fulfill some personal goals.

    Steven enlisted in the active-duty Army in 1989 as a heavy equipment mobile tactical truck wheel mechanic. He was slated to serve during Operation Desert Storm when personal issues at home prevented his involvement.

    He was young and dealing with a troubled marriage when his chain of command made the determination to let him remain in the rear as his unit prepared to support Desert Storm.

    “Looking back, I don’t feel I was mature enough to handle the task at hand,” he said, adding that his brief service helped him mature and gave him cause to consider future opportunities for service.

    The events of Sept. 11 reignited a simmering ambition for Steven.

    “I felt like I had left something on the table, an obligation I had left incomplete” he said.

    So almost 15 years later, he began the process to rejoin the Army, eventually serving with the Iowa National Guard. The process wasn’t easy.

    Steven had remarried and had three additional children, daughters Ashley and Rachel and stepson Jon, when he decided to reenlist for active duty. Despite trying three times, the active Army would not accept his application since he had more than two dependants.

    Steven gave up trying for active duty after the third attempt. Then in spring of 2007, he met his daughter’s soccer coach, a staff sergeant in the Iowa National Guard. The soccer coach informed Steven that the Iowa National Guard had waivers and programs to allow people in situations such as Steven’s to join.

    “A month after speaking with [the soccer coach] I was at [the military entrance processing station] swearing in for service,” Steven recalled.

    A year later, Andrew raised his right hand and made the oath to serve his country, but he had a different reason: his daughter Kyra.

    Being in the Iowa Army National Guard has given Andrew a means to provide healthcare and child support to his only daughter.

    “I plan to start a savings account with the money I’m making (on deployment) to help pay for her college,” said Andrew

    Joining the Guard came with some unanticipated benefits for Andrew.

    “I see myself grow every day,” said Andrew, “whether or not I enjoy it all the time.”

    Before making his commitment to serve in the Iowa Guard, Andrew had a loose-cannon mentality, as his father put it. He was an unruly youth who often did not think before he acted. That was nine months ago. Now, six months into deployment, Andrew is a much different person.

    “He’s level-headed and can take criticism constructively like an adult,” said Steven, who went on to say witnessing this change has been one of the most rewarding benefits to come out of being on this deployment together.

    Steven said sometimes a father has to be a father, regardless of rank, and stick up for his son.

    “It’s hard to keep the fatherly instinct at bay when I see my son getting in trouble by his boss,” said Steven. “I often have to swallow my pride and know my place.”

    The Starkeys act more like brothers or best friends when talking with one another, calling each other by their last name and making fun of just about anything the other says. Despite being co-located at the same company, the Starkeys still feel as though they could spend more time together.

    As trying as some days may get, the Starkeys usually find some time throughout the week to hang out and unwind together, giving them a chance to solidify, in a unique way, a bond that can only be made between a father and son deployed together.

    “The one thing that everyone else wants ... we have,” said Andrew. “A family member on deployment.”

    LEAVE A COMMENT

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 01.05.2011
    Date Posted: 01.15.2011 04:31
    Story ID: 63596
    Location: PAKTYA PROVINCE, AF

    Web Views: 73
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN