Chapter 26 — Joining the Soviet 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment (OPFOR) at Fort Irwin (1982–1984)

1LT Anthony Carbone in OPFOR uniform in front of a Soviet style T72 VISMOD at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You See — A memoir of Service, Shame and the Search for Truth

A New Life Begins

Mariann and I were married October 30, 1982. For the first time in my life, I felt the weight and joy of building a life with someone else. The Army, of course, had no intention of slowing down to let me savor it. As soon as the wedding was behind us, I was already thinking about orders, logistics, and the next assignment. I had been stationed at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California, since November 1981. Now it was time to bring my new bride west and set up our first home together.

Mariann Schmitz Carbone at her home in Wheaton, Illinois before moving to Fort Irwin, California with her new husband, 2LT Anthony J. Carbone in November 1982.
Mariann in front of her car at her home in Wheaton, Illinois before leaving for Fort Irwin, California

Visit to Naval Station Great Lakes to Ship Our Household Goods

I had to arrange for the shipment of our household goods from Mariann’s hometown of Wheaton, Illinois. Armed with a folder of official orders, I drove to the Naval Station Great Lakes. I found the Personal Property Department. It was barely 0700, but a long line of service members — at least a hundred — had already formed. I dutifully took my place at the end of it.

A Navy Petty Officer soon noticed me and walked over with a puzzled expression. “Sir, what are you doing?” he asked.  “I’m in line to get my household goods shipped,” I replied. He tilted his head, squinting as if he hadn’t heard me correctly.  “But, Sir… what are you doing here?” Again, I repeated myself, and this time he shook his head.  “Sir, please follow me. Officers do not wait in line.”

Learning the Navy Way

He led me to his desk and motioned for me to sit down. After reviewing my orders, he began a rapid-fire series of questions: How much did I plan to ship? How many dependents? How many bedrooms? Any vehicles or heavy equipment? I answered them as best I could.

Then he asked when I wanted my household goods picked up. “How much warning time do you need?” I asked. His tone sharpened. “That is not what I asked you, Sir. I asked you when you want your household goods picked up.”  I hesitated.  “Is tomorrow morning possible?” He nodded. “No problem. The packers will be there at 0700. You’ll also see someone from this office to check on the move. Good luck, Sir.”

And sure enough, the next morning, a team of professional movers arrived at Mariann’s home right on time. As I watched them pack and load our things, I couldn’t help but think that maybe I had joined the wrong branch of service. The U.S. Navy certainly treated its officers differently from the Army.

A Hasty Journey West

Unlike the carefree solo trip I had taken along Route 66 just a year earlier, the drive west with Mariann was hurried and utilitarian. There was no time for sightseeing or detours this time. Duty was calling, and I was eager to get back to work. We drove nearly straight through to California. Mile after mile, trading the familiar Midwest landscapes for the vast, empty expanses of the Mojave Desert.

New Government Quarters at Fort Irwin

When we finally arrived at Fort Irwin, I checked us into the Visiting Officers’ Quarters. We stayed until I could sign for on-post housing and our household goods arrived. Soon, we were given a small yellow stucco house in the company-grade officers’ neighborhood. It wasn’t large, but it was ours. A palm tree stood proudly in front of the house, and low desert shrubs circled the yard. Over time, I even managed to coax a small patch of green lawn from the dry ground. It was a small victory that earned us the “Quarters of the Month” award.

Mariann in front of our quarters in the Company Grade Officer housing area at Fort Irwin.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Our Company Grade Officer Quarters at Fort Irwin
Mariann near the big palm tree on our quarters property at Fort Irwin.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Mariann Fixes Up Our Home

Mariann threw herself into making the house a home. She transformed that little stucco building into a cozy, welcoming space — curtains on the windows, our wedding gifts neatly arranged, the smells of her cooking drifting through the rooms. It felt like the beginning of something hopeful and new.

Interior of our government quarters at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Interior of our quarters at Fort Irwin
Interior of our government quarters at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

But that hope was quickly overshadowed by the reality of my job. Almost as soon as we had unpacked, I received new orders: I was being reassigned to the Opposing Forces — the OPFOR — to join the Soviet 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment. I was excited by the professional opportunity. This was a chance to prove myself in a real combat unit and to learn the art of large-scale battle from the inside out. But it also marked the start of a grueling new phase of life.

2LT Anthony J. Carbone in Battle Dress Uniform (BDUs) in our government quarters at Fort Irwin.  Grandfather clock was a wedding gift from my father.
The last time I had a 28-inch waist. Grandfather clock was a wedding gift from my father.

The irony was not lost on me: while Mariann was pouring her heart into creating our first home together, I was already being pulled away from it. In truth, I can barely remember being there after that. The OPFOR’s mission consumed nearly every waking hour. The National Training Center was the most realistic, intense combat training environment in the Army, and once I stepped into that world, the rhythms of normal life seemed to vanish.

New Wife, New Boss, New Rank

In the midst of all these changes, leadership at the National Training Center was shifting too. My boss, LTC Billy Jo Piper, received new orders and departed, and LTC Gary Roderick assumed command of DPTSEC (Directorate of Plans, Training, Security, and Evaluation Center). Under his leadership, the tempo of operations only increased.

On 24 November 1982, LTC Roderick promoted me to First Lieutenant, a milestone that Mariann proudly witnessed. She pinned the silver bars onto my shoulders herself — a simple gesture that meant a great deal to both of us.

2LT Anthony J. Carbone being promoted to First Lieutenant by his boss LTC Gary Roderick (Chief of DPTSEC) and wife Mariann Carbone pinning on new silver bar.
LTC Roderick promoting me to 1st Lieutenant (with Mariann pinning on one of my new silver bars).

Assigned to the Polar Bears

Just a week later, on 30 November 1982, I received orders assigning me to the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment (Mechanized) — the storied “Polar Bears.”

6th Battalion, 31st Infantry (Mechanized), Polar Bears wiith motto “Pro Patria” (For Country).  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
6th Battalion, 31st Infantry (Mechanized), Polar Bears wiith motto “Pro Patria” (For Country)

The 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry had a long and distinguished lineage, stretching back to the early 20th century. Nicknamed the “Polar Bears” for their service in the bitter cold of the Russian Civil War, they had fought in the Philippines, Korea, and Vietnam. Our history included the surrender to the Japanese forces at Bataan, Philippines, on April 9, 1942, with members of the regiment forced to march and die in the infamous Bataan Death March. Now, at Fort Irwin, they carried on that legacy in a new and unconventional way: by becoming the Soviet enemy.

I was stepping into my role as Battalion Chemical Officer and Assistant S3 (Operations Officer) just as the OPFOR mission was hitting its stride. What lay ahead was unlike anything I had ever experienced in the Army — a world where the Cold War was fought every day in the blazing Mojave sun, where we wore the enemy’s insignia, studied their doctrine, and became the adversary our own Army would have to defeat.

Chemical Officer for the 6th Battalion 31st Infantry

When I received my assignment orders to the Headquarters & Headquarters Company (HHC) of the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry (Mechanized), I knew my life was about to change. This wasn’t headquarters-level planning work anymore. This was the heart of a real combat unit — the OPFOR battalion that served as the spearhead of the Soviet 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment. My official title was Battalion Chemical Officer and Assistant S3 (Plans, Operations, and Training), but in reality, my job was to immerse myself completely in the mindset, doctrine, and tactics of the Red Army.

6th Battalion 31st Infantry Chain of Command

don’t even recall much interaction with the Headquarters Company commander — our paths rarely crossed. My daily life revolved around the battalion leadership and the small, tightly knit team that made up the S3 shop. At the top was LTC Joseph Stull, our battalion commander and my senior rater. He was a big, burly African-American infantry officer — the kind of man whose physical presence filled a room before he even spoke. A combat veteran with the intellect and bearing of a scholar (I swear he had his Ph.D.), LTC Stull commanded with authority, calm confidence, and an unwavering focus on combat readiness. Every conversation with him left me sharper, more focused, and more determined to measure up.

Parade field at Fort Irwin, California.  I am one of the officers in the first rank of HQs & Headquarters Company, 6–31st Infantry Pass-In-Review.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
I am one of the officers in the first rank of HQs & Headquarters Company, 6–31st Infantry Pass-In-Review

S3 Major David Ozolek

My direct boss — and the single most influential officer of my early career — was Major David J. Ozolek, our S3. If LTC Stull was the embodiment of battlefield command presence, Major Ozolek was the strategic mind that made our OPFOR battalion so formidable. He was a crusty, no-nonsense Vietnam veteran infantry officer — but also an Ivy League–educated intellectual with a deep, almost academic grasp of Soviet doctrine. Major Ozelek had studied their playbook inside and out and could think like a Soviet commander. He authored dozens of articles in Armor Magazine on Soviet mechanized and armored operations in desert warfare, and every one of them reflected the brilliant, unconventional mind that I saw at work every day.

My immedicate boss/rater, Major David Ozelek, S3 of the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Major David Ozelek, S3, 6–31st Infantry

Major Ozolek became my teacher, mentor, and model. He taught me how to write operations orders and fragmentary orders with precision and clarity, how to anticipate an enemy’s maneuver two steps ahead, and how to think like a Red Army staff officer. He taught me what it truly meant to be a junior officer in a combat unit — not just the tactics and doctrine, but the character, discipline, and grit it required. I never told him how much I admired him, but to this day, I measure much of what I know about leadership against the standard he set.

MSG Aikens (S3 NCO)

We had another officer in the S3 shop — a Captain Scott, who served as the assistant S3 — who had been living in the BOQ with me, Major Zupan, and Lieutenant Hong. But the soul of our team, the man who made everything work, was Master Sergeant Aikens, our senior NCO.

I had met Aikens a year earlier, on my very first day at Fort Irwin, when he had greeted me with a booming “Airborne, Lieutenant!” He was the walking embodiment of an Airborne infantryman — lean, carved out of steel, with a waist that couldn’t have been more than twenty-eight inches and the strength to do a hundred pushups without breaking a sweat. He radiated confidence and positivity, the kind that made even the toughest days feel manageable.

MSG Aikens took me under his wing and taught me how to survive — not just in the field, but in the Army. How to navigate the unspoken rules of the officer–NCO relationship, how to prepare for the unexpected, and how to stay one step ahead. I owe much of my survival — and my success — in the Army to him.

My Driver, Corporal Ricky Loftis

And then there was Corporal Ricky Loftis, my jeep driver. Ricky was a pale, freckle-faced redhead from Tennessee, a country boy with a GED and a mechanical mind that could put any engineer to shame. He could disassemble our M151 jeep and every piece of its communications gear blindfolded, then reassemble it faster than most soldiers could read the manual. With Ricky on my team, I never had to worry about our equipment failing — or about finding my way to the next meeting on time.

M151 quarter ton truck, better known as the Jeep, in desert camouflage.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

With a team like that — Ozolek, Scott, Aikens, Loftis, and the rest — I couldn’t help but excel. Every day was an education, a test, and an adventure rolled into one.

A Day in the S3 Shop

Life in the S3 shop moved at a relentless pace. We weren’t just simulating war — we were living it, planning it, breathing it. Every day was structured around operations orders, rehearsals, staff meetings, and briefings. The mission was constant: prepare for the next rotation, sharpen our tactics, and ensure the OPFOR was ready to give every visiting U.S. unit the toughest, most realistic fight of their careers.

1LT Carbone, Battalion Chemical Officer/Assistant S3, 6–31st Infantry outside S3 Shop. At the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Wearing OPFOR uniform.
1LT Carbone, Battalion Chemical Officer/Assistant S3, 6–31st Infantry outside S3 Shop.

A typical day might start with MSG Aikens glancing at his watch — which he always wore with the face on the underside of his wrist, just like my father — and barking, “LT! You’ve got a meeting with the Post Commander in fifteen mikes!”

“About what?” I’d shout back, scrambling to gather my notes.

“Ricky’s got your folder in the jeep. Your call sign’s written on the windshield,” Aikens would reply without missing a beat.

I’d thank him and head for the door. “LT!” he’d call after me again, tossing me a cold canteen of water. “Thanks, Top!” I’d reply with a grin as I hustled out the door.

Sure enough, Ricky would be waiting by the jeep, engine running, folder ready. “Here’s your briefing packet, sir,” he’d say, handing me exactly what I needed before I even had to ask. Everything was thought of, planned for, anticipated. All I had to do was climb in and focus on the mission.

It was a great feeling — to be part of a team that worked so seamlessly, so professionally, that I felt unstoppable. It wasn’t just that they were good at their jobs. They believed in what we were doing. We weren’t just playing war. We were preparing the U.S. Army for the real thing.

My Office in the S3 Shop

Sitting at my desk in the S3 Shop, writing battle plans and working on the monthly SECRET Unit Status Report for the Pentagon.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Sitting at my desk in the S3 Shop, writing battle plans and working on the monthly SECRET Unit Status Report for the Pentagon

Operation of the 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment

Although my official Army orders identified me as a First Lieutenant, Chemical Officer and Assistant S3 assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry, my real assignment — the one that would define my life at Fort Irwin — was far stranger and far more immersive.

My operational posting was as a Senior Lieutenant in the Regimental Headquarters of the 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment of the People’s Democratic Republic of Krasnovia — a fictional Soviet-bloc country invented by the U.S. Army. Krasnovia didn’t exist on any map, but at the National Training Center it was treated with the seriousness and gravity of a real-world adversary. Its purpose was clear: to provide American troops with the most realistic enemy possible in large-scale Cold War training scenarios.

Socialist Republic of Krasnovia

Flag of the Socialist Republic of Krasnovia, the fictional country of the Opposing Forces (OPFOR) at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Flag of the Socialist Republic of Krasnovia

In this alternate universe, Krasnovia was a hostile, expansionist state bent on destabilizing its democratic neighbor, the Republic of Mojave — a thinly veiled stand-in for Western-aligned nations. Our job was to embody the Warsaw Pact threat in every conceivable way: tactics, language, doctrine, even appearance. And we did.

Slides from the briefing on Soviet Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare that I used at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  BIography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Slides from the briefing on Soviet Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare that I used at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  BIography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Slides from the briefing on Soviet Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare that I used at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  BIography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Slides from the briefing on Soviet Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare that I used at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  BIography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Slides from the briefing on Soviet Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare that I used at the National Training Center

32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment

The 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment (MRR) — the backbone of the OPFOR (Opposing Forces) — was made up primarily of two U.S. combat units: the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry (Mechanized) and the 1st Battalion, 73rd Armor. Supporting us was a specialized technical intelligence detachment. In 1982, a small group from the 11th Military Intelligence Company was permanently assigned to Fort Irwin. Their mission evolved into what became the 203rd Military Intelligence Battalion (Provisional) — a unique organization tasked with providing the most accurate Soviet capabilities possible on American soil.

11th Military Intelligence Company

The TECHINT (technical intelligence) soldiers were unlike anyone else at the National Training Center. They operated genuine Soviet equipment — from communications intercept systems to armored vehicles — and they were deeply involved with the Army’s Intelligence and Threat Analysis Center, ensuring that everything we did mirrored Soviet doctrine. Their work extended beyond training: they analyzed captured foreign weaponry, reverse-engineered systems, and advised on how real Soviet units might respond in battle.

Authentic Soviet BTR 60-PB at the National Training Center operated by the 11th Military Intelligence Company.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
Authentic Soviet BTR 60-PB at the National Training Center operated by the 11th Military Intelligence Company

OPFOR Uniform

For us in the OPFOR, this meant immersion on a level that bordered on theatrical. We didn’t just “play” Soviets — we became them. We wore Soviet-style uniforms: simple olive-drab fatigues, black berets adorned with a red star, and brass insignia representing our branch. Infantry soldiers bore crossed rifles. Tankers wore the armored branch symbol. And I, as the regimental chemical officer, proudly displayed the crossed retorts and benzene ring — the traditional insignia of the Chemical Corps.

1LT Anthony J. Carbone wearing his  OPFOR uniform with a black beret with my 1LT silver bar and Chemical Corps crossed retorts. The three dots on my epaulettes indicate that I am a “Soviet” Senior Lieutenant.
Wearing my OPFOR uniform with a black beret with my 1LT silver bar and Chemical Corps crossed retorts. The three dots on my epaulettes indicate that I am a “Soviet” Senior Lieutenant.

Soviet VISMODs

Our vehicles were a story unto themselves. While we had a handful of actual Soviet systems, most of what we used were American platforms converted into lookalikes through a clever system of fiberglass shells and external modifications known as VISMODs (visually modified vehicles). The old M551 Sheridan light tanks were our workhorses, transformed into mock Soviet T-72 main battle tanksBMP infantry fighting vehicles, and even ZSU 23–4 Shilka anti-aircraft platforms. From a distance — especially through the dust and chaos of battle — they were almost indistinguishable from the real thing.

M551 Sheridan Tank as a Soviet T-72 Main Battle Tank (VISMOD).  National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
M551 Sheridan Tank as a Soviet T-72 Main Battle Tank (VISMOD)
Line of M551 VISMODs with Soviet BMP followed by ZSU 23–4 and several T-72 Tanks.  National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Line of M551 VISMODs with Soviet BMP followed by ZSU 23–4 and several T-72 Tanks
M551 Sheridan Tank as a Soviet ZSU 23–4 Shilka Anti-Aircraft Tracked Vehicle.  National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
M551 Sheridan Tank as a Soviet ZSU 23–4 Shilka Anti-Aircraft Tracked Vehicle

What impressed me most was how seriously everyone took the deception. This wasn’t a game. Units arriving from across the Army — infantry, armor, aviation, logistics, special forces — were coming here to test themselves against the most dangerous enemy they might ever face. And it was our duty to be that enemy: ruthless, cunning, unpredictable, and thoroughly Soviet in doctrine and execution.

Soviet Tactics

The 32nd Guards MRR operated like a true Soviet regiment. We organized our forces into motorized rifle battalions supported by tank companiesartillery batteries, and air defense assets. Operations were planned according to Soviet tactical manuals, and battle plans were written in the language and logic of Warsaw Pact doctrine. We used map symbols, terminology, and radio procedures that mirrored those of the Red Army. Even our command briefings and field orders followed Soviet structure and emphasis.

Although my primary billet was as the regimental chemical officer, my responsibilities extended well beyond that. In many ways, I functioned as a regular combat officer. I was trained intensively in Soviet operational doctrine by Major Ozelek, our Regimental S3 (operations officer), and by Lieutenant Mike Pierson, our brilliant S2 (intelligence officer). Together, we pored over unclassified translations of Soviet field manuals — dense, doctrinal texts that detailed how Soviet regiments planned, maneuvered, attacked, and exploited weaknesses. That knowledge became the backbone of the battle plans and orders we wrote for the 32nd Guards MRR.

Soviet Motorized Infantry Battalion formation diagram from FM 100-2-1 "The Soviet Army--Operations and Tactics" used at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Soviet Motorized Infantry Battalion formation diagram from FM 100-2-1 "The Soviet Army--Operations and Tactics" used at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

I studied the Soviet Military, with focus on both Soviet Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare operations, as well as Soviet Military Intelligence. I read everything that I could both classified and unclassified. Some of my favorite books were written by a Soviet GRU Officer, Viktor Suvorov, who defected from the Soviet Army in 1978 and wrote famous books about the inner workings of Soviet military and intelligence operations. I ended up with secondary specialties in Nuclear Target Analysis and Soviet Counterintelligence.

Tactical Operations Center (TOC)

When the training rotations shifted into high gear and the mock wars began, my battlefield role intensified. During those weeks, I ran the Regimental Tactical Operations Center (TOC) — a tracked command vehicle connected to a sprawling tent complex that housed the nerve center of our operations. Inside were dozens of military radios, map boards, grease-pencil overlays, and situation charts — a chaotic symphony of information flowing in from every corner of the desert battlefield.

1LT Anthony J. Carbone (Battalion Chemical Officer/Assistant S3) Sitting on the S3’s Jeep at the Tactical Operations Center (TOC) somewhere near Death Valley
Sitting on the S3’s Jeep at the Tactical Operations Center (TOC) somewhere near Death Valley

From the TOC, 1LT Mike Pierson and I worked side by side, collecting intelligence from forward scouts, electronic intercept teams, and reconnaissance patrols. We processed and analyzed the information, building a real-time picture of the battlefield that shaped our decisions and influenced the regimental commander’s next moves. We briefed commanders, directed maneuver units, and issued fragmentary orders as the situation evolved — all while operating under the guise and doctrine of a Soviet staff.

M577 Command Post Carriers lined up to form a large Tactical Operations Center (TOC)
M577 Command Post Carriers lined up to form a large Tactical Operations Center (TOC)

24/7 Operations

It was exhausting, high-tempo work. Days bled into nights, and nights into days, under the relentless Mojave sun and freezing desert nights. I would emerge from the TOC after a 20-hour shift covered in dust and sweat, only to crawl into a sleeping bag for a few hours before returning to the radios. Month after month, this became my existence — an intense, almost dystopian cycle of planning, fighting, analyzing, and fighting again.

U.S. vehicles visually modified (VISMODs) to look like Soviet BMPs (Infantry fighting vehicles). At the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
U.S. vehicles visually modified (VISMODs) to look like Soviet BMPs (Infantry fighting vehicles). At the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
U.S. vehicles visually modified (VISMODs) to look like Soviet BMPs (Infantry fighting vehicles).

And in that strange, alternate reality — where I was an American officer living as a Soviet regimental staff officer in a fictional country — I learned more about warfare, intelligence, and command than I ever had in any classroom. It was, in every sense, the sharp edge of Cold War training.

I’m stanging in front of a Soviet style T-72 VISMOD Tank in my OPFOR uniform.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
I’m stanging in front of a Soviet style T-72 VISMOD Tank in my OPFOR uniform.

Our New Marriage on Post

The brutal tempo of life in the 32nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment took a heavy toll on my personal life — especially on my new marriage. Mariann and I had just moved into our cozy yellow stucco house when the OPFOR mission’s relentless demands consumed me. For weeks, I rarely saw her. After staggering home from the field, exhaustion overwhelmed me, leaving me only enough energy to shower, eat, and collapse into bed.

Our first Christmas together as Lt & Mrs. Carbone.  At Fort Irwin, California.  Christmas 1982.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Our first Christmas together as Lt & Mrs. Carbone

It was an especially lonely and bewildering reality for her. Mariann’s father hadn’t served in the military, and none of her close relatives had, either, so there was no family frame of reference for this strange and punishing lifestyle. The Mojave Desert — stark, isolated, and lifeless — contrasted sharply with the idyllic stories I shared with her about my childhood in Europe. Life here was not about strolling through cobblestoned streets or sipping coffee at outdoor cafés; it was about enduring blistering heat, sandstorms, and weeks of near-total solitude while her husband fought mock wars in a fictional Soviet regiment. Looking back, I honestly don’t know how she survived as long as she did.

Studying and Teaching at California State University 

To make matters worse, as if the demands of field duty weren’t enough, our battalion commander, LTC Stull, launched a college program in partnership with California State College in San Bernardino to offer classes for the soldiers of the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry during their off-duty hours. He asked Major Ozolek and me to obtain teaching credentials with Cal State so we could serve as instructors.

I qualified to teach math and basic sciences — and while I was proud of that accomplishment, it came at a steep personal cost. The teaching hours further cut into what little time I had with Mariann, and the university was nearly a two-hour drive from Fort Irwin. It meant even the rare evenings or weekends we might have spent together were swallowed up by long drives and lecture halls, widening the distance between us in ways neither of us knew how to fix.

My faculty Identification Card from California State College, at San Bernardino. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

At the same time I was teaching at Cal State, I was also enrolled in their graduate program in National Security. Alongside that, I was taking U.S. Army courses that qualified me as a Counterintelligence Officer and in Nuclear and Chemical Target Analysis. Looking back, I honestly don’t know how I found the time or energy to manage it all. What I do know is that none of it helped my marriage. I was so determined to prove myself — to follow in my father’s footsteps and become a successful Army officer — that I didn’t see the toll it was taking on my health, or on Mariann. By the time I realized what was happening, both were breaking under the strain.

Back to the War: Observer/Controller Group, Laser Tag, GPS and the Star Wars Building

I’ll never forget one particular After Action Review (AAR) session I attended inside the so-called “Star Wars Building.” The Observer/Controller (O/C) team was debriefing a recent battle with one of the visiting task force commanders, and the atmosphere was tense. The Observer/Controller, a calm but razor-sharp major, told the commander bluntly that he had lost control of his unit in the fight. The captain immediately launched into a passionate defense of his decisions, insisting that the chaos had been beyond his control. The major let him speak, then quietly said, “Let’s take a look together.”

Star Wars Building

On the enormous flat-screen monitor — something almost no one had ever seen back in 1982 — the entire battle unfolded in real time. The American plan appeared in blue graphics, the OPFOR plan in red. Each vehicle’s GPS position was displayed on the screen, complete with its unit designation. The controller pointed to one particular blue icon labeled A66 — the Alpha Company commander’s tank — and asked, “Is this your tank, Captain?” “Yes, sir. I assume so,” the officer answered, his voice suddenly less certain.

The O/C signaled for the radio transmissions to be played. Through the speakers, we could hear the frantic shouting inside that tank: “Driver, left! No — right! Driver, left! Halt! Gunner, HEAT, tank!” Then the gunner’s reply: “Identified” followed by the commander’s “Fire!” Gunner: “On the way!……. Target hit!”

On the screen, a thin blue line traced the shot’s path — from A66 straight into another blue tank labeled A42. Seconds later came the high-pitched wail of the “dead tank” screaching signal echoing through the speakers. The room fell silent. Then the O/C queued up the next engagement. Again, the commander’s tank fired — and destroyed another one of his own. And then a third. By the time the recordings ended, no one in the room doubted what had happened. The captain stared at the floor, shook his head slowly, and said in a quiet voice, “It seems obvious that I lost control of my team.”

Training Reveals The Reality of War

This was the genius — and the brutal honesty — of the National Training Center. Gone were the days of umpires pointing fingers and shouting, “You’re dead!” only to have the other side yell back, “No, I’m not!” Here, the truth was undeniable. Every movement, every order, every shot could be seen, heard, and replayed. In today’s world, with laser tag, GPS, and digital tracking systems, this might not sound remarkable. But in 1982, this was cutting-edge, science-fiction-level technology. And for those of us watching in the Star Wars Building, it was a stark reminder that the battlefield — even a simulated one — showed no mercy for confusion, ego, or excuses.

Watching that AAR unfold left a lasting impression on me. It drove home just how real this training was — and how close it came to the brutal reality of war. On that screen, those red and blue symbols weren’t just graphics; they represented men’s lives, and the decisions made in seconds that determined who lived and who died. There was no hiding from the truth, no way to explain it away. You could literally see the consequences of confusion, hesitation, or poor leadership play out before your eyes. That was the power of the NTC system — it stripped away the illusions and forced us all, from the newest lieutenant to the most seasoned commander, to confront the unforgiving nature of combat. And it taught me that every decision mattered. Every single one.

The Plagiarizing Captain and Motorcycle Messenger

Not every lesson I learned at Fort Irwin was about tactics, Soviet doctrine, or running a TOC under pressure. Some were about human nature — about integrity, ego, and the kind of officer I did not want to become.

My good friend Scott, the captain in the S3 shop, had been given a company command, and his replacement was a new officer named Captain Kazzo. From the moment I met him, my gut told me he was trouble — a scrawny, desk-bound nerdy type who struck me as more interested in career advancement than soldiering. Unfortunately, I was soon proven right.

Whenever we reported to Major Ozelek or Lieutenant Colonel Stull to brief them on a new order, plan, or policy — something I had spent hours drafting — Captain Kazzo would present it as if he had written it. He never once gave me credit. I was furious. I tried to bring it up with Major Ozelek, but he brushed me off, telling me to quit whining and “suck it up.

Frustrated, I called my father at Fort Dix and asked his advice. He told me the same thing: “Suck it up. Stay quiet. The truth always comes out eventually.” I didn’t like it, but I listened. Even so, the plagiarism gnawed at me.

Motorcycle Messenger to the Rescue

One afternoon, I was out in the desert running the Tactical Operations Center during a lull in operations when one of our motorcycle messengers — just like the Soviet scouts used — roared up beside the tent. “Sir,” he said, “he’s doing it again. Captain Kazzo, sir. He’s briefing the CO on your plans.”

Soviet motorcycle with sidecar used by Soviet messengers.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

I jumped into the sidecar of his motorcycle and we tore across the desert back to headquarters. When I walked into the command post, the battalion commander was seated in his leather chair just to the left of the doorway, listening intently as Captain Kazzo stood before the map board — my map board — and briefed my plan as if it were his own.

I stood silently in the doorway, staring him dead in the eyes while he spoke. He avoided my gaze, but I didn’t blink. Without a sound, I mouthed the words, “You son of a bitch, sir.” And then I walked away. I followed my father’s advice — I let it go.

Captain Kazzo was eventually rewarded with a company command. I was still in the S3 shop, still writing battle plans. But I had one small measure of control left: I put his company in the field first and brought them in last. I gave them every miserable job I could dream up.

One day he came storming into my office, livid. “Lieutenant,” he barked, “I know exactly what you’re up to. I know what you think of me — but think about my men.” “I am thinking about your men, sir,” I told him calmly. “The best thing I can do for them is to get you relieved of command as soon as possible.”

The Truth is Eventually Revealed

Eventually, Major Ozelek called me into his office. He remembered the complaint I had made months earlier. “Was it true?” he asked. “Was he plagiarizing your work?” “Yes, sir,” I said. “And I didn’t know what to do about it.” Well,” Ozelek replied, “you don’t have to worry about him anymore. He’s been relieved of command and will be leaving the battalion.”

It was a hard lesson in patience, pride, and integrity. I learned that in the Army — just like in war — there are battles worth fighting and others you win simply by standing your ground and waiting for the truth to catch up.

Staff Duty Officer and the Barracks Thief

One night, while serving as the Staff Duty Officer for the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry, I had one of those experiences that reveal a lot about a person’s instincts and sense of justice. Sometime after midnight, a visiting Army captain came into the battalion headquarters and asked if it would be possible to grab a quick shower before heading back out to the field. I told him to use the Headquarters Company barracks — it was quiet that night, and I figured it would be no problem.

Missing Wallet

He was gone, maybe ten minutes, when the door to my office burst open. The captain stood there in nothing but a towel, dripping wet and clearly furious. “Lieutenant,” he barked, “someone stole my wallet while I was showering!

I turned to the Staff Duty NCO and said, “Call the MPs and meet me at Headquarters Company — now.” Within minutes, we were sprinting through the night toward the barracks, joined soon after by two MPs. I ordered one to guard each exit and then called the barracks to attention. Every soldier froze at their racks, backs straight, eyes forward.

I began inspecting footlockers one by one. At the third bunk, I flipped open the lid — and there it was, a wallet lying right on top. I held it up. “Sir, is this your wallet?” I asked the captain. He nodded, visibly relieved. I looked at the soldier standing stiffly at attention beside the bunk. “Whose footlocker is this?” “Mine, sir,” the private stammered. “Private Schmedlap?” “Yes, sir.

I continued checking through his footlocker. Inside, I found a stack of letters, the top one addressed to “PFC Johnson,” complete with hearts drawn in red ink and still faintly scented with perfume. I held it up and said, “PFC Johnson, come get Julie’s letter.” The barracks erupted in nervous laughter. As I dug deeper, I found more stolen letters, personal items, and keepsakes — small things that meant the world to the men who’d lost them.

Barracks Thief is Caught–Now what?

I looked around the room and could feel the anger simmering beneath the surface. Knowing what these men were thinking, I turned to the MPs and quietly said, “Step outside and guard the doors.” Then I looked at my watch. “You have three minutes,” I told the barracks.

I walked outside with the captain and waited. Three minutes later, I told the MPs to go back in. When we entered, Private Schmedlap was lying on the floor with a bloody nose and a look of regret that didn’t need explaining. I knelt beside him and said calmly, “Private Schmedlap, you are under arrest for larceny. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you…” The MPs cuffed him and led him out to the jeep.

The men of Headquarters Company nodded their thanks. They didn’t cheer — they didn’t have to. Justice, in their eyes, had been served. The captain got dressed, shook my hand, and thanked me more times than I could count. The Staff Duty NCO and I walked back to headquarters in silence and filed the report.

Secretary of the Army and the Napalm Night Battle

If the Captain Kazzo episode showed me the worst side of human nature in the Army, what happened next revealed the very best.

Our Opposing Force had been humiliating visiting Blue Force units for months — brigade after brigade came to the Mojave and left in defeat. We were so effective at simulating Soviet tactics that the Pentagon was starting to worry that the U.S. Army itself wasn’t ready for high-intensity war. Word of our dominance spread all the way to Washington, and soon the Secretary of the Army himself decided to fly out to Fort Irwin, entourage and all, to observe our regiment in action.

Official seal of the Department of the Army.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Special Night Operation

I had been tasked with writing a special battle plan for the exercise, which was scheduled for a night under a new moon — pitch-black conditions. Studying the terrain and our intelligence reports collected by Lieutenant Mike Pierson, I had a hunch about where the American main battle tanks would line up: hull-down, behind the ridgelines, with their barrels aimed toward our defensive positions. I decided to turn that assumption into their downfall.

Before the battle, I had 55-gallon drums of napalm emplaced behind each of those hilltops. And when the Blue Force tanks maneuvered into position exactly as predicted, I gave the order to ignite the drums. Instantly, the night sky exploded into a hellish orange glow. The silhouettes of every single tank were perfectly illuminated against the flames. Our gunners didn’t hesitate. One by one, the enemy vehicles were destroyed — a slaughter made possible by preparation, deception, and a little creative thinking.

Main battle tanks illuminated at night by incendiary devices at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Incendiary devices illuminate tanks on the horizon during night battle at Fort Irwin.

Debriefing the Secretary of the Army

When the battle ended, the Secretary of the Army gathered with our leadership to hear the after-action review. He was clearly impressed. “No wonder you’re kicking the Blue Force’s asses out here, Colonel!” he said with a hearty laugh, turning to our battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Stull. The crowd erupted in polite laughter and applause.

But LTC Stull didn’t smile. He cleared his throat and gestured toward the back of the crowd, where I was standing quietly, barely visible among the rows of officers and dignitaries. “Sir,” he said, “this wasn’t my plan. Lieutenant Carbone wrote this one. That’s him in the back there.”

Every head in the room turned toward me. I could feel my face flush with pride. The Secretary nodded approvingly and gave me a smile, but the moment wasn’t about me — it was about LTC Stull.

It would have been easy — expected, even — for a battalion commander to accept the praise and move on. But LTC Stull was a different kind of leader. In a profession where credit often flows upward and blame flows down, he did the opposite. He gave the credit where it belonged. I never forgot that moment. It taught me a lesson I’ve carried throughout my life: that real leadership isn’t about claiming glory. It’s about recognizing and elevating the people who make success possible.

Two Great Lessons of Leadeship

Those two experiences — Captain Kazzo on one end of the spectrum and Lieutenant Colonel Stull on the other — shaped the way I understood leadership for the rest of my career. Kazzo taught me how corrosive selfishness and ambition can be when they’re untempered by integrity. Stull showed me the opposite: that true leaders don’t hoard recognition; they pass it down to the people who earned it. One man made me determined never to treat others the way he treated me. The other inspired me to lead the way he led — by giving credit, sharing responsibility, and remembering that no victory is ever the work of one person alone.

1LT Anthony J. Carbone in OPFOR uniform with black OPFOR beret with silver bar of 1st lieutenant and gold crossed retorts of the Chemical Corps.

Training is Dangerous

For all its simulated nature, the training we conducted at the National Training Center was anything but a game. These were full-scale, mechanized battles fought across thousands of square miles of unforgiving desert, often under the cover of darkness, and the danger was real. Every rotation brought injuries — broken bones from vehicle rollovers, burns from equipment failures, concussions from explosions — and occasionally, soldiers were killed. Massive armored vehicles maneuvered through rocky ravines and steep washes at night with limited visibility, and even a moment’s lapse could turn deadly.

Chemical Smoke Platoon

As the battalion’s chemical officer, I worked constantly to make the battlefield even more chaotic, coordinating with chemical units to lay down dense smoke screens, simulate gas attacks, and ignite fuel for flame effects. It was all in the name of realism — and it drove home the point that even in training, war was dangerous business.

Live Fire Range

If the force-on-force battles with MILES lasers felt like a realistic preview of war, the live fire range was war itself. Nestled deep in the Mojave’s vast, jagged expanse, the National Training Center’s live fire complex sprawled across thousands of acres — a brutal, dusty crucible designed to strip away any illusions about what modern mechanized combat really meant. Here, units didn’t fight with lasers or simulated munitions. They fired real tank rounds, real artillery shells, and live mortars. The only thing we didn’t use was actual guided missiles. Everything else — the thunder of 120mm tank guns, the concussive blasts of high-explosive artillery, the roar of helicopter gunships overhead — was as real as it gets.

Every brigade that rotated through the NTC had to fight the OPFOR in realistic Force-on-Force MILES battles, but that was only half the test. Each unit also had to survive and succeed on the Live Fire Range before they could call their training complete.

M1 Abrams tanks firing at night at the Live Fire Range at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
M1 Abrams tanks firing at night at the Live Fire Range at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Our Battalion Faces the Live FIre Range

Even our own OPFOR regiment was required to run the gauntlet once a year, and those days were some of the most intense and unforgettable of my military career. Tank crews practiced coordinated gunnery while infantry advanced under the cover of real artillery fire. Engineers breached obstacles with live demolitions while smoke and flame roiled across the desert floor. It was an exhilarating spectacle — the Army’s vision of combined-arms warfare brought terrifyingly to life.

But that realism came with a steep price. Live fire training was dangerous — far more dangerous than anything in the MILES box — and no amount of planning or safety briefings could completely prevent tragedy. With hundreds of soldiers, vehicles, and weapons systems operating simultaneously across miles of broken terrain, mistakes happened. Friendly fire incidents were not rare. Men were wounded. And, on more than one occasion while I was stationed at Fort Irwin, soldiers were killed. Each death sent a shockwave through the community and reminded us all that the line between combat training and war was paper-thin.

The most terrifying moments of all came when we had to dismount from the safety of our armored vehicles and advance on foot to breach obstacles under live fire. I can still remember stumbling forward through choking clouds of smoke and tear gas, wire cutters in hand, trying to slice through strands of barbed wire as tracer rounds zipped past just feet away.

USAF A-10 Warthogs at NTC

The air itself seemed to crack and sizzle as tank rounds slammed into distant targets and artillery shells screamed overhead. A-10 Warthogs circled above us, unleashing their 30mm Gatling guns in long, thunderous bursts that shook the ground beneath my boots. In those moments, we were fully exposed — vulnerable in a way no classroom or field exercise could ever replicate.

A-10 Warthogs at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
A-10 Warthogs at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
USAF A-10 Warthogs provided close-air support at National Training Center from bases in Indiana and South Carolina.

As an officer, I buried my fear as deep as I could, determined not to let the men see it. But the truth is, those experiences left their mark on me. They added to the weight of my growing PTSD — a burden I was far from ready to name at the time. Only now, as I sift through these memories to write my memoir, do I realize just how much I was carrying back then, and how deeply those days on the live fire range shaped me.

Departure Gift from Officers of 6th Battalion 31st Infantry (Polar Bears) Opposing Forces.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Departure Gift from Officers of 6th Battalion 31st Infantry (Polar Bears) Opposing Forces

Lynne & Chris’s Wedding

In the midst of that turbulent year, there was at least one bright moment for my family. My oldest sister, Lynne Elizabeth Carbone, was married to Chris Brown of Arlington, Massachusetts, on May 7, 1983, at Saint Joseph’s Catholic Church in Medford — the same church where we were all baptized, received our First Communions, and where my parents had exchanged their vows years earlier.

It should have been a day of joy and celebration, a moment to stand proudly beside my family. But the truth is, I don’t remember it. The exhaustion, the relentless schedule, and the emotional numbness brought on by my PTSD at Fort Irwin had hollowed me out. I only know that I was there because of a photograph — one that shows me walking my mother down the aisle. That image is my only proof that I hadn’t completely vanished from my family’s life, even though, in many ways, I already had.

The End of Our Marriage

The demands of Fort Irwin were draining, and the trauma I was enduring ran deeper than I ever understood at the time. Working through tactical problems and battlefield obstacles had become second nature to me — but there was no manual, no field exercise, to teach me how to maneuver through my personal life. I wasn’t in control. I let life happen to me — and poor Mariann had to sit there and watch it unfold.

Thank God, I wasn’t a drinker. I didn’t use drugs. I was never violent. But I know I hurt her terribly. I know now that I was dead inside, and she could feel it every single day. I saw the misery in her eyes, and it was killing me and I could sense her silent plea for me to stop — to step off the treadmill, to find my way back to the boy she fell in love with at Notre Dame. Of course, I wanted that too. I wanted to be that young man again — full of hope, joy, and love. But I was too sick. Too broken.

Taking Mariann Home

Eventually, Mariann asked me to let her go home, and with a heavy heart, I agreed. I couldn’t just put her on a plane by herself, so I flew home with her to Chicago. And then, in one of the most humiliating and heartbreaking moments of my life, I physically handed her back to her father like the day he handed her to me in marriage. That moment has haunted me ever since. I still have nightmares about it — the weight of failure, the unbearable shame, the realization that the Army had taken not just my peace of mind but the woman I loved.

There are nights when I still wish I had been the soldier killed in battle— that she could have gone home an honorable widow instead of a broken man’s abandoned wife. I never forgave myself for losing Mari. And for years afterward, I tried — desperately and hopelessly — to win her back.

Looking back now, I realize that losing Mariann was the deepest wound of all — one that never stopped bleeding. The Army had taught me how to lead soldiers, how to plan battles, how to survive chaos and death. But it had not taught me how to love someone through my own brokenness, or how to protect the person who needed me most. I failed her in every way that mattered. And the shame of watching her walk away — of knowing that I had driven her to that point — still haunts me. I would give anything to go back and rewrite that part of my life, but time offers no mercy. The truth is, I never stopped loving her. And I never stopped hating myself for letting her go.

Lieutenant and Mrs. Anthony J. Carbone dancing at their wedding reception on October 30, 1982.
Lieutenant and Mrs. Anthony J. Carbone dancing at their wedding reception on October 30, 1982.

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Chapter 25: National Training Center at Fort Irwin & Marriage (1981–1982)

Groom (Lieutenant Anthony J. Cabone) and Bride (Mariann Schmitz Carbone) sharing thier wedding cake on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinlos

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You See — A memoir of Service, Shame and the Search for Truth

Graduated from Chemical Officer Basic and Airborne Courses

Graduating from the Chemical Officer Basic Course as an honor graduate and pinning on silver paratrooper wings at Jump School filled me with a pride I had never known before. At last, I was stepping into the world as a real second lieutenant, with my first permanent assignment waiting for me at Fort Irwin, California. It was everything I had been working toward since Notre Dame — proof that I could meet the Army’s highest standards. Yet beneath the pride and excitement ran an equally powerful current: the pull of Mariann. I couldn’t imagine celebrating without her. She was the person I wanted to share all of this with, the one whose steady presence gave meaning to the sacrifices of the past five months.

Headed to Mariann in Wheaton, Illinois

The morning after graduation, I packed my car and drove straight through to Wheaton, Illinois, determined to make the most of even a short visit with her. We hadn’t seen each other in months, and no amount of phone calls could make up for her absence. During training, I had saved every bit of my extra TDY pay with Mariann in mind, tucking it away for an engagement ring. I wasn’t quite ready to propose, but there was no doubt in my heart that she was the woman I wanted to marry. Being welcomed into the Schmitz household only reinforced it — I felt like I belonged, like I finally had brothers and sisters of my own.

My visit was brief; the Army had given me just a week to make the cross-country trip. But even that short time reminded me of the two paths that now defined me: the officer with a career taking shape, and the young man longing to build a life with Mariann. With both hopes alive in my heart, I pointed my car toward Route 66, bound for the Mojave Desert and my new post at Fort Irwin.

The beginning of Route 66 in Chicago

Headed to Fort Irwin via US Route 66

From Chicago, I turned my wheels west onto the legendary Route 66, determined to follow the old road all the way to California. This wasn’t just a drive — it felt like a rite of passage, a chance to see America up close, mile by mile. I felt lucky to experience Route 66 while it was still intact, still alive, still carrying the heartbeat of the country. Each day brought something new to marvel at, from the simplest gas stations and general stores to the oversized roadside icons designed to make you stop and stare.

Route 66 from Chicago to LA.

Enjoying all of the Classic Sites Along Route 66

The road was dotted with landmarks that have since become legendary — the Cadillac Ranch rising out of the Texas plains, the smiling Blue Whale of Catoosa, the soaring Gateway Arch in St. Louis, the Painted Desert stretching across Arizona, the sparkling Blue Hole in Santa Rosa, and even the whimsical Bottle Tree Ranch in the Mojave. I made it a point to stop at the neon-lit motels, to grab dinner at classic diners with vinyl booths and jukeboxes humming in the background. It was America at its best — quirky, colorful, and unpretentious.

As I cruised down that highway, I felt a kind of freedom I had never known before. I was a brand-new second lieutenant, finally independent, with my own car, money in my pocket, and a mission for life. The Army had given me responsibility and purpose, but Route 66 gave me the wide-open road and the space to savor it. For the first time, I felt like I was standing on my own two feet, ready for whatever lay ahead.

It took me a full week to wind my way west, soaking it all in, before I finally crossed the Nevada desert and rolled down into Victorville and on to my final stop: Barstow, California. Route 66 had delivered me not just to my first duty station but into a deeper sense of the country I was now sworn to serve.

Arrival at Barstow, California

I drove onto Main Street of Barstow, California — still part of old Route 66, if I remember right — and the first thing that caught my eye was the giant McDonald’s called Barstow Station. It seemed like the perfect place to regroup, so I sat down with a Big Mac, fries, and a Coke, trying to map out the last leg of my journey.

The truth was, I was beat. The excitement of the road was giving way to fatigue, and I knew I needed to rest before tackling the final stretch. I decided to spend the night right there in Barstow and checked into the Route 66 Motel on Main Street. The room was nothing fancy, but at ten dollars a night it was exactly what I needed — cheap, simple, and a bed to crash in.

Main Street (Route 66) Barstow, California in 1981

Stayed at Motel Route 66

That night at the Route 66 Motel, I did what every new lieutenant was trained to do — I prepared for reporting in. I laid out my folder with several copies of my Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders assigning me to the National Training Center at Fort Irwin. I laid out a fresh set of perfectly starched olive-drab fatigues and spit-shined my brand-new Corcoran jump boots until they gleamed. Everything had to be in order. I went to bed early, determined to get up with the sun and make a sharp impression on my first day at my new post.

The next morning, I grabbed an Egg McMuffin at McDonald’s and headed out on the thirty-seven–mile drive to Fort Irwin. It doesn’t sound like much, but back then the road was just two narrow lanes with no shoulders, winding through the desert. One mistake and you were off into the sand.

Fort Irwin Road between Barstow and Post

White Crosses Line Fort Irwin Road

White Crosses along Fort Irwin Road where someone was killed.  Each contains the date of death.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
White Crosses along Fort Irwin Road where someone was killed.

Painted Rocks

Then, almost as if answering that somber message, the desert shifted. I came upon Painted Rocks — a field of massive boulders splashed with bold, colorful unit insignia left behind by generations of soldiers. It was unlike anything I had ever seen. If the white crosses spoke of sacrifice, Painted Rocks shouted pride and tradition. Together, the two monuments told a larger story — one of danger and death, yes, but also of resilience, service, and legacy. Standing there, I felt the weight of both. I was not just driving down Route 66 anymore. I was on my way to become part of that distinguished heritage.

The iconic Painted Rocks Memorial on the route to Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
The Iconic Painted Rocks Memorial

Fort Irwin from a high point in the Mojave Desert.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Cabone.
Fort Irwin from a high point in the Mojave Desert
National Training Center and Fort Irwin welcome sign with tenant units and facts about the post.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Fort Irwin Road from Barstow to Fort Irwin, California--just two lanes and no shoulders making it very dangerous to drive.  This shows the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.
Fort Irwin Road leading into the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.

First Time Passing Through the Front Gate

Eventually, the long, winding road delivered me to the main gate of Fort Irwin. A small Military Police station sat just inside, and an MP in crisp uniform stepped forward to check me in. He asked for my military ID, then snapped off a sharp hand salute with his white gloves. I told him I had PCS orders to

report to Headquarters, National Training Center. He gave me clear directions on where to drive, followed by another salute and a sweeping right-arm motion from left to right, signaling me forward and onto post.

I followed his instructions and soon found myself at the Headquarters building for the National Training Center. I parked my POV (privately-owned vehicle), shut off the engine, and gathered my military file with my new orders. As I stepped out, I placed my cap squarely on my head, proud that it displayed both my shiny new gold lieutenant bar and my silver paratrooper wings. With my records tucked in my left hand, I squared my shoulders and stood tall, determined to look the part.

Meeting MSG Aikens

Across the large dirt-covered parking lot — maybe a hundred meters away — I suddenly heard a booming voice cut through the desert air. A tall, thin African-American sergeant was calling out to me in a deep, commanding tone: “Airborne, Lieutenant!” He snapped up a strong hand salute. Instinct took over. I straightened instantly, returned the salute, and called back the traditional Airborne reply: “All the way!” It was my very first greeting on post, and it stuck with me. As fate would have it, a year later that same man — Master Sergeant Aikens — would become my very own sergeant when I was later assigned to the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry (Opposing Forces) in 1982.

Master Parachutist Badge that Master Sergeant Aikens Wore.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Master Parachutist Badge that Master Sergeant Aikens Wore

The formality of my arrival — the crisp salutes at the gate, my spit-shined Corcoran boots, my starched fatigues — faded quickly once I got a taste of daily life at Fort Irwin. This was no typical Army post. In my 21 years, I had never lived on or even visited a base like it. Fort Irwin in 1981 was the Wild West — remote, raw, and rough around the edges. There weren’t many rules in place yet, and in fact, I was expected to help write a number of the installation’s first policies and regulations, just to make the place look and feel official.

My New Position — Installation Chemical Officer

I was also something of a curiosity — the very first chemical officer assigned to the National Training Center. Most officers had never met a Chemical Officer in their career.

Nobody seemed quite sure what to do with me. For the moment, I was put in Headquarters as the “Installation Chemical Officer.” My big boss was Lieutenant Colonel Billy Joe Piper, the director of DPTSEC — the Directorate of Plans, Training, Mobilization & Security.

Portrait of Lieutenant Colonel Billy Joe Piper, Director of DPTSEC, National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Lieutenant Colonel Billy Joe Piper
National Training Center Headquarters building at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Post Headquarters, National Training Center, Fort Irwin, California

Day to day, though, I worked for Major Fuentes, a relaxed Cuban-American officer running the Training Department.

Photograph of desert sand color Quonset Hut building that housed my office and members of Range Control at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

They set me up at a wooden field desk in an old, desert-sand–painted Quonset Hut, which I shared with two morbidly overweight Vietnam veteran sergeants who fit the definition of ROAD Scholars — “Retired on Active Duty.” One was Sergeant Maddox and I forgot the other’s name. Across the way sat an old aviation officer, Major Zupan, who also turned out to be my BOQ suite-mate. And scattered around the hut were about a half-dozen Range Control civilians, desert-hardened and full of stories. It was a strange mix of soldiers, semi-retired lifers, and salty civilians. And there I was — a brand-new chemical officer — trying to figure out where I fit in while helping to bring order to the Army’s version of the Wild West.

My New Office and Quarters

I tried my best to be excited about my first assignment as a brand-new lieutenant, but the reality hit me fast. My “office” was nothing more than a beat-up Quonset Hut with two of the most combat un-ready sergeants I had ever met sitting next to me. When they drove me over to my Bachelor Officers’ Quarters, I thought maybe things would look up. Instead, my new home turned out to be an old, dilapidated building that looked like it had survived a war of its own. Inside, I had a bed with sheets, a pillow, and a scratchy wool Army blanket. There was a wooden desk with a lamp and chair, and no air conditioning — just an ancient contraption called a “swamp cooler” that struggled hopelessly against the desert heat. And to make matters worse, I was assigned to share a bathroom with none other than Major Zupan.

Major Zupan Goes AWOL

Major Terry Zupan was no ordinary officer. He was a decorated U.S. Army pilot and Vietnam veteran who had been shot down one too many times and carried those demons with him ever since.

Photograph of Major Terry Zupan a U.S. Army Aviation Officer assigned to DPTSEC, National Training Center, Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Major Terry Zupan, U.S. Army Aviation Officer

Over the course of his career, he had logged more than 950 combat flight hours and earned the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Bronze Star Medal, the Air Medal, and an astounding 27 Oak Leaf Clusters for his meritorious achievement. But all of that honor and heroism had left scars that no medal could heal. By the time I met him at Fort Irwin, he was a severely alcoholic man living with ghosts he could not outrun.

Distinguished Flying Cross medal worn by Major Terry Zupan.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Most nights ended the same way — Zupan stumbling back from the Officer’s Club, slurring his words, and then throwing up and suffering diarrhea simultaneously in our shared bathroom. I would lie in bed with my pillow pressed tight over my ear, trying to block out the sounds and the smell, only to have him attempt drunken, half-intelligible conversations through the night.

Then one morning I woke up and, for the first time, didn’t have to fight Zupan for the shower. I showered, shaved, dressed, and ate breakfast at the mess hall as usual. But when I got to the Quonset Hut at DPTSEC, there was still no sign of him. The day went on, and finally LTC Fuentes asked me if I had seen Major Zupan. Nothing that day. Nothing the next.

Major Zupan Goes AWOL

After several days of silence, I was told to put him on official leave, which I did. Days kept passing, and then finally the phone rang. It was Zupan on the other end of the line, asking what was happening. I told him, “Sir, they’re looking for you.” Who’s looking for me?” he asked. “The MPs, sir,” I said. He asked if I could put him on leave, and I replied, “I did, sir, but LTC Fuentes says you’re out of leave. You need to come back to post before the MPs go looking for you.”

Army poster entitled "AWOL and the Consequences".  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Major Zupan Gets Article-15

Zupan eventually returned and was fortunate to receive only an Article 15 non-judicial punishment rather than a court-martial — an outcome owed in large part to his decorated record and combat history. But the whole episode was just another preview of what life at this strange, chaotic place called Fort Irwin would be like.

U.S. Army Trial Defense Service document on Article 15s.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Looking back, I realize that Major Zupan embodied a generation of soldiers who had given everything in Vietnam and returned broken, bearing invisible wounds that no one knew how to treat. Sharing a bathroom with him wasn’t just inconvenient — it was my first up-close lesson in the hidden cost of war and the heavy toll it could take on even the bravest among us.

Fort Irwin Has Little to Offer Off-Duty

I made it to my first Saturday at Fort Irwin and decided to explore the post and see what it had to offer. I quickly learned the answer: not much. The post exchange (PX) was tiny and only open two days a week. There was just one gas station — also open only two days a week. The post boasted a theater, an officers’ club, and an NCO/enlisted club.

Post Exchange at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
The new Post Exchange (PX)

Weed Army Hospital stood ready to support both the permanent party and the rotating units. There was a swimming pool, a chapel, and a commissary with a small shoppette. Housing consisted of the BOQ, BEQ, and modest sections for married officer and enlisted families. Beyond that, there was a massive motor pool and an endless sea of sand.

Weed Army Community Hospital

Fort Irwin was blessed with a small but capable medical facility — Weed Army Community Hospital. One afternoon, I was escorting a dehydrated soldier there for treatment. As I was leaving the building, I nearly collided with a lieutenant colonel in an Army flight suit. His name tag caught my eye: beneath his name were a pair of distinctive wings, the letters “MD,” and the title Flight Surgeon.

U.S. Army Master Flight Surgeon Badge.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
U.S. Army Master Flight Surgeon Badge

Curious, I asked what that meant. He introduced himself as Lieutenant Colonel David Lam, a physician specializing in aerospace medicine. He explained that his duties included flying with helicopter crews and caring for pilots and aircrew members on flight status. I was fascinated — I had never considered that a physician could be part of a flight team.

I remember blurting out, almost incredulous, “How can you fly if you wear glasses?” He smiled and explained that flight surgeons didn’t need perfect natural vision — only eyesight that could be corrected to 20/20.

Something shifted in me in that moment. That chance encounter planted a seed. I walked out of Weed Army Community Hospital that day, determined that someday I would become an Army flight surgeon myself. And a decade later, I did — serving at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, under the very same man I’d met by chance in the desert: Colonel David Lam.

My First Thanksgiving Alone

Thanksgiving Day 1981 came and I was excited to live out the traditions that I had grown up with. For years, I watched my father put on his Dress Blue uniform and take the family to the unit mess hall for Thanksgiving. It is a huge Army tradition. The mess hall would be decorated for Thanksgiving to include ice sculptures and carved butter, in addition to traditional roast turkey, stuffing, gravy and loads of pies. 

I put on my dress blue uniform and went over to Leiutenant Hong to pick him up, and we walked over to the NTC Mess Hall, and there was nothing going on special at all. Everyone turned and looked at us in our Dress Blues like we were idiots. I was so embarrassed. We rushed over to the Officer’s Club to see if maybe that’s where Thanksgiving was being celebrated, but it was closed. I remember that Lieutenant Hong and I went back to the BOQ, removed our Dress Blues, and I drove us to Barstow and we ate our Thanksgiving meal at Denny’s.

Second Lieutenant Anthony J. Carbone in his Dress Blue uniform with shoulder boards of Cobalt Blue indicating that he is a Chemical Corps Officer.

Found Fort Irwin Very Boring

For a young lieutenant, there was very little to keep me entertained. The post was full of a couple thousand men and almost no single women. This was not the kind of first assignment I had pictured for myself when I dreamed of being an Army officer. Growing up in Germany, I had watched lieutenants living what looked like the good life — traveling across Europe, eating at restaurants, going to beer festivals and carnivals, dating beautiful German women, and joining in one military or civilian celebration after another. That was the picture I had in my mind of an officer’s life.

Post Chaplain and Chapel

What I did find, however, was the post chapel. I made friends with the post chaplain, a fellow Catholic, as well as his sacristan, the chaplain’s assistant. Just like I had done in college, I began attending daily Mass. It gave me some much-needed grounding and stability in a place that otherwise felt like the edge of nowhere.

I was just getting settled into my new job, busy drafting new policies and regulations for Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical operations and training, when disaster struck.

Range Control Civilians Killed by Unexploded Ordnance

The Department of Defense civilians who worked in Range Control Operations under DPTSEC — men who shared that same beat-up Quonset Hut with me every day — were out in the field clearing a range. One of them moved an unexploded munition, most likely left over from World War II training days, and it detonated. Four of the men who worked alongside me were killed instantly.

Common Unexploded Ordnance found throughout Fort Irwin.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Common Unexploded Ordnance found throughout Fort Irwin.

I had only been on the job a couple of weeks, and I struggled to comprehend the devastation. The suddenness of it. The loss of life. The realization that we were surrounded by hidden dangers, any one of which could claim us without warning. I was especially shaken when I learned the youngest of the Range Control gang had been among those lost — a young married man with a wife and two children at home. That hit me hard.

Danger, Unexploded Ordnance--Do Not Enter Sign at Fort Irwin, California.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

In those dark days, I found myself drawn even more to the chapel. My faith was the only way I could make sense of it all. I prayed for the men we lost, for their families, and for the strength to carry on in a place where danger seemed to lurk in the very ground beneath our feet. My Catholic faith had always been at the center of my life, but here in the desert, it became my anchor.

What struck me even more was how little the tragedy seemed to affect the hardened combat veterans I was surrounded by. For them, it was just another day of work at the National Training Center — another risk accepted as part of the job. That cold indifference was shocking to me as a young lieutenant. It showed me just how different life was going to be here at Fort Irwin.

Christmas Leave and Engagement in Boston

I had barely settled into my new life at Fort Irwin — still learning my way around the job as Installation Chemical Officer and adjusting to the desolate Mojave landscape — when it was suddenly time to fly across the country for Christmas leave. I was heading back to Boston, back to familiar streets and familiar faces, and most importantly, to see Mariann.

The details of that trip are hazy now, blurred by exhaustion and the mental fog I was already living in, but a few moments stand out clearly. I remember how proud I felt introducing Mariann to my extended family — many of them meeting her for the first time — and watching them welcome her with open arms. My Nana Pietrantoni hosted an engagement party at her house, where we celebrated with family, laughter, and a chocolate mousse cake. I can still remember thinking, with a strange mix of humor and superstition, that it was an ominous sign — chocolate mousse being my least favorite cake.

Photograph of Mariann Schmitz and Anthony Carbone at Nana Pietrantoni's home in Medford, Massachusetts.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Mariann and I at Nana & Papa Pietrantoni’s house for Christmas.

We exchanged engagement gifts and Christmas presents, and for a brief moment, I allowed myself to feel a sense of joy and normalcy. I took Mariann downtown to see the historical sites I loved and walked her through the spots that had shaped my life — including Harvard Square and the storied campus of Harvard College. And then, as quickly as it had begun, the visit was over. Mariann and I flew back to Chicago together, and I continued on alone to Fort Irwin — back to the desert, back to the isolation, and back to the difficult road that still lay ahead.

Air Florida 90 Disaster (13 January 1982)

Just a few weeks later, on Wednesday, January 13, 1982, I was in my BOQ room watching the news on my little portable black-and-white television when a special announcement came over the air. Air Florida Flight 90 had just taken off from National Airport in Washington, D.C., headed for Tampa, Florida, when it suffered a major malfunction due to severe icing. The aircraft struck the 14th Street Bridge and plunged into the icy Potomac River, killing seventy-four passengers and crew, along with four more people in their cars on the bridge.

My uncle, Joe Carluccio — who we often visited during our years living in the D.C. area — was among the 74 souls killed in the crash. The news tore me apart. It was another shock in a string of tragedies, and it left me reeling. That disaster added to my growing obsession with safety, especially aviation safety, but also safety in general. Between the deaths on post and the sudden loss of my uncle, I became acutely aware of how fragile life really was — and how quickly it could be taken away. In those days, I found myself praying more than ever and having deeper conversations with the post chaplain, trying to make sense of the loss and strengthen my faith.

Quiet Off-Duty Life at Fort Irwin

While I was assigned to Headquarters and living in the BOQ, life was quiet — too quiet. It was a lonely time. I rarely interacted with Major Fuentes, and though I occasionally visited Colonel Billy Piper in his quarters, I wasn’t finding much camaraderie. Most of the other lieutenants were assigned to the Opposing Forces (OPFOR) and spent nearly thirty days a month out in the field. I did get to know a Second Lieutenant Hong, a Vietnamese-American quartermaster officer, a bit of a bookworm who was also living in the BOQ.

Death of Friend, Private Kenneth Cartie

Just a couple of months after settling into my new assignment at Fort Irwin, tragedy struck close to home. Private Kenneth Cartie, an Army brat I had first met years earlier during my family’s travels, was serving with the 6th Battalion, 31st Infantry (OPFOR). He had asked me to stand as his best man in his upcoming wedding, a request I accepted with honor. But on March 21, 1982, while his unit was parking M551 VISMODs — Sheridan tanks disguised as Soviet armor — a young, inexperienced driver gunned the accelerator at the wrong moment.

In an instant, Private Cartie was crushed between two tanks, cut in halfbefore the eyes of his comrades. It was gruesome, and it was devastating. I still carry the nightmares of that day. My father had always warned me as a boy to stay wary of tanks and tracked vehicles — they were dangerous, unpredictable beasts. Seeing Kenneth’s life end that way burned that warning forever into my mind.

The loss shook me to my core. I turned again to the post chaplain, seeking comfort in Scripture, talking through my questions about death, and holding fast to daily Mass. Prayer became my anchor. Without it, I don’t know how I could have stood upright.

But as if one tragedy weren’t enough, just a week later, disaster struck again — this time on a scale that dwarfed everything I had seen before.

Gallant Eagle-82 Disaster

On March 30, 1982, I joined my commander, Colonel Billy Piper, on a desert ridgeline to observe Gallant Eagle-82, the largest peacetime airborne exercise in U.S. Army history. Nearly 3,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division were jumping into the Mojave, ferried by 90 Air Force cargo planes. Through my Army field glasses, I watched the sky fill with parachutes — green canopies blossoming like flowers across the dawn. But the beauty turned to horror in an instant.

High winds whipped down from the mountains, twisting parachutes into deadly cigar-shaped “streamers.” I saw men pulling frantically at their white reserve chutes, some too low for them to open. One trooper slammed into a parked vehicle. Others hit the desert floor at full force, their bodies crumpling on impact. Some were dragged helplessly across the jagged terrain, gear tearing, helmets flying, limbs snapping. I will never forget the sound of bodies striking earth with a gruesome “thump”. From my perch on the OP, I was helpless but to watch it unfold.

When the chaos subsided, four paratroopers were dead and over a hundred were wounded — twenty critically. Medics and helicopters swarmed in, but the damage was done.

The base mourned briefly, but then the exercise marched on. For most, it was “just another day” in training. But for me, the twin blows of losing Kenneth and then watching men fall to their deaths within a week of each other was almost unbearable. If not for the steady wisdom of Colonel Piper and the counsel of the post chaplain, I believe I would have been medically boarded out then and there.

Worsening PTSD

Gallant Eagle-82 was more than an exercise — it was a sentinel event in my life. Together with Private Cartie’s death, it became a defining trauma of my Fort Irwin assignment, one of the core experiences that planted the seeds of my PTSD.

I don’t remember ever sharing these stories with my father, or with anyone in my family, because I was ashamed of how shaken I was. I thought an Army officer was supposed to be ready for real combat, not rattled by training deaths. So I kept it all bottled inside. My family never knew the nightmares, the images burned into my memory, the constant sense that death was always a step away. They just knew that I had gone off to Fort Irwin a cheerful, optimistic Second Lieutenant — and returned a hardened, battle-scarred First Lieutenant without ever firing a shot in war.

The only place I allowed myself to open up was with the post chaplain. My Catholic faith had always been the center of my life, and in those dark months it became my anchor. Daily Mass, quiet prayer in the chapel, and long talks with the chaplain about death, grief, and the Bible were the only release I had. My faith kept me steady when I otherwise might have broken completely.

Nearly Died on Fort Irwin Road

As if everything else hadn’t been enough, the next blow comes on that goddamn stretch of asphalt we all call Fort Irwin Road — thirty-seven miles of winding, unforgiving desert highway between post and Barstow. In 1982, it’s just two narrow lanes with no shoulder, a death trap we all treat like a racetrack. Nobody drives it under sixty.

Fort Irwin Road in 1982 — Two lanes with sand-covered shoulders.  37 miles through the Mojave Desert.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Fort Irwin Road in 1982 — Two lanes with sand-covered shoulders.

I’m dead tired, running on fumes after another brutal field rotation, and the steady hum of the road is hypnotic. My head keeps dipping — bobbing down, snapping up — and then one time, it doesn’t snap up fast enough.

The front right tire drifts off into sand. I feel the wheel jerk, the sudden, sickening loss of control. My car veers left across the oncoming lane. In that split second, I see a station wagon coming at me — a mother behind the wheel, three kids standing on the front seat like it’s a playground. I can still see her face — mouth open in a scream, hands lifted off the wheel in terror — and those kids’ wide eyes staring straight into mine.

Photograph of an old woody station wagon driving along Fort Irwin Road through the Mojave Desert.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone

The car keeps sliding left, out of control, until the tires bite into a sand berm. Then I’m airborne. For a moment, it’s like a scene out of The Dukes of Hazzard— time slowing, my stomach floating — but this isn’t TV. The nose of the car slams into the desert, and then I’m flipping, end over end, until everything stops. Quiet.

Photograph of a scene from the television series "Dukes of Hazard" with orange car Number 01 flying through the air.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Traumatic Brain Injury

When I come to, I’m upside down. My head’s pounding — probably knocked out cold for a while — and the roof is crushed down toward me. The only thing that saves me is the bucket seat snapping back flat. Every window is blown out, shards of jagged glass everywhere. When I fumble for the seatbelt, they slice into my hands and arms. I’m bleeding, and there’s warm fluid dripping onto me. For a terrifying second, I think it’s my blood.

I crawl out through the blown-out driver’s side window and drag myself across the sand. The car’s smoking, so I keep low, belly to the ground, crawling toward the road. Dozens of soldiers are standing there, just watching. Not one of them moves. Not one. Rage boils up — white-hot and blinding. I scream at them, call them cowards, tell them they don’t deserve the damn uniform. I remember saying “No Soldiers Medals for you!” (the award for bravery saving a life in peacetime.) They scatter before I can read a single name tag.

The Soldiers Medal for Valor Saving Someone’s Life in Peacetime (that no one earned that day).  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
The Soldiers Medal for Valor Saving Someone’s Life in Peacetime (that no one earned that day)

Car is Totalled and Towed Away

I lie there on the roadside, alone, bleeding, and furious. The woman I almost killed offers to call a tow truck. No one offers me a ride. No one asks if I’m okay. The tow truck driver eventually shows up, hauls my wrecked Sapporo away, and dumps me in Barstow like a burden. I find a pay phone and call Lieutenant Hong to come get me.

When I call my boss, he doesn’t ask a single question. Just tells me to “shake it off” and be at work by 0500. “Yes, sir!” No sick call. No hospital. No nothing. That night, I ask Hong to sleep in my room. My head hurts so bad I’m not sure I’ll wake up. I even give him Mariann’s number — just in case I don’t.

That night changed something in me. The crash, the blood, the way everyone just stood there — it all carved a deeper scar into the person I was becoming. I stopped expecting anyone to save me. I stopped believing the Army would take care of its own. From that point on, I trusted no one but myself. And just as my faith in everything else was crumbling, the one steady thing left in my life — Mariann — was waiting on the other end of the phone, planning a future I wasn’t sure I deserved.

The Holy Sacrament of Matrimony

And then, amid the chaos and scars of that year, came the one bright, immovable point in my life — the day I married my Notre Dame sweetheart, Mariann Schmitz of Wheaton, Illinois. On October 30, 1982, we stood before God, family and friends at St. Michael’s Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois, and entered into the Holy Sacrament of Matrimony.

Saint Michael’s Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois where Mariann Schmitz and Anthony J. Carbone.
Saint Michael’s Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois

Parents of the Bride & Groom

Best Man and Ushers

I wish I could say I played an active role in planning our wedding, but the truth is, I was too consumed by Fort Irwin — the operations, the trauma, the sleepless nights, and the accident — to be much help. Mari and I never even went through Pre-Cana. Mariann and her mother planned everything. All I had to do was show up. I asked my father to stand beside me as my Best Man. My ushers were my lifelong friends: Jeff Bell, Mark Sanchez — who had been with me since Mannheim — and my soon-to-be brother-in-law, Chris Brown.

My mother (Edda Carbone) with my three ushers: Jeff Bell, Mark Sanchez, and Chris Brown.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
My mother with my ushers: Jeff Bell, Mark Sanchez and Chris Brown

Visitors from Boston to Washington DC

What still amazes me is how many people came. My entire family flew in from Boston — my mother and father, my four sisters, Nana Pietrantoni and her sister, my great Aunt Connie. My godmother, Auntie Yole. Uncle John and Auntie Rose Marie Antonelli. Auntie Cynthia and Auntie Norma Pietrantoni. Aunt Terry and Uncle Arthur McDonald. Even Mr. Richard Callen made the trip from Woodbridge, Virginia. They were all there to witness the moment when Mariann and I promised our lives to one another before God. And yet, I can’t remember most of it.

Auntie Norma Pietrantoni, sisters Pamela & Diana, and my godmother, Auntie Yole Lakos.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Auntie Norma Pietrantoni, sisters Pamela & Diana, and my godmother, Auntie Yole Lakos.

Waiting for My Bride

I was already deep in the grip of what I now know was PTSD. I was exhausted, haunted, and still reeling from the crash that nearly killed me. The second half of 1982 — including my own wedding — is a blur, like watching someone else’s life through frosted glass. I do remember a single, crystalline moment: standing alone in the sacristy before the ceremony, my father slipping out and leaving me in silence. Then the music began — a string quartet Mari had hired as a gift to me. They played Pachelbel’s Canon in D, one of my favorite pieces of classical music. To this day, just four notes of that melody can transport me back to that exact instant.

Sacrament of Holy Matrimony for Anthony & Mariann Carbone on 30 October 1982 at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois.
Anthony J. Carbone at his wedding to Mariann Schmitz at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois on October 30, 1982.
My father (Colonel Anthony Carbone) with my 3 ushers: Jeff Bell,  Chris Brown, and Mark Sanchez.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Waiting on the Bride

Sacrament of Holy Matrimony

Sacrament of Holy Matrimony between Mariann Schmitz and Anthony Carbone at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois on October 30, 1982.

The only other memory that pierces the fog is Mariann herself — radiant and breathtaking, wearing her mother’s satin wedding gown. I remember staring at her and wondering how someone so beautiful, so intelligent, so faithful, so funny, so kind, could choose to marry me. But when I look at the photographs now, I see more than just a wedding. I see a young officer who was already sick, already broken — a man who was deeply in love with his soulmate but was too lost inside his own mind to truly be present.

Presenting Lieutenant and Mrs. Anthony Carbone

Priest presents the newly married couple.  Sacrament of Holy Matrimony between Mariann Schmitz and Anthony Carbone at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois on October 30, 1982.
“May I present Lieutenant and Mrs. Anthony Carbone.”
Bride and Groom walking down the aisle.  Sacrament of Holy Matrimony between Mariann Schmitz and Anthony Carbone at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois on October 30, 1982.
I think Mari was already having second thoughts.

The Trauma of Fort Irwin and PTSD

I don’t remember our wedding night–don’t remember if we even had a honeymoon. But I do remember that I loved Mariann with everything I had — more than anyone will ever truly know, especially her.

Looking back now, that first year at Fort Irwin was the crucible that shattered something inside me. It was supposed to be the beginning of a promising career — a safe, non-combat assignment where I could grow into the officer I had trained to be. Instead, it became a year of relentless trauma: sudden death, gruesome accidents, unimaginable loss, and a deep loneliness I had no tools to process. I buried every emotion, ashamed that I was so shaken when others seemed unaffected.

And so I locked it all away — the nightmares, the anxiety, the guilt — and never spoke a word of it to my father, my family, or even to Mariann. I stood at the altar that October already broken inside, and no one knew. For decades, I would hide that damage behind achievements and credentials, never understanding how I managed to keep going — only that I did. But the truth is, everything that followed in my life was built on the fractured foundation of what happened to me in 1982.

Our Wedding Reception

New bridge and groom enter the Wedding Reception Hall.  Marriage of Mariann Schmitz to Anthony J. Carbone on October 30, 1982.
Walking into our wedding reception hall.
The wedding reception line for Lieutenant & Mrs. Anthony J. Carbone on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
The wedding reception line for Lieutenant & Mrs. Anthony J. Carbone on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
Wedding Reception Line

The Head Table

The wedding head table for the wedding of Lieutenant & Mrs. Anthony J. Carbone on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
Our first toast at our wedding reception.  Mariann Schmitz Carbone with Anthony J. Carbone on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
My best man and father, Colonel Anthony J. Carbone, giving the toast to the new wedding couple.
The Head Table and the Best Man’s Toast

Sharing Our Wedding Cake

The new bride and groom (Anthony and Mariann Carbone) sharing their wedding cake.  October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
We promised not to mess around.
Anthony Carbone the groom removing his bride's (Mariann's) garter at the wedding reception on October 30, 1982.
First Dance of bride (Mariann) and groom (Anthony Carbone) at their wedding reception on October 30, 1982.
Another promise kept, and Our First Dance to “Unchained Melody”

With Nana Pietrantoni

Bride (Mariann) and groom (Anthony Carbone) with Anthony's maternal grandmother, Nana Pietrantoni.

My Big Fat Italian Wedding

Carbone Family photo with Mariann at our wedding reception on October 30, 1982.
Bride and Groom (Mariann and Anthony Carbone) with his parents Edda & Colonel Anthony Carbone.  30 October 1982.
The Carbone Side of the Family
Groom with his 3 ushers:  Jeff Bell, Chris Brown, and Mark Sanchez.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.  30 October 1982.
Bride, Mariann Carbone, with her four bridesmaids.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Me with my ushers, and Mariann with her bridesmaids.
My oldest sister Lynne and my future brother-in-law, Chris Brown, at our wedding reception.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Groom (Anthony J. Carbone) with his mother (Edda Carbone) at his wedding reception on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
Lynne & Chris, Mariann & Bridesmaids, Me & Mum
My father (Colonel Anthony Carbone) dancing with my bride (Mariann Carbone) at our wedding reception on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois
My father trying to steal my girl.
Groom (Anthony J. Carbone) dancing with his mother (Edda Carbone) at his wedding reception on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois
My father (Colonel Anthony Carbone) with my four sisters Diana, Cynthia, Pamela and Lynne, at my wedding reception on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois.
My father (Colonel Anthony J. Carbone) with his two living sisters: Rosemarie Antonelli and Teresa McDonald.  At my wedding reception on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois
Dad with my four sisters (Left) and With his sisters Rosemarie and Teresa (Right)
My father (Colonel Anthony J. Carbone) and mother (Edda Carbone) at my wedding reception on October 30, 1982 in Wheaton, Illinois
Groom (Lieutenant Anthony J. Carbone) and Bride (Mariann Schmitz Carbone) walking down the aisle of Saint Micheal's Catholic Church following their wedding on October 30, 1982.
At least my mother seems happy!
Our Marriage License from DuPage County, Illinois dated October 30, 1982.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

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Chapter 24: U.S. Army Airborne School (October 1981) Fort Benning, Georgia

U.S. Army Parachutist Badge of silver wings with a parachute. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA memoir of Service, Shame and the Search for Truth.

Welcome to Fort Benning--Home of the Infantry.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone

Orders for Jump School — Fort Benning

The U.S. Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia, was one of the most grueling yet exhilarating experiences of my military career. Known simply as “Jump School,” this four-week crucible transformed me into a qualified paratrooper, earning the coveted Parachutist Badge.

U.S. Army Parachutist Badge. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

I would be attending Jump School alongside three of my classmates from the Chemical Officer Basic Course at Fort McClellan: James Piner, Perry Williams, and Ron Snyder. My roommate in the Bachelor Officer Quarters (BOQ) would be Perry, while James and Ron shared a room. Together, the four of us reported to 43rd Company, 4th Student Battalion (Airborne), The School Brigade, Fort Benning, Georgia.

T-shirt with "4th Student Battalion (Airborne) U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia."   Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone

43rd Company (Airborne)

Our company commander was CPT James Bly, as strict as a pirate. The first sergeant was 1SG Riley Miller, but the man who ran the show was Staff Sergeant Trevor Bennett — nicknamed “Idi Amin” who had an eiry resemblance to “The Butcher of Uganda.”

The company had two massive platoons, each led by a student officer. Our platoon was led by a Navy ensign on the verge of becoming a SEAL, with five other SEALs sprinkled throughout. Whenever a Black Hat ordered “Drop and give me 10!” our leader would snap his head and shout over his right shoulder, “Make it 20!” We would drop, do 20 push-ups, return to attention, then clap and bark like seals (trademark of the US Navy SEALS). The Black Hats would retaliate, and our SEAL leader would double down. Push-ups stacked into triple digits, building both physical and mental endurance while keeping us motivated.

Graduation photo with course honor grads showing our platoon leader, U.S. Navy SEAL ensign.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
That is our Navy SEAL Platoon Leader holding the Honor Graduate Statue with his diploma.

Airborne School Inprocessing

Our first stop was Inprocessing. We were issued an Orientation Packet and a billeting assignment at Abrams Hall, where bachelor officers were typically housed. The packet included instructions for drawing some of our combat gear, such as a steel pot helmet and load-bearing equipment (LBE). I’ll never forget the helmet they handed me — it had a huge dentright in the top. Later, during Jump Week, I would learn exactly how that dent may have been made.

We Receive Our Student Numbers

When we shuffled through the Arrival and Inprocessing line, Ron, James, Perry, and I stuck together and ended up with consecutive student numbers: A120, A121, A122, and A123. These numbers were painted boldly on the fronts of our helmets. From that point forward, I wasn’t “Carbone” anymore — I was “Alpha-122.” Officers’ numbers all began with the letter “A.” Non-commissioned officers (NCOs) started with “N,” and enlisted soldiers had just three digits. Anyone who had previously failed Jump School was forced to wear the letter “F” after their number — a daily mark of humiliation.

BOQ, Boot Black & Corcoran Jump Boots

After we finished in-processing, the four of us reported to our rooms at the Bachelor Officer Quarters (BOQ) in Abrams Hall. That’s where we first discovered the “Boot Black” — a man who made his living shining boots for officers, and only officers. His work saved us a precious hour each day, and the results were almost unreal.

Abrams Hall that contained the Bachelor Officer Quarters (BOQ) at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Abrams Hall that contained the Bachelor Officer Quarters (BOQ) at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

The shine he put on our leather made them look like patent leather, gleaming so bright they seemed untouchable. Jim, Perry, and Ron had already bought their classic Corcoran Jump Boots, the iconic footwear of paratroopers. I, however, held back. I told them I was too superstitious to buy a pair before I’d actually earned my wings. Once those silver Jump Wings were pinned on my chest, I promised myself I’d head straight to the PX and buy a couple pairs of Corcorans to wear proudly every day. I couldn’t wait.

Classic Corcoran Jump Boot worn by U.S. Army until 2008.
Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone
Classic Corcoran Jump Boot worn by U.S. Army until 2008

My Airborne Haircut

After we finished checking into our BOQ we dropped off our boots with the Boot Black. Then, we headed over to the post barber shop. It was loud and packed, a Saturday rush with everyone getting their weekly cuts. I was the first to sit in the chair, and I confidently asked the barber for a “Regular Officer’s Cut.” He started at the back of my neck with the electric razor. Perry suddenly shouted, “He’s here for Jump School!” The barber paused and declared, “I see!” Without another word, the barber drove the razor straight down the center of my forehead. In an instant, I had a reverse-Mohawk shaved right to the scalp.

A few quick swipes later, I was completely bald. I wanted to kill Perry—I didn’t think shaving my head was an actual requirement for Airborne School. But there I was, looking like a freshly polished bowling ball. In the sweltering days of training that followed, I had to admit—being bald wasn’t the worst thing after all.

My with a short Airborne haircut wearing my "Notre Dame" baseball shirt and standing outside of Abrams Hall at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Orientation Week

For enlisted soldiers, Jump School began with Orientation Week, a soldier-only phase that officers skipped. Instead, we officers dove straight into Ground Week, which meant the soldiers already had the advantage of being in better shape and knowing the rules and SOPs of Jump School. Still, as officers, we had no choice but to jump in — pardon the pun — like we knew exactly what we were doing. We could not afford to fail in front of soldiers.

Orientation Week itself was a whirlwind introduction to airborne culture and physical preparation. Soldiers went through rigorous PT assessments — push-ups, sit-ups, pull-ups, and a two-mile run — designed to weed out those not fit for airborne training.

The instructors, known as “Black Hats” for their distinctive headgear, drilled them on airborne history, safety protocols, and the mental toughness needed to jump out of airplanes. They also learned the basics of the T-10 and T-11 parachute systems and their maintenance. For those soldiers, Orientation Week wasn’t just training — it was a test of commitment.

Members of the Airborne Course doing PT at Fort Benning.   Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Members of the Airborne Course doing PT at Fort Benning.   Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Ground Week

Ground Week was the first of the three core phases of Jump School — and the starting point for officers. It was all about mastering fundamentals. The Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) became our daily obsession. Over and over, we drilled the five-point landing: balls of the feet, calves, thighs, buttocks, and back. We practiced on sawdust pits, from platforms, and off mock doors until our bodies moved instinctively.

Ground Branch at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Sunday, before Ground Week officially began, we attended church and went out for brunch. The rest of the day was spent preparing uniforms and equipment. I even found a pay phone to call Mariann and share what had happened so far. That night, we went to bed early because the alarm would come at 0430 the next morning.

Monday morning arrived quickly. The day began with the brutal rhythm of Ground Week: early wake-up, physical training, parachute landing fall (PLF) practice, mock door drills, parachute packing, and classroom instruction, all under the relentless scrutiny of the Black Hats.

Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) training at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

A Typical Ground-Week Day included:

  • 0430–0500: Wake-up and personal hygiene. Bunks made to military standards.
  • 0500–0600: PT. Calisthenics, running in formation (often in combat boots), and airborne-specific exercises.
  • 0600–0700: Breakfast and accountability. Black Hats inspected uniforms and appearance.
  • 0700–1200: PLF drills, mock door exits, classroom lessons on parachute components and emergency procedures.
  • 1200–1300: Lunch. Quick refuel for the afternoon.
  • 1300–1700: Afternoon training, continued PLFs, parachute rigging and packing, additional classroom instruction, and PT.
  • 1700–1800: Dinner. Officers were dismissed back to the BOQ, while enlisted soldiers continued.
  • 1800–2100: Evening review, equipment maintenance, or personal study.
  • 2100–2200: Lights out.

Our First Day of Training

That first Monday morning, Jim, Perry, Ron, and I joined the company formation at the barracks. We were aligned in ranks called “sticks,” with an officer in the first spot, each paired with an NCO, with dozens of soldiers to our left (as many as 50–60 enlisted men). The Black Hats were relentless. Each day, soldiers who couldn’t keep up were dismissed or volunteered to quit at the end of the day. By Jump Week, my stick had dwindled to fewer than a dozen.

Airborne students in formation at the U.S. Army Airborne School.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone

Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) training at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) training at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) training at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

We also studied parachute rigging and emergency procedures: what to do if a chute malfunctioned, if you got entangled, or if you had to cut away. Physical training ramped up, with long formation runs in combat boots and punishing group calisthenics. The Black Hats kept us under constant pressure, enforcing discipline with no room for error. By the end of Ground Week, every movement — exiting an aircraft, checking equipment, executing a PLF — was burned into muscle memory.

Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) training on the Sling-Land-Trainer at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Black Hat Sergeant assisting an Airborne student on the Sling-Land Trainer

Looking After the Zairian Lieutenant

During Ground Week, I had the additional duty of looking after a lieutenant from Zaire, 2LT Mbanga Bona (A900F). On the first day, when the Chow Trucks arrived at noon, he leapt toward them in excitement. I ran and grabbed him by the shirt. “The chow is for the soldiers,” I said. “When do the officers eat?” he asked. I replied, “We don’t. They feed the soldiers, not the officers.” He chuckled. “Oh, in my country, it’s the opposite!”

Allied Officer, 2LT Mbanga Bona (A900F) from Zaire at the U.S. Army Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
2LT Mbanga Bona (A900F) from Zaire

I asked him what he normally ate. “If I’m lucky,” he said, “I eat cow!” His response made me laugh and forget my own hunger for a brief, much-needed moment of levity.

My Miserable Night as SDO

One night, I was assigned as the Staff Duty Officer for the company. That meant staying in the barracks overnight, with no sleep, monitoring the Charge of Quarters, and answering to Idi Amin. Soldiers cleaned the barracks under his relentless orders, while I tried to survive the night.

By 0430, when I was released to shower and dress for PT, I was delirious. The next day, after mud had accumulated from overnight rain, I was forced to do push-ups directly over puddles until I collapsed into the muck. A Black Hat leaned over me, yelling, “Do you want to quit, Lieutenant?” Blowing bubbles in the mud, I replied, “No, Sergeant, Airborne!”

“That’s what I want to hear, Airborne. Now get back in formation and look like a paratrooper!”

250-Foot Free-Drop Towers at the Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
250-Foot Free-Drop Towers at the Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia

Tower Week

After surviving Ground Week, Tower Week tested both courage and skill. Tower Week took everything we’d practiced on the ground and elevated it — literally. The 34-foot towers were our first real test of simulated aircraft jumps, focusing on proper exit posture and landing technique. Then came the 250-foot towers and the Swing Landing Trainer, simulating real canopy sway and descent dynamics.

The 34-foot towers were our first real test, simulating the jump out of a C-130 door. We learned to keep our posture tight: chin tucked, elbows in, knees bent. Clean exits were everything.

34-Foot Tower with Poster showing Airborne Body Position Check List.  U.S. Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
34-Foot Tower with Poster showing Airborne Body Position Check List

Then came the 250-foot tower, a hulking steel structure visible from across the base. Hoisted skyward in a parachute harness and then released, we learned to trust the canopy, control our risers, and prepare for landing. The Swing Landing Trainer added another layer — simulating the motion of descending under a chute and forcing us to nail our PLFs under stress. Tower Week was more psychological than physical, bridging the gap between practice and the reality of what was coming next.

Rigging the chute for the 250-foot free drop tower at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Rigging the chute for the 250-foot free drop tower at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Rigging the chute for the 250-foot free drop tower at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Rigging the chute for the 250-foot free drop tower at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Doctor Mushroom Head

During Tower Week, I noticed the ranking officer in our company — a Major, a physician, who had been assigned to a Special Forces unit — walking around in a white skydiver’s helmet instead of a standard steel pot. The Black Hats called him “Mushroom Head” all day, shouting, “Mushroom Head, drop and give me 10!” It was humiliating, and I felt sorry for him. Occasionally, our SEAL platoon leader would shout, “Make it 20!” and we would all laugh at the Black Hats, who became even more furious. Moments like these made the long, grueling days pass with a little bit of levity.

Photo of Airborne students at the U.S. Army Airborne Course.  Special Forces doctor wearing white skydiving helmet known as "Mushroom Head".  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
That’s Doctor “Mushroom Head” in the White Helmet

Jump Week

Jump Week was the culmination of everything we had worked toward. Each of us had to complete five Airborne jumps to graduate. The Black Hats liked to joke that if a trainee died on the fifth jump, they would still pin silver wings on his chest.

The aircraft delivering paratroopers over Fort Benning in 1981 came from the 317th Tactical Airlift Wing at Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina. Over the week, I had the opportunity to jump from three different aircraft: the C-130 Hercules, the C-141 Starlifter, and the venerable C-47 Skytrain “Gooney Bird.”

C-141 Starlifter
C-131 Hercules dropping paratroopers at the U.S. Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
C-131 Hercules
C-47 Skytrain "Gooney Bird" dropping paratroopers at the U.S. Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
C-47 Skytrain “Gooney Bird”

The C-130 was by far the most common, a workhorse of tactical airlift. Jumping from the C-141 was the smoothest experience — the jet blast from its four engines snapped your chute open almost instantly, leaving no doubt you’d deploy safely. In stark contrast, the old C-47 was painfully slow. I remember hanging in the air, counting — “four-thousand, five-thousand, six-thousand” — my hand already reaching for the reserve handle, when finally my main canopy decided to blossom above me.

Combat-Equipped Jumps

The first two were Hollywood jumps — just us and our parachutes. Then came two combat-equipped jumps, where we hauled full gear into the aircraft and lumbered to the door under the weight of it all.

Combat Equipment Jump at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Combat Equipment Jump at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Night Jump

Finally came the infamous night jump — the one that every paratrooper remembers. It was scheduled for a night with a new moon, which meant there wasn’t a sliver of moonlight in the sky. It was pitch black.

Night Jump at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Night Jump at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Night Jump at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

As the officer leading my stick, I was called forward: “Stand in the door!” the jumpmaster barked. I stepped up, staring out into pure darkness. There were no landmarks, no horizon, just a black void. My instincts screamed Don’t do it. But training takes over. The green light flashed. I jumped.

Out into the universe — blackness rushing past, the roar of the aircraft fading, counting one-thousand, two-thousand, three-thousand, four-thousand — and whoomp! My chute opened. The sudden silence was surreal. Just me, the canopy above, and the invisible ground somewhere below.

T-10 Parachute without slits for steering at the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
T-10 Parachute wihout slits for steering

Floating Backwards with the T-10 Parachute

For night jumps, we were issued the older T-10 parachute, the kind without slits, which meant it wasn’t steerable. I didn’t realize until I landed flat on my back that I had been drifting backwards the whole descent. With no horizon to orient myself, the ground came sooner than expected. I slammed down hard, helmet cracking against the drop zone. “F**k!” I shouted instinctively — and in that moment, I finally understood the dent in the steel pot helmet they had issued me. I was certain I had just added another.

Flat on my back, staring at the black sky, I actually paused for a second to admire the stars and thank God I was alive. Then — splat! Another paratrooper hit nearby, cursing “F**k!” A second later — splat! another one, then another: “Fk! Fk! F**k!” It was like a chorus of misery echoing across the drop zone.

That’s when it dawned on me — I couldn’t see a thing, and at any moment someone might land directly on top of me. I rolled up my chute in record time and sprinted for the green beacon marking the Assembly Area, as fast as my legs could carry me.

Each landing tested the PLFs we’d drilled endlessly. Each successful jump added to the confidence and camaraderie of our class. By the time we completed that fifth jump, we were no longer just students — we were paratroopers.

5th and Final Jump

The fifth and final jump was a mix of nerves and pure anticipation. By now, I trusted the process, but nothing matched the relief of feeling that chute snap open overhead one last time. My descent was steady, my PLF crisp, and as soon as I hit the ground, I rolled up my chute with a grin I couldn’t hide. Sprinting to the Assembly Area, I knew what waited at the end of this run—my Airborne wings, the symbol of having earned a place among paratroopers.

Final jump before graduation.  Paratroopers exiting door of C-130.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Final jump before graduation.  Dozens of paratroopers under open canopies.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Final jump before graduation.  Single paratrooper under a T-10 parachute.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Final jump before graduation.  Rolling up parachute.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Graduation and Pinning Wings

At graduation, when those silver wings were finally pinned on my chest, I knew I had earned not only the badge but also the right to go buy those Corcoran Jump Boots I’d been waiting for. Yet, standing there, another thought stayed with me. I didn’t know if my father would ever see me differently—as a fellow paratrooper, or finally as a man to respect. But in that moment, it didn’t matter. I had pushed myself through every ounce of training and earned those wings on my own. Airborne School gave me more than a badge; it gave me confidence in myself as a soldier and stirred a warrior ethos that ran deep in the Carbone bloodline. Regardless of my father’s judgment, I walked away knowing I had truly become my own man.

Newly earned Parachutist Wings on a paratrooper at the U.S. Army Airborne School.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

New graduates of the U.S. Army Airborne Course at Fort Benning, Georgia with Honor Graduates in front rank holding awards.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Diploma for the U.S. Army Airborne Course.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
U.S. Army Parachutist Badge.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Class Yearbook for 43rd Company, 4th Student Battalion, The Student Brigade (Airborne), Fort Benning, Georgia.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Home Page

Chapter 22: My Senior Year at Notre Dame

Photo of graduate Anthony J. Carbone with his parents Colonel Tony and Edda Carbone. In front of the Hesburg Library at the University of Notre Dame.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA memoir of Service, Shame and the Search for Truth

Return to Campus

I returned to Notre Dame on Saturday, August 23, 1980, ready to begin my final year of college. I had just left my family at Fort Dix, New Jersey. My father had taken his new assignment as the Senior Army Advisor to the 50th Armored Division and the New Jersey National Guard. Saying goodbye carried a certain weight — this was it, my last year at Notre Dame. In many ways, the year that would set the course for what came next.

Back to Campus and Fisher Hall

By now, I had the routine down. Arrive at Fisher Hall. Reconnect with the Fisher Hall gang. Track down Mariann at Lyons Hall. Dinner at South Dining Hall with everyone together again. Pick up my belongings from storage and turn Room 221 of Fisher into my bachelor’s pad for the year. It felt comfortable, familiar — like slipping back into a well-worn groove.

The Fisher Hall Gang

Returning to Notre Dame and Fisher Hall for my final year felt like coming home to a band of brothers. We had our tight-knit Fisher Hall gang: Bob Terifay, my fellow pre-med senior. Andy CordesAl Emory, and Chris Kane, all senior engineering majors. Matt Bedics, our senior philosophy mind. Scott Olds, our pre-med junior genius. And Joe DeLaney, our sharp-witted pre-law junior.

We weren’t just classmates — we were a crew bound by late-night study sessions, endless banter in the hallways, and a shared love of Notre Dame traditions. Adding to our circle were the three steady girlfriends. I had Mariann Schmitz. Andy was with Ginger Miklausen. And Joe with Bernadette Young. All three couples would go on to marry soon after graduation. Which made our Fisher Hall gang feel even more like a family.

Photograph of 3 young men from Fisher Hall, University of Notre Dame.  Friends of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Group photo of Fisher Hall Gang at University of Notre Dame.  Anthony Carbone with Mariann Schmitz.  Andy and Ginger Cordes.

Fisher Hall gang at small dinner table.  Anthony J. Carbone with Andy Cordes and Scott Olds.

Registration Day

Monday, August 25, was Class Registration Day. My schedule ended up being a mix of heavy requirements and a few breaths of relief. Only two science courses first semester — Embryology (BIOL 301) with its demanding laboratory, and Physiology Lab (BIOL 344L). I signed up for Medical Ethics(THEO 344), a required English class on the Novel (ENGL 322). And, for my one true elective, Introduction to Music (MUS 220). That music class would turn out to be the only course where I could truly relax.

University of Notre Dame Student Class Schedule for Senior Year First Semester. Courses include Embryology with Lab, Physiology Lab, American Military History, Novel, and Intro to Music. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

ROTC and Military History

ROTC senior year was every bit as demanding as junior year, only in a different way. Last year, I had been preparing myself for ROTC Advanced Camp. This year, the responsibility shifted — I was the one preparing the junior class cadets for their turn at Advanced Camp. On top of that came my academic load. American Military History turned out to be one of my most difficult courses. I found both the professor and the material fascinating, but the exams were brutal. My learning disability with rote memorization — names, dates, and battles — was exactly the foundation of the course. No matter how hard I studied, the details slipped through my fingers. The tests felt like uphill battles every time.

Painting of British Major General Charles Cornwallis surrenders his army at Yorktown, the U.S. Army’s first — but not last — overall war victory. Biography of Anthony J. Carbone.

Senior Year ROTC Position

As part of the ROTC routine, I had to report to the Professor of Military Science (PMS). We reviewed my evaluation from Advanced Camp at Fort Riley over the summer. My rating came back in the Top 1%. The PMS wasted no time asking if I wanted to be the next Fighting Irish Battalion Commander. It was the most coveted position for a senior cadet — prestige, responsibility, recognition. For many, it was the crown jewel of the ROTC program. But I turned it down.

The truth was, I had been wrestling with this decision for weeks. This was my last chance to raise my GPA before applying to medical school. I knew that taking on the role of Battalion Commander would be all-consuming, and I couldn’t afford the distraction. In the moment, it felt like the disciplined and practical choice — but it was a decision I later came to regret. The cadet who grabbed the title after me seemed to take delight in treating me like a brand-new recruit for the rest of the year. And the PMS, perhaps disappointed in me, seemed to punish my decision by assigning me only the rank of Cadet First Lieutenant.

3 ROTC cadets in dress uniform in front of Fisher Hall at the University of Notre Dame.  Anthony J Carbone (Army), Chris Kane (USAF), and one US Navy midshipman.
Three Fisher Hall Section ROTC Cadets

Despite everything I had accomplished in ROTC and in my academic life up to that point, I carried a quiet but persistent lack of confidence. It didn’t make sense — I had proven myself again and again — but deep down, I couldn’t quite shake it. Partly because my father was intent on teaching me humility, to the point that it choked out any developing confidence.

Photograph of Anthony J. Carbone with Mariann Schmitz in winter coats with scarves.
With Mariann Schmitz

Senior Year with Mariann

Mariann was at the center of my senior year. We were more than just a couple — we were companions in the truest sense. Ours was not a relationship defined by drama or passion alone, but by a steady closeness that anchored me. She understood me in ways no one else did, and she had a calming presence that quieted the anxieties I often carried.

Except for classes and the restrictions of parietals, we were inseparable. We studied together in my room every day, we ate every meal together, and we moved through campus life as a pair. In many ways, she completed me, filling in the gaps where I lacked confidence or balance. By then, even our families had begun to know each other, which only deepened the sense that what we shared was lasting and real.

Senior Year Missions

In my senior year, I focused on two missions: first, raising my overall GPA to boost my chances of getting into medical school, and second, preparing to commission as a U.S. Army officer.

For ROTC, I had to submit my branch preferences, and I listed them in order as Military Intelligence, Medical Service Corps, and Armor. Then came the assignment location choices. If I had my way, it would be simple: (1) Germany, (2) Germany, (3) Anywhere in Europe. The Army would give me its answer soon enough.

The bulk of my mental energy that autumn was spent trying to raise my GPA while I waited for an interview from any of the medical schools I had applied to. It was an endless waiting game. Every day I checked my mailbox in Fisher Hall, hoping for a letter that might finally open the door to an interview. The uncertainty gnawed at me. Most nights I prayed at the Grotto with Mariann, asking God to guide my path and steady my nerves. My classmates seemed to be coasting through their senior year with light schedules and carefree weekends, while I carried the heavy weight of not knowing whether my dream of becoming a doctor would ever get off the ground.

Ronald Reagan is Elected President

The semester flew by because I was so busy balancing academics, ROTC responsibilities, and the endless cycle of medical school applications. In the midst of all this, the country was caught up in the 1980 presidential election. In November, Ronald Reagan won a landslide victory over incumbent Jimmy Carter, signaling a dramatic political shift for the nation. Even on campus, you could feel the change in mood — an undercurrent of renewed confidence and patriotism that matched the new decade just beginning.

New York Times front page "Reagan Wins By A Landslide, Sweeping at Least 48 States; GOP Gains Strength in House."  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Cover of Times Magazine with face of President Reagan with "A Fresh Start".  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Thanksgiving 1980

Thanksgiving was a repeat trip to Mariann’s family home in Wheaton, Illinois. That year, Mrs. Schmitz decided to have the meal catered, which felt like a real treat. I slept downstairs again in John Jr.’s wood-paneled basement bedroom, complete with its enormous waterbed. Mariann’s roommate, Bernadette Young, joined us for Thanksgiving in Wheaton.

Photograph of 3 people sitting on a couch, one young man and two young ladies.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
At Mariann’s house in Wheaton, Illinois, at Thanksgiving with her youngest sister, Jacqueline (to my right), and Mari’s roommate, Bernadette Young (to my left).

One of the highlights of the weekend was when Mariann and I drove out to the Morton Arboretum. Founded in 1922 by Joy Morton — son of Arbor Day founder J. Sterling Morton and the man behind Morton Salt — the Arboretum was created as an outdoor museum of trees and a center for tree research and conservation. It was the perfect place for a quiet walk together, surrounded by nature.

Fighting Irish Football

Notre Dame football in the fall of 1980 gave us plenty to cheer about. The highlight of the season was the dramatic victory over Michigan, sealed by a last-second field goal that had the whole campus buzzing for days. Saturdays were sacred for the Fisher Hall gang and our girlfriends. We would walk together across campus to the stadium, always stopping to watch and listen to the Band of the Fighting Irish perform for students and fans before the game. And always on the lookout for our Fisher Hall Irish Guardsman.

The Notre Dame Marching Band, founded in 1845, is the oldest university marching band in continuous existence in the country. From its beginnings as the Notre Dame Cornet Band, it grew into a symbol of spirit and tradition, playing at every home football game since the program’s very first in 1887. The sight and sound of the band — its drum cadence, the brass fanfares, and the unity of its formations — were an inseparable part of every football Saturday.

Fall Final Exams December 13–19, 1980

Fall Final Examinations ran from December 13–19, 1980, and they demanded steady effort from start to finish. My goal for the year was to raise my GPA for medical school applications, and I stayed focused on that. The sciences were as rigorous as ever — Embryology pushed my limits, while Physiology rewarded my persistence with an A. In Novels (English 322), I wrote a paper that came together better than expected, and in Medical Ethics (Theology 344) I faced one of those exhausting Blue Book essay exams, but came out with another A. Introduction to Music (Music 220) balanced the load with a course I thoroughly enjoyed, deepening my appreciation for the classics and revealing a growing fondness for the Baroque. The American Military History exam proved the most difficult, but I managed it better than I anticipated. Of course, my last examination fell on the final day — premeds were always the last to leave campus for the holidays. Step by step, course by course, the semester added up to real progress — exactly what I needed as medical school decisions drew nearer.

Christmas 1980 Vacation in Boston

Christmas Holiday 1980 ran from December 20 to January 12. I flew from South Bend to Boston Logan to spend Christmas and New Year’s with my family at my grandparents’ home in Medford, Massachusetts. My parents, Cynthia and Pamela, drove up from Fort Dix, New Jersey to join us. Lynne and Diana were both still in school in Boston, so they were already there when I arrived. As with most Christmas breaks, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day passed in a blur — I was running on fumes after weeks of final exam preparation.

Our Italian Christmas Traditions

Still, the traditions were the same. On Christmas Eve, we gathered for the great Feast of the Seven Fishes with my aunts, uncles, and cousins. At midnight, we attended Mass at Saint Joseph’s Catholic Church — the same church where all of us had been baptized, where we received our First Communions, and where my sisters were married. Christmas Day brought another feast at Nana’s: roast turkey and roast beef, salad and fruit, then nuts, and finally desserts like cannoli, Italian cookies, and my mother’s favorite, Italian rum cake.

The Mike’s vs. Modern Pastry Debate

This would always lead us to the family debate on who makes a better cannoli — Mike’s or Modern Pastry. Having lived in Boston’s North End (the Italian section), I am partial to Modern Pastry.

What about medical school?

The holiday wasn’t without its stresses. Every relative seemed to ask the same question: Have you heard from any medical schools yet?” I hadn’t, and each time I was asked, the weight of uncertainty pressed on me a little more. On top of that, I was phoning Mariann a couple of times a day, racking up long-distance charges. By the end of the holiday, the phone bill was steep, and I was definitely in trouble for it.

New Year’s was a quieter affair. In my family, it was never a grand occasion. We’d watch the ball drop in Times Square, share a hug and a kiss at midnight, and then be in bed by 12:30. The next morning, we went to Mass for the Solemnity of Mary, before turning our attention to football. On New Year’s Day, we gathered to watch Notre Dame face Georgia in the Sugar Bowl. A little over a week later, on January 11, I was back on the plane to South Bend, ready to begin the spring semester.

Sugar Bowl Notre Dame vs. Georgia (January 1, 1981)

That season under Coach Dan Devine, the Irish finished with a 9–3 record. The team capped its year with an appearance in the 1981 Sugar Bowl against Georgia. Hopes were high for a bowl victory, but Georgia’s freshman running back Herschel Walker proved unstoppable, and Notre Dame fell 17–10. It was a bitter ending to what had been an exciting season, but the tradition, pageantry, and sense of community that surrounded Notre Dame football remained unforgettable.

Return to Campus for my Final Semester

Flying back into South Bend in early January, I felt the familiar mix of anticipation and relief that always came with returning to campus. I hauled my bags into Fisher Hall, where I caught up with Bob, Andy, Al, Scott, and the rest of the gang — lots of handshakes, backslaps, and quick stories about our holidays.

But as always, the first place I really wanted to be was Lyons Hall, looking for Mariann. Seeing her again was the best part of returning to Notre Dame, and it made the long break apart melt away in an instant. That first evening back, we all headed over to South Dining Hall for dinner, trading stories and laughter as we settled back into campus life.

There was also a deeper current running beneath all the reunion energy. I knew this was the start of my final semester at Notre Dame — a place that, over four years, had become the longest I had ever lived anywhere in my life. That fact alone gave everything a little more weight. I was keenly aware that the semester would fly by, and that before long I’d be saying goodbye to good friends — some I might never see again. But I also knew I’d see Mariann again. That certainty brought a quiet comfort as I braced myself for the final stretch.

Spring Registration (January 13, 1981)

My last semester at Notre Dame, and at long last, a slightly lighter schedule. For the first time in four years, I wasn’t buried under calculus equations or the endless grind of organic chemistry. Instead, my final academic stretch looked almost enjoyable. I had just one core science — Comparative Anatomy (BIOL 302) with its inevitable laboratory component. ROTC was still part of the mix, with Military Management II (Military Science 412), sharpening us for commissioning only four months away.

To balance out the science and military, I registered for American Writers Survey (ENGL 383), where we dove into classics by Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Edgar Allan Poe, who once warned: “Believe nothing you hear, and only half of what you see.” Rounding out the schedule was Religion & Art (Philosophy 361), an hour each day spent studying breathtaking works of sacred art, and New Testament: Death & Afterlife (Theology 314), which promised to stretch both faith and imagination. By the time I graduated, I think I had a minor in Philosopy & Theology. And ROTC should count automatically as a minor in Military Science.

University of Notre Dame Class Schedule 4th Year 2nd Semester for Anthony J. Carbone. Courses include Comparative Anatomy plus lab, ROTC Military Management II, American Writers Survey, Religion & Art, and New Testament: Death and Afterlife.
Student Class Schedule for Spring Semester of my Senior Year at Notre Dame.

It was still a full load, but one that finally left me breathing room — a welcome change for a senior staring down the last lap of the race. More than anything, it gave me the chance to step back and enjoy the life I had built here: evenings in Fisher Hall with Bob, Andy, Al, Chris, Joe and Scott, long walks across campus with Mariann, and the daily rhythms of a place that had come to feel like home. I knew the months would fly by, but I wanted to make every one of them count.

Reagan Inauguration (20 January 1981)

On January 20, 1981, history unfolded as Ronald Reagan was inaugurated as the 40th President of the United States. It was a day marked by symbolism and change — the end of the Carter years and the beginning of what many hoped would be a new era of strength and optimism for the country.

Mariann and I gathered in the lounge of Fisher Hall with the rest of the gang to watch the inauguration on television. There was a sense of excitement in the room, mixed with the usual banter, but also an awareness that this was a turning point for America. Watching it together, with Mariann at my side and surrounded by good friends, tied the national moment into the fabric of my senior year.

American Hostages Released From Iran After 444 Days

Just minutes after Reagan took the oath of office, the American hostages held in Iran for 444 days were released, adding even more drama to an already historic moment.

Tri-Military Ball (February 21, 1981)

On February 21, 1981, we gathered for the Tri-Military Ball, a joint celebration of Army, Air Force, and Navy ROTC. Of course, I took Mariann as my date. It felt good to wear my dress uniform, now adorned with the badges and awards I had earned at ROTC Advanced Camp the previous summer. But what made the evening truly special was walking into that ballroom with Mariann at my side. I was proud of her — not only for her beauty, but for her intelligence and social grace. Mariann was the kind of partner who made me feel completely at ease at any event. She remembered names when I couldn’t, and she had a clever way of getting people to introduce themselves first so I wouldn’t be caught in the awkward position of trying to recall them. She was, in every sense, my better half.

Army ROTC Cadet Lieutenant Anthony J. Carbone in dress uniform with ribbons and Expert Marksmanship Badge.
Taking Mariann to the Tri-Military Ball at Notre Dame

The night carried all the formality and tradition of the military, complete with the expected reception line. At the head stood our Professor of Military Science, Lieutenant Colonel Henry Gordon, with his wife at his side. As I stepped forward, he shook my hand and introduced me to his wife as “Cadet Bill Carbone.” I smiled and replied, “My name is Anthony. I’ve been your cadet for four years.” Then, as I turned to Mariann, I jokingly introduced her to him as “Sergeant Gordon.” The look of shock on his face was priceless, and Mariann laughed as I properly introduced her to Mrs. Gordon. That moment of humor broke the stiffness of the line, and together, Mariann and I carried the evening with the same warmth and confidence that made her the perfect date for any occasion.

More of the Fisher Hall Gang

Assassination Attempt on President Reagan (March 30, 1981)

On March 30, 1981, the nation was shaken when President Ronald Reagan was shot and wounded by John Hinckley Jr. outside a Washington, D.C. hotel. I can remember the exact moment the news broke. I was in Comparative Anatomy Lab, where a few of us were goofing around with our specimens while the radio played music in the background. Suddenly, the broadcast was interrupted: “We interrupt this program for a special news bulletin. President Reagan has been shot in an attempted assassination attempt…” The room fell instantly silent. Reagan had been struck by a bullet that narrowly missed his heart, but he recovered quickly and reassured the country with his resilience and humor.

Hinckley, who had acted in a delusional attempt to impress actress Jodie Foster, was later found not guilty by reason of insanity and confined to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital for the Criminally Insane — a place I would one day walk the halls of as a Georgetown medical student. At the time, I had no idea that my future path would bring me face-to-face with the same institution where the man who had nearly killed the President was confined, giving me firsthand insight into the uneasy intersection of mental health and criminal justice.

John Hinckley Jr’s Mugshot (March 30, 1981)

Assassination Attempt on Pope John Paul II — May 13, 1981

On Wednesday, May 13, 1981, just one day after my last final exam at Notre Dame, the world seemed to stop again. It was 11:17 a.m. Central Daylight Time when the broadcast cut in. A group of us — our Fisher Hall gang of seniors, along with Mariann and Ginger, who were staying behind to attend our graduation — were in our rooms watching television. I was sitting with Mari when the familiar words rang out: “We interrupt this program for a special news bulletin. Pope John Paul II was just shot in Saint Peter’s Square in an apparent assassination attempt. He is being rushed to the Agostino Gemelli University Polyclinic in Rome for emergency surgery.” The room went silent. We sat frozen, stunned by the idea that someone would try to kill the Pope. Reports came in that he had been hit in the abdomen and suffered intestinal injuries, his survival uncertain as surgeons fought for hours to save his life.

Incredibly, Pope John Paul II did survive, spending three weeks in the hospital recovering from his wounds.

What followed made an even greater impression: his extraordinary act of forgiveness. In 1983, he visited Mehmet Ali Ağca — the man who had tried to kill him — in prison, offering him mercy and compassion instead of bitterness.

The Pope later attributed his survival to the intercession of Our Lady of Fátima, whose feast day coincided with the shooting.

President Reagan had survived his assassination attempt just six weeks earlier. The parallel ordeals forged a deep friendship between the two men, uniting them in resilience, faith, and a shared determination to confront tyranny and defend human dignity.

Army Branch and Location Assignments

Shortly before commissioning, all of us Senior Army ROTC cadets received the orders we had been anxiously awaiting — our Army branch and unit assignments. I remember holding the envelope with a mix of anticipation and dread, knowing that whatever it contained would shape the next chapter of my life. First, my request for an educational delay to attend medical school was denied. I had been branched in the U.S. Army Chemical Corps with an initial assignment to the U.S. Army Chemical School at Fort McClellan, Alabama for the Chemical Officer Basic Course.

For someone who had grown up studying my father’s military career, I was amazed — I didn’t even know the Army had a Chemical Corps. I could feel my father’s quiet disappointment that I hadn’t been branched into the combat arms, like Armor or Cavalry, the “real” soldiers.

The unit crest of the Chemical Corps. A green Griffen with the motto: “Elementis Regamus Proelium” stands for “Win the Battle Through the Elements”

Not Korea, but Fort Irwin

The Army also asked if I would like to serve in Korea, which meant a one-year, unaccompanied tour. I replied that I would prefer anywhere in the United States or Europe. My father’s disapproval was clear; Korea had been the start of his own career, the proving ground of the Army, and he could not understand why I was thinking about Mariann instead of my career. Eventually, my assignment was revealed: the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California.

Entrance to the National Training Center at Fort Irwin and the infamous Painted Rocks Momument honoring units who have rotated through the NTC.

I had never heard of the post, which had only reopened weeks before. When I told my father, he said, “Great assignment, JR!” — and I knew I was in trouble. Sure enough, Fort Irwin was located in the infamous Mojave Desert, bordering on Death Valley, USA, a harsh and unforgiving landscape that would test me in ways I had never imagined.

Commencement Weekend (May 15–17, 1981)

The University of Notre Dame 1981 Commencement Weekend May 15–17 Bulletin. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

My entire family — Mom, Dad, and all four of my sisters — made the trip out to Notre Dame for my commissioning and graduation. And of course, Mariann was right by my side through it all. The weekend was packed with ceremony and meaning.

Commissioning Ceremony (May 16, 1981)

On Saturday, May 16, the day began at 10 a.m. with the Army ROTC Commissioning. The most powerful moment for me was taking the Oath of Office, sworn in by my father, a Colonel in the U.S. Army.

“I, Anthony J. Carbone, do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.”

To stand there, repeating those words, and to be sworn in by my own father — it was overwhelming. The pride of the moment was real, but so was the quiet sting. Deep down, I prayed that he had finally let go of his disappointment that I had turned down West Point. I couldn’t be sure. I sensed it still lingered in him, unspoken. But as I looked at my mother, my sisters, and Mariann, I saw nothing but pride in their eyes. That helped temper the pain. For me, it was the beginning of a new life: at once exhilarating, humbling, and sobering.

My father, Colonel Tony Carbone, commissioned me as a new Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army
Commissioning Day with my mother, Mariann, and my sister Pamela at Notre Dame (May 16, 1981). Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Commissioning Day with my mother, Mariann, and my sister Pamela at Notre Dame (May 16, 1981)
Newly commissioined U.S. Army Second Lieutenants from Notre Dame Army ROTC (May 16, 1981). I am in the back row between the American flag and Notre Dame banner. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Newly commissioned Army officers from Notre Dame (May 16, 1981). I am in the back row between the American flag and the Notre Dame banner.

Academic Procession & Baccalaureate Mass

Later, at 4:20 p.m., came the Academic Procession at the Athletic and Convocation Center, followed by the Baccalaureate Mass at 5 p.m. The evening was full: a cocktail party and buffet supper from 7 to 8:30 p.m., then a concert by the University of Notre Dame Glee Club at Stepan Center at 9 p.m. It was a long, emotional, and exhausting day for all of us.

Commencement Ceremony (May 17, 1981)

The highlight of the day, however, was President Ronald Reagan himself. On May 17, 1981, just weeks after surviving an assassination attempt, Reagan chose Notre Dame for his first public appearance. The arena crackled with anticipation. Secret Service agents were everywhere, watchful eyes scanning the crowd as we passed through metal detectors and searches to enter. The sense of history unfolding right before us was undeniable.

When President Reagan finally appeared, the entire arena erupted. His presence filled the space — larger than life, resilient, and still carrying the aura of a man who had stared down death and come back smiling. His address mixed humor with deep inspiration, speaking of America’s role in the world, the strength of freedom, and the resilience of our people. It was everything you could hope for from a commencement address, and more.

Honoring “Knute Rockne, All American”

Then came one of those unforgettable Notre Dame moments. Father Theodore Hesburgh, our legendary president, conferred honorary degrees upon both Reagan and actor Pat O’Brien. The symbolism was perfect — O’Brien, who had portrayed Knute Rockne, and Reagan, forever remembered as “The Gipper,” standing together on our stage. The crowd went wild, the cheers echoing like the roar of a football Saturday in Notre Dame Stadium.

Pat O’Brien and President Reagan hugging after being awarded honorary degrees by Father Theodore Hesburgh.

Reflections on Past Four Years

For me, it was overwhelming. I had just been commissioned as a U.S. Army officer the day before, had received my diploma, and was now witnessing history alongside my family and Mariann. I felt a profound sense of pride — not just as a new graduate, not just as a soldier, but as an American. It was a moment that fused together all of my identities: Notre Dame man, Army officer, and citizen of a country that, despite its trials, always found a way to rise.

As President Reagan spoke, I couldn’t help but reflect on my own journey. Four years at Notre Dame had taught me discipline, resilience, and the value of faith and friendship. Now, standing on the threshold of adulthood, commissioned as an officer, and armed with my diploma, I felt a surge of possibility. Reagan’s words about courage, responsibility, and service resonated deeply with me — not as abstract ideals, but as a call to action for my own life.

That day, surrounded by family, friends, and Mariann, I realized that the lessons of Notre Dame, the discipline of ROTC, and the support of loved ones had prepared me for whatever challenges lay ahead. It was not just a graduation; it was the beginning of everything I had worked for, a launch into a life I was ready to embrace with confidence, hope, and gratitude.

With my parents and sisters at the Big Commencement Ceremony Day with President Ronald Reagan (May 17, 1981)

The Final Chapter of my Notre Dame Experience

Looking back, my senior year at Notre Dame was a whirlwind of challenge, growth, and unforgettable experiences. Between demanding academics, ROTC responsibilities, and the uncertainty of my future, I learned to balance discipline with perseverance, ambition with patience, and intellect with heart.

Mariann’s companionship, the support of my family, and the camaraderie of the Fisher Hall gang made every obstacle more manageable and every success sweeter. From the highs of football victories and the Tri-Military Ball to the sobering moments of world events and the exhilaration of commissioning and graduation, the year was a microcosm of life itself — intense, unpredictable, and profoundly rewarding. As I left campus for the last time, I carried not only a diploma and a commission but a sense of purpose, pride, and readiness for the next chapter of my life.

Photograph of me standing in front of the U-Haul that I used to move out of Fisher Hall at the University of Notre Dame on May 17, 1981 following graduation. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Loading up my belongings from Fisher Hall into a U-Haul for the last time (May 17, 1981)

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Chapter 12: Bad Kreuznach–Duty, Discipline and a Defining Choice

Bad Kreuznach, Germany Bridge Houses over the Nahe River. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

Bad Kreuznach Germany

Bad Kreuznach, Germany with it’s iconic Bridge Houses over the Nahe River.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Bad Kreuznach, Germany, with its iconic Bridge Houses over the Nahe River.

Dad transfers to the 8th Infantry Division HQ, and I enter Bad Kreuznach American High School

It was mid-junior year, right around New Year’s Day 1976, when my life changed again. We moved from Mannheim to Bad Kreuznach, Germany — just me, my parents, and my two younger sisters. Lynne was already in college in Boston, and Diana chose to stay behind in Mannheim to finish high school. This move marked a major shift not just for me, but for my father as well.

8th Infantry Division “Pathfinders” Headquartered in Bad Kreuznach, Germany

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
8th Infantry Division “Pathfinders” Headquartered in Bad Kreuznach, Germany

8th Infantry Division G3

Dad was no longer commanding a front-line tank battalion. He had been selected for a prestigious yet grueling assignment at the 8th Infantry Division Headquarters at Rose Barracks — serving as the G3, or Plans and Operations Officer. In Army terms, the G3 is arguably the most critical position under the Division Commander, responsible for planning everything from readiness drills to potential combat scenarios. His new boss, Major General John Cleland, was a stern, humorless officer, and these were difficult years for my father.

8th Infantry Division Rose Barracks Front Gate

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
8th Infantry Division Rose Barracks Front Gate
8th Infantry Division Commanding General Cleland

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
8th Infantry Division Commanding General, Major General Cleland
Rose Barracks, Home of HQ 8th Infantry Division

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Rose Barracks, Home of HQ 8th Infantry Division

Busier Days for Dad at Division HQ

Dad brought Major Jim Mills — his trusted officer from Mannheim — with him to the G3 office at BK. But even with a loyal team, the workload was relentless. He was up before dawn and often didn’t return home until well after dark. By the time I woke up for school each morning, he was already gone. But beside my bed, like clockwork, would be a pair of combat boots and a handwritten note. The note included five to ten daily tasks — each one numbered inside a small circle. It was understood that the boots needed to be shined, and when I completed each task, I’d color in the circle. This was how we communicated for most of my time in high school — short, silent exchanges of expectation and acknowledgment.

Pair of official Corcoran Army Jump Boots

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Pair of official Corcoran Army Jump Boots

If Dad managed to sneak home for dinner, it was brief. He’d eat, maybe ask about our day, then disappear back to Headquarters. If he ever woke me up after I had gone to bed, it meant something hadn’t gone well. We lived in the same apartment, but we were passing shadows.

He never saw me play a single Varsity football or soccer game — even though that year, our school won the European Championship in both sports for our division. I was a starter on both teams. Not even one practice. It was always my mom and sisters on the sidelines, cheering me on. Maybe Auntie Norma, too.

The French Quarters

Dad’s world was focused entirely on the Cold War’s ever-present threat. Much of his time as G3 was spent preparing for the possibility of Soviet invasion and coordinating readiness with NATO partners. The Army post at Bad Kreuznach was small — quieter, more insular than Mannheim. We lived in a government apartment in a cluster of buildings known as the “French Quarters,” perched on a hill overlooking the town. There were only three French Quarters buildings, and ours housed just eight families.

Map of the Family Housing Area at Bad Kreuznach, Germany.

We lived in the French Quarters #42

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
We lived in the French Quarters Building #42
Sitting on the sofa (governement issue) in our home in the French Quarters of Bad Kreuznach Housing Area with my two younger sisters, Cynthia and Pamela.  Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
In our government quarters in Bad Kreuznach, with my sisters Pamela and Cynthia

Again, the Sights, Sounds and Smells of Germany

What I remember most? The smell of fresh bread from the nearby German bakery — twenty-four hours a day. And the sound of church bells from the Catholic church just down the street, ringing rhythmically throughout the day. Both scents and sounds would stay with me for life.

Bad Kreuznach American High School (BKAHS)

Bad Kreuznach American High School was a smaller, tighter-knit school than Mannheim. It was unusual in that it combined grades 7 through 12 in one building.

My 7th Grade Sister Cynthia Goes to my School

That meant I shared a school with my little sister Cynthia, who was in 7th grade, and believe it or not, I often ate lunch with her and her group of friends. It gave me a break from the pressure of running the school — and those girls were funny, sweet, and surprisingly great company.

My Close Friends at Bad Kreuznach: Greg Otte, Debbie Wingfield & Jim Mills

Although I was Senior Class President and knew everyone in our small school, I really had three closest friends: Jim Mills Jr., Greg Otte (another super-athlete), and Greg’s girlfriend, Debbie Wingfield. The school was so small and familiar that I could honestly say everyone was my friend, but I spent most of my free time with that trio.

Jim Mills is a Bigger Star in Bad Kreuznach

Jim Mills was a star from the minute he arrived. It didn’t take long for everyone to realize that Bad Kreuznach had just inherited a rare specimen — a super athlete with brains and discipline. He was elected President of the Student Government, and his talents seemed endless. But if Jim had one dominant hobby, it was women. I wouldn’t call him a “player,” but let’s just say he was never without a girlfriend. With his muscular frame, thick hair, smooth charm, and unshakable confidence, he was a magnet.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Jo Gonzales and Brenda Pierce with Jim Mills’ Winnebago in the background.

The Mills’ Winnebago

To top it off, Jim drove around in his family’s Winnebago. Not a car. Not a van. A full-blown mobile bedroom with a rumbling engine and an 8-track stereo permanently loaded with Bad Company — especially “I Feel Like Making Love.” He literally drove everywhere in that machine. I was one of his copilots — or more accurately, his gas stamp collector. At the time, many things in Germany were still rationed for Americans, including gasoline, cigarettes, and alcohol. If you wanted a ride in the Winnebago, you handed over your gas stamps. I managed the trade like a logistics officer.

No Love Life in Bad Kreuznach

My own love life in Bad Kreuznach was much quieter than in Mannheim. I was so focused on schoolwork, school functions, sports, and applying to college that romance became more of a background story. In Woodbridge and Mannheim, I had always relied on my sisters — Lynne and Diana — to help me get socially connected and involved. At Bad Kreuznach, for the first time in my life, I was on my own. Things started off slowly.

Dad Drives Jeff Bell from Mannheim to BK

My father tried helping me out by occasionally surprising me on a Friday when he would drive his Porsche 911, the 82 kilometers to Mannheim and pick Jeff Bell up, and bring him to Bad Kreuznach for the weekend. All that Jeff can remember about those trips is my father asking Jeff if he minded if he smoked one of his Italian stogie cigars, and Jeff holding his breath for an hour.

My First Loves at Bad Kreuznach American

My first crush at Bad Kreuznach was Pauline Shortell (playing the guitar, and bottom right with the cheerleading squad), but she left for the States before she noticed me. Then sometime later, came Sherrie Sullivan, a sophomore on the cheerleading squad (top left cheerleader). 

My Sister Diana Remained in Mannheim, but Visited

During my first semester at Bad Kreuznach, Diana was staying with the Colonel Roddy’s Family (right next to Colonel Bell’s quarters) in Mannheim. So, my father picked her up often and brought her home for weekends when she wasn’t cheerleading or otherwise busy.

My sister Diana and Kelly Diest back in Mannheim, Germany.  Typical post housing in the background.

My Sister Lynne

My sister Lynne was going to nursing school at Northeastern in Boston in 1975 to 1980. Besides the fact that Northeastern has a world-renown nursing school, she choose it because it was a 5-year program with co-op periods where she worked as a student nurse and was paid.

My oldest sister Lynne at Northeastern School of Nursing in Boston.  BIography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

She couldn’t visit us often, but when she did, it was an adventure. She would sometimes have to fly Space-Available on a U.S. Air Force C-141 Starlifter in the cargo hold with soldiers, and often with American flag draped metal caskets. The only consolation, was that when Lynne finally made it back to Bad Kreuznach, she dated the Commanding General’s son, Gary Cleland.

My First Formal at Bad Kreuznach

For my very first dance at Bad Kreuznach, I actually invited Diana up from Mannheim to be my date. She was attractive and charming, and everyone at the dance assumed she was my girlfriend — which had both advantages and drawbacks. On the one hand, it gave me some social credibility; on the other, people thought I was taken.

Debbie Bell in Bad Kreuznach

Then, for Spring Homecoming, Jeff’s sister Debbie Bell did me a huge favor by traveling to Bad Kreuznach to be my date. Debbie was beautiful — and importantly, not a blood relative — which helped spark my actual romantic life at BK.

Debbie Bell was my date for my first formal dance at Bad Kreuznach.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Debbie Bell was my date for my first formal dance at Bad Kreuznach.

Spring Break in Spain, 1976

In the spring of 1976, while I was living in Bad Kreuznach and my sister Diana was still in Mannheim, she wanted to go on her Senior Class trip to Lloret de Mar, near Barcelona, Spain. My parents wouldn’t let her go without a chaperone, so they volunteered me for the job. The Mannheim seniors traveled by bus all the way from Germany to Spain, and we stayed at the Flamingo Hotel in Lloret de Mar. This hotel was famous among military dependents across Europe as a Spring Break destination.

I was especially excited because Kelly Diest was on the trip with her brother Jack (who was sent as Kelly’s chaperone).

A few of us are standing in front of the Hotel Flamingo. I am in front with a 1976 mop of a haircut. Kelly Diest is to my right. Diana is in the white sweater, and Jack Diest is directly behind her.

The Flamingo included three meals a day, but the food was terrible. On a side trip to Madrid to see a bullfight, the hotel packed us “chicken sandwiches” — except their idea of a chicken sandwich was a roll stuffed with an entire chicken thigh and drumstick, bones still inside, and, to my horror, the leg still had the foot attached. It was revolting.

Me sitting on a soccer ball staring at Kelly Diest on the beach in Spain.
Me coming out of the ocean after being thrown in the water in Lloret de Mar, Spain.

Encounter With Spanish Civil Guard

Bad food aside, the trip was a blast. The hotel sat right on the beach, and we were out there every day. One night, we all went down to the water without realizing the beach was off-limits after dark. Out of nowhere, members of the Spanish Civil Guard appeared, surrounding us with machine guns pointed right at us. Most of our group was half-drunk and mouthing off, and I was certain they’d open fire if one of the Americans got too aggressive.

I instinctively stepped in front of Diana, raised my hands, and slowly walked us backward, saying, “We surrender!” The Guards kept yelling “Hotel!” and I replied, “Hotel Flamingo! We go now!” Miraculously, we made it back without incident — and learned that Francisco Franco’s fascist grip on Spain was still very real even a year after his death.

The rest of the week was sun, sand, and 24/7 teenage romance. I was completely smitten with Kelly Diest, but, unfortunately, the feeling wasn’t mutual.

First BK Love–Sherrie Sullivan

Later that year, I developed a crush on Sherrie Sullivan, a varsity cheerleader, and we dated for a while. I was also very close to Debbie Wingfield. After Greg Otte left for the States, there was a strong mutual attraction between us, but neither of us could come to terms with what felt like disloyalty to a good friend, so we kept it at friends without benefits.

Varsity Soccer at Bad Kreuznach

Let me tell you a little about my sports experiences at Bad Kreuznach. As I mentioned in the previous chapter, Rudy Glenn had taught me to play soccer in Mannheim, and I kept improving every year. By senior year, I made the Varsity Soccer Team at Bad Kreuznach and loved every minute of it.

Bad Kreuznach Varsity Soccer Team at Practice

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Bad Kreuznach Varsity Soccer Team at Practice
Varsity Soccer Co-Captain Tony Carbone

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Bad Kreuznach American High School Varsity Soccer Co-Captain Tony Carbone

Made the Varisity Football Team

Then came the fall of senior year — football season. My friends, who were already on the team, wanted me to join so we could travel together and hang out more. The problem? I had never played a single day of football in my life. I didn’t even know how to put on the uniform.

Bad Kreuznach American Varsity Football with Jim Mills #76, Tony Carbone #81, and Greg Otte #28

They taught me everything — starting with how to wear a girdle and pads. At first, they tried me out as a running back because of my speed from soccer. But my small body couldn’t take the hard tackles, and it became clear I’d need a less punishing position. That’s when they turned me into a wide receiver on offense and the safety on defense.

I had to learn how to run routes — and even more importantly, how to catch a football. I wasn’t a starter, so I spent most games standing next to the coach. But when he needed to send a play to the quarterback, he’d look around, spot me, and send me in with the call for our All-Europe quarterback, Jamey Boynton.

Jamey Boynton–All Europe Quarterback

Now, Jamey was one of my good friends — and an incredibly talented QB with a mind of his own. Nearly every time I ran in with a play, he would change it on the spot. He’d send me deep and throw the ball to me. His aim? Unbelievable. He would hit the number “81” on my jersey dead center, over and over. I caught touchdown passes, built my confidence, and eventually earned a starting spot and my Varsity letter. I owe all of that to Jamey Boynton and he led our team on to become European Football Champions in our division.

European Football Champions

The 1976–1977 Bad Kreuznach Varsity Football Team and DoDDEUR European Champions. (I’m wearing #81, Greg Otte #28, Jim Mills #76, Jamey Boynton)

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
The 1976–1977 Bad Kreuznach Varsity Football Team and DoDDEUR European Champions. (I’m wearing #81, Greg Otte #28, Jim Mills #76, Jamey Boynton)
Jim Mills Jr., after a football game at Bad Kreuznach with his parents (Major & Mrs. Mills) and my parents (Colonel & Mrs. Carbone), and my sisters Cynthia and Pamela.

Bad Kreuznach American High School Basketball

In Winter season, I didn’t have a sport, so I was Basketball Manager for both the men’s and women’s Varsity Basketball teams. We didn’t make European championships in basketball, but basketball was filled with tons of road trips across Germany and I was always looking to travel.

Mens BKAHS Basketball Team

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Mens BKAHS Basketball Team
Me in Adidas Shirt Managing Basketball

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Me in an Adidas Shirt Managing Basketball
Girls Varsity Basketball Teams.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Bad Kreuznach American High School Girls Varsity Basketball Teams.

Co-Captain of Varsity Soccer at Bad Kreuznach American High School

Soccer, though — was my game. I was co-captain with Bobbie Fredricks of the Varsity team that would go on to win the European Championship. Wore number 4, in honor of my childhood hero, Boston Bruins defenseman Bobby Orr. I played center halfback — the playmaker of the team — and I ran the entire field, from goal line to goal line, every minute of every game.

1977 Bad Kreuznach American Varsity Soccer Team and European Champions

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
European Champion Soccer Team, Bad Kreuznach American, 1977

I led the team, but hated the spotlight. I would steal the ball near our goal, pass and move upfield, race toward the opposing keeper, and then — at the last second — I’d pass the ball to Bobbie for the score. The Americans would cheer for Bobbie. But the Germans, who truly understood the game, would run to me and cheer enthusiastically. Bobbie made the Stars & Stripesr newspaper regularly. I rarely got mentioned — but I knew I drove that team to European Champions.

BK Varsity Soccer Co-Captain Bobby Fredricks

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
BK Varsity Soccer Co-Captain Bobby Fredricks

Troop Train Through Soviet Union to West Berlin

One unforgettable game was in Berlin. We had to receive special military orders to ride the Troop Train through East Germany — still part of the Soviet-controlled Eastern Bloc at the time. Soviet officers boarded the train at designated stops and checked our papers. It felt surreal.

The Berlin Wall and East-West Contrast

When we reached Berlin, I was struck by how starkly the world divided at the Wall. On one side — West Berlin — was color: parks, flowers, movement, freedom. On the other side — East Berlin — everything was grey. Lifeless. And what stunned me even more was the direction of the machine guns. They weren’t pointed at us in the West. They were turned inward, aimed at their own people. That moment changed me forever. I realized that communism was not just flawed — it was oppressive. And I became determined, right then and there, to serve in the U.S. Army and help stop it from spreading.

East-West Berlin Border showing how color stopped at Communist Block.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
East-West Berlin Border showing how the color stopped at the Communist Block.
East-West Berlin Border showing how color stopped at Communist Block.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Looking into Soviet East Berlin from the Berlin Wall during the Cold War.

European Champions in Varsity Soccer

Then came the championship game. Bad Kreuznach vs. Munich American for the European title. After regulation, we were tied 2–2. We went to 11-meter penalty kicks. After nine kicks, it was 4–4. I was the tenth shooter. I approached the ball. Looked down. Then up at the upper left corner. Then back down. I ran forward, sold the keeper on a power shot to the top shelf — and then gently rolled the ball along the ground to the opposite bottom corner. Goal! Game over! European Soccer Champions! And for once, even the Americans cheered for me.

Co-Captain #4 Tony Carbone, European Varsity Soccer Champion 1977

Prom Night on the Rhein

Right after we won the championship game in Munich, we sprinted to the locker room for the fastest showers of our lives, then piled onto the bus for the long ride back to Bad Kreuznach. That night was our Senior Prom, and we couldn’t miss it. Our tuxedos and shoes were stashed on the bus, so as we got closer to the Rhein, the whole team was changing in the aisles, tying bow ties and pulling on jackets while still buzzing from the win.

I hadn’t asked anyone to prom, but Lisa Schlieper — my friend and sparring partner since childhood — asked me, and my mother’s rule was always the same: you either go with the first person who asks, or you don’t go at all. It was a terrible rule, but I abided by it. To make things even more awkward, Lisa had just injured her leg and was stuck in a full cast beneath her prom dress, unable to dance. That hardly mattered to me — I had already burned every ounce of energy in the Munich game.

The prom itself was unforgettable: a moonlit cruise down the Rhein, castles glowing on the hillsides, the river shimmering in the night. And at some point that evening, I had a prom portrait taken with my good friend, Debbie Wingfield — a memory I still treasure.

Senior Class President at BKAHS

Outside of sports, I ran the Senior Class. I’d taken over the presidency as a write-in — awkwardly, since my nemesis (albeit good friend) Lisa Schlieper had officially run and lost. She also lost the National Honor Society election to me. I’ve always been an overachiever, but I dislike direct competition. I hated solo performances. I avoided leading roles in school plays. I’m naturally shy, yet oddly confident when leading groups. It’s a strange duality.

1977 Senior Class Officers for Bad Kreuznach (Top to Bottom: Anthony-President, Bobby Fredricks-VP, Kelly Marks-Sec, & Lisa Helper-Treasurer)

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
1977 Senior Class Officers for Bad Kreuznach (Top to Bottom: Anthony-President, Bobby Fredricks-VP, Kelly Marks-Sec, & Lisa Helper-Treasurer)

When I took over as Senior Class President, I discovered that the Class of 1976 had left us several hundred dollars in debt. I launched fundraisers and found our goldmine in a humble little operation: a snack closet in the student lounge. We sold chips, candy bars, and soda during lunch and made a fortune — hundreds of dollars.

Running a Senior Class meeting as President with ever-helpful Kathy Cramer and our wonderful Faculty Advisor, Claudia Wood

President of National Honor Society

I was also elected President of the Bad Kreuznach American High School Chapter of the National Honor Society.

Bad Kreuznach American National Honor Society.  I was President of the Chapter

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Bad Kreuznach American National Honor Society with the sharpest students in the school.

Army Hospital Mess Hall over School Lunch

I usually skipped lunch at school anyway. I preferred walking next door to the 56th General Hospital and eating in the Army mess hall. Might be hard to believe, butI loved Army food — meat, potatoes, hot trays. It sure beat soggy peanut butter sandwiches. But I gave up my mess hall meals when soccer practice was extended. Coach McCauley wanted to push practice later. I told him I’d have to quit.

56th US Army General Hospital with Bad Kreuznach American High School (in the upper right corner)

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
56th US Army General Hospital with Bad Kreuznach American High School (in the upper right corner)

Dinner at the Cabones

Dinner was sacred in the Carbone household. We set the table each night with lace tablecloths, candlesticks lit, and casual china from Vietnam. My mother insisted that no condiment bottles be on the table — only crystal dishes. My father would go around and ask, “What did you do for your country today?” He praised improvement, but never perfect performance. He feared pride.

This was a typical setting for the Carbone Family dinner table. Lynne & Diana were home for Christmas.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
This was a typical setting for the Carbone Family dinner table. Lynne & Diana were home for Christmas.

Authentic German Gummis

And then there was dessert. Every night, Dad turned to Mom: “Ellie Mae, what’s for dessert?” If there was none, he asked for candy. And in Germany, candy meant Haribo gummies — pronounced goo-mee, not gum-mee. He would lay them out in neat columns — one for each of us. When Lynne and Diana were gone, it meant more for the rest.

Coach Wants to Change Soccer Practice Time

So when I told Coach McCauley I couldn’t miss dinner, he thought I was joking. “You’re the co-captain — we’re going to be European Champions!” But I wasn’t joking. He changed practice to our lunch hour. I lost my mess hall meals, but I kept dinner with my family — and we did go on to become European Soccer Champions.

We made enough money from the Snack Shack to pay off the senior class debt, buy brand-new caps and gowns for future graduates, purchase a new color Xerox copier for the administration, and still had money left over to gift to the Class of 1978.

Now to Think About College

And finally, college. I applied to Harvard, MIT, Tufts, and West Point. I got into every school — except Smith College (an all-girls school at the time).

West Point Presidential Nomination, Beast Barracks & Bugle Notes

West Point was the first to accept me. I earned a Presidential Nomination. Everyone assumed I’d go. Visiting officers praised me. Cadets warned me about Beast Barracks and the Plebe Bible (Bugle Notes). But I had a secret: I couldn’t memorize. And West Point didn’t offer pre-med.

Turned Down West Point

I was terrified. I talked to my parents. Their response: “Whatever you decide, we’ll support you.” So I turned it down. My father came into my room that night. “You turned down your appointment?” I replied, “Yes, Sir.” He responded quietly, “You know that West Point is completely free, right?” “Yes, Sir” I replied. “Well then, college is on you. Good luck.” And he walked out. I had no plan. I had no money. But I applied for an Army ROTC scholarship — one of the hardest to get — and I won it. And that scholarship opened the door to the opportunity to attend college, become an Army officer, and eventually a physician.

Relationship wIth Father Whithers with West Point

After I turned down my Presidential Nomination to West Point, my relationship with my father changed forever. His disappointment in me was immediate — and he couldn’t hide it. In the years and decades that followed, it festered. From that moment on, it felt as if nothing I did could make him proud — not even following in his footsteps to become an Army officer, a paratrooper, and later an Army flight surgeon. None of it mattered. He told others that he was convinced I had made such an idiotic career decision because West Point was an all-boys school— though West Point had started admitting women in 1976.

I never had the chance to explain to him that it wasn’t about women at all. It was about fear. I was terrified that my learning disability — my lifelong struggle with rote memorization — would doom me to fail out of Beast Barracks before my Plebe year even began. To this day, almost no one believes I have a memory issue — how could they, given that I made it through Georgetown Medical School and earned a degree from Harvard? But the fear of failure at West Point was real. And my father never knew the truth. After I signed away my appointment, we were never truly okay again.

My military dependent ID card from my senior year at Bad Kreuznach.  Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
My Military Dependent ID Card From High School

Armed Forces Radio & Television Service (AFRTS)

Outside of school, like every American overseas, I got my entertainment from a single source: AFRTS — Armed Forces Radio and Television Service, affectionately nicknamed “A-Ferts.” There was one television station and one radio station for all of us. They rotated programming to please everyone — rock & roll hour, jazz hour, country, classical, Soul Train, Casey Kasem’s Top 40, and my personal favorite: Wolfman Jack. It was a strange mix — but it made you feel connected to home.

Vice Principal Mr. Donald Boepple

I had a very special relationship with our Vice Principal, Mr. Donald Boepple. He was like a gentleman’s gentleman — calm, refined, and quietly wise. When the weather was nice, he would sometimes meet me outside our government apartment building in the French Quarters, and together we’d walk the couple of kilometers to school, chatting along the way. At least once a day, he would send a student messenger to my classroom with a handwritten note asking the teacher to release me — always under the pretext of “Senior Class business.”

BK’s Vice Principal, Mr. Donald Boepple

Dr. Anthony Carbone’s Autobiography. Bad Kreuznach American High School. Germany. Vice Principal Mr. Donald Boepple.
Bad Kreuznach American’s Vice Principal, Mr. Donald Boepple

Bad Kreuznach’s Famous Salinental Park

If the weather held, we’d walk down the hill from where the school perched on a mountain plateau above the Bad Kreuznach Salinental, the beautiful spa park nestled in the valley below our high school. The Salinental is famous for housing Europe’s largest open-air inhalatorium, a therapeutic health park lined with “Gradierwerke” — enormous wooden walls made of blackthorn brushwood designed to evaporate saline water and release mineral-rich mist into the air. The effect was like standing near the ocean, with air believed to soothe the lungs and restore the spirit.

Mr. Boepple and I would sit on one of the wooden benches near the Gradierwerke, breathing in the salt air and talking about the world, about life, and about my future. Those quiet conversations gave me a sense of calm and perspective during what was otherwise a whirlwind year of pressure, responsibility, and transition. He wasn’t just a school administrator to me — he was a steadying presence, a mentor who reminded me to slow down and take in the moment, even as everything in my life seemed to be racing forward.

Graduation Day for Bad Kreuznach American 1977

Giving my Valedictorian Address at the Class of 1977 Graduation.

Dr. Anthony Carbone’s autobiography. Bad Kreuznach American High School. Germany. 1977. Army Brats. Validictorian.
Giving the Senior Class President & Valedictorian Addresses at the Class of 1977 Graduation.

Earned Valedictorian Spot

Then graduation day arrived. I gave two speeches: one as Senior Class President, and one as Class Valedictorian. It’s a blur now. But I remember one moment clearly. I thanked Major General Cleland for finally giving my father an hour off work so he could attend my graduation. The entire auditorium let out a quiet, knowing chuckle. I was also awarded the Officers’ Wives’ Club Scholarship, which paid for my first year of college room and board — expenses not covered by my ROTC scholarship.

Valedictorian, Salutatorian, Principal, Vice Principal and other Honored Guests at Graduation.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Valedictorian, Salutatorian, Principal, Vice Principal and other Honored Guests at Graduation.

Sobering Thought of Future

That night, while most classmates celebrated with cold German beer, silence enveloped me. Drinking and cheering held no appeal. A quiet certainty settled in, acknowledging that life might never surpass high school’s peak. The path ahead loomed—four grueling years of study, training, and discipline to fulfill my commitment to becoming an Army doctor.

Senior Class Portrait from Bad Kreuznach American High School 1977.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Senior Class Portrait from Bad Kreuznach American High School 1977.

Photos of my BK Friends and Classmates

BKAHS German Club

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
BKAHS German Club

Home Page

Chapter 7: Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth

US Army Command & General Staff College Seal. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

Return to the Command & General Staff College as a Tactical Instructor

After returning from Vietnam, the Army sent my father to the Command and General Staff College (CGSC) at Fort Leavenworth. This wasn’t just another stop on the military carousel — it was a pivotal milestone in his ascending career. Officers who were selected early for CGSC earned a mark of distinction.It signaled that the Army saw him not only as a skilled officer but as a leader with long-term potential.

Front Gate to Fort Leavenwork, Kansas where the Command & General Staff College is located.
After returning from his first tour in Vietnam in 1967, my father received prestigious orders to attend the United States Army Command and General Staff College (CGSC) at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. This wasn’t just another stop on the military carousel — it was a pivotal milestone in his ascending career. Being selected early for CGSC was a mark of distinction. It signaled that the Army saw him not only as a skilled officer but as a leader with long-term potential.

Front Gate to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
The Command and General Staff College is one of the crown jewels of military education. Established in 1881 by General William Tecumseh Sherman as the School of Application for Infantry and Cavalry, it was designed to train officers in the complexities of tactics, operations, and command. By 1907 it had become the School of the Line, and eventually evolved into what is now CGSC. Its mission remains timeless: to educate and develop agile, adaptive leaders who can operate in joint, interagency, and multinational environments — and to advance the art and science of the profession of arms.

Seal of the U.S. Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
My father knew that the college had shaped some of America’s greatest military minds. Its alumni list reads like a hall of fame: Eisenhower, MacArthur, Marshall, Patton, Bradley, Westmoreland, and later, Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkopf. To follow in their footsteps — even to walk the same halls — was both humbling and inspiring.
Since on-post housing was limited and claimed quickly, our family settled down in a modest townhouse in a small civilian development called Redwood Gardens, located about 35 miles southeast of Fort Leavenworth, in Kansas City, Kansas. Though a few other military families lived there, it lacked the closeness, safety, and camaraderie of post living. For us kids, it was an isolating and sometimes chaotic environment.

Civilian housing at Redwood Gardens in Kansas City, Kansas.
Our townhouse was cramped. My father turned a corner of the basement into a makeshift study where he would disappear for hours, immersed in maps, doctrine, and war histories. The workload at CGSC was intense, and the pressure to excel immense.

Carbone Family Portrait in the Command & General Staff College Yearbook “The Bell”
My own memories of Kansas City during that time are scattered and, for the most part, not especially fond. That year seemed filled with accidents and discomfort. Pamela fell down the basement stairs and had to get stitches on her face. Diana dove into the shallow end of the neighborhood pool and broke her front tooth in half, eventually receiving a dental cap. I got into a fight when I saw a bully beating up a younger kid — jumped in, broke my hand, and spent the rest of the summer in a cast.
One of my more cherished memories I have of our time in Kansas City was the day that Lynne, Diana, and I were all confirmed in the Catholic Church — on the same day — by the Archbishop of Kansas City, Bishop Edward Joseph Hunkeler. It was a peaceful and proud moment in an otherwise trying year.
On weekends when my father could sneak away from his studies, we would occasionally, we would make a special trip into the Italian section of Kansas City to stock up on authentic cold cuts — thin slices of mortadella, prosciutto, and provolone cheese — all tucked lovingly into crusty loaves of Italian bread. The vibrant tapestry of Kansas City in 1967 was interwoven with the rich history of its Italian community, particularly in the neighborhood then known as the North End. Having drawn immigrants — mostly from Sicily — since the 1860s, this area, which would soon be renamed Columbus Park, bustled with life centered around Holy Rosary Church and its many family-owned shops and markets. This self-sufficient “Little Italy” offered more than just delicious food — it was a place where tradition, language, and community thrived. Even as changes like the construction of Interstate 35 began to carve through its heart and displace families, the neighborhood remained a beloved reminder of cultural roots and Sunday flavors that felt like home.

Columbus Park “Little Italy” in Kansas City
But another memory stands out even more clearly — not for its peace, but for its intensity. Just a few doors down from our townhouse lived a parentless family of unruly boys who had clearly slipped through the cracks. They had long, unkempt hair — a growing trend in the late 1960s — and I remember them smoking on their back steps, jeering at us as we passed. One day, they went too far and scared my mother. That was a mistake.
I’ll never forget the moment my father found out. He calmly called out, “Hey, J.R.! Come with me!” and together we stepped into the backyard and walked down the road toward the rough boys’ unit. My father knocked on the door, and the oldest, cockiest of them answered. My father made it very clear: he didn’t want any of them speaking to his wife or his children again.
The kid smirked and said something along the lines of, “What is it to you? I don’t plan on stopping.” Without hesitation, my father grabbed the kid by his long hair and — in a move I can only describe as quiet thunder — drew his service Colt 1911 .45 caliber pistol and placed it gently but firmly under the boy’s jaw. His voice was low, measured, deadly calm. “This will be the last time that I warn you.” Then he released the boy, turned to me, and said evenly, “J.R., let’s get back to your mother… and never say a word about this to her.” That day left a mark on me. I had always admired my father, but in that moment, I saw him not only as a soldier but as a protector. I had never felt so safe in my life.
Despite all the challenges of civilian housing, my heart always returned to the post of Fort Leavenworth. Some of my fondest memories of that tour are tied to my personal fascination with the history of the fort — especially its deep connections to the U.S. Cavalry. I was captivated by the legacy of General George Armstrong Custer and his 7th Cavalry, as well as the legendary Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th U.S. Cavalry — the same regiment my father had served with during his tour in Korea. I felt a personal connection to that history, one that ran through the bloodline of my own father.

General George Armstrong Custor of the U.S. 7th Cavalry.

Buffalo Soldiers of the U.S. 10th Cavalry
The post was still very much a place of history. Many of the old red brick buildings from cavalry days still stood, preserved like time capsules from another era. I found myself drawn again and again to the Fort Leavenworth museum, which was filled with relics from Custer, the 7th Cavalry, and the 10th Cavalry. There were even artifacts and exhibits tied to President Abraham Lincoln’s visit to the post, which added another layer of reverence. My family often made Sunday day trips to the museum. Those quiet visits — walking through dusty uniforms, sabers, saddles, and faded photographs — lit a spark in me. Even as a child, I felt that Fort Leavenworth was hallowed ground.

Typical post housing at Fort Leavenworth dating back to its cavalry days.
The post itself dates back to May 8, 1827, when Colonel Henry Leavenworth established Cantonment Leavenworth along the Missouri River. It became the first permanent settlement in what would eventually become Kansas, and is today the oldest active Army post west of the Mississippi River. Originally serving as a quartermaster depot, arsenal, and garrison to safeguard the fur trade and commerce along the Santa Fe Trail, the post was briefly evacuated in 1829 and occupied by Kickapoo Indians before being re-garrisoned later that same year. On February 8, 1832, it was officially renamed Fort Leavenworth.

General Henry Leavenworth
Over time, the post developed a reputation not just as a military outpost, but as an intellectual center of the Army. It housed the prestigious Combined Arms Research Library (CARL), and it became a place where strategic thought and operational planning were forged and refined.

Combined Arms Research Library at Fort Leavenworth/
Yet there was another layer to Fort Leavenworth’s identity — its prisons. The United States Disciplinary Barracks (USDB), established in 1875, is the Department of Defense’s only maximum-security military prison. Right outside the gates, the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, operated by the Department of Justice, stood as a towering reminder of the civilian justice system’s reach.

U.S. Disciplany Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Both institutions had reputations for housing some of the most notorious figures in American criminal and military history — from military murderers and spies to civilian outlaws like George “Machine Gun” Kelly, labor leader Eugene V. Debs, and Robert Stroud, the so-called Birdman of Alcatraz. Their stories seemed to hang in the air like myths. Even as children, we sensed the gravity of their presence, and we were always reminded not to stray too far from home. There was mystery and menace just over the horizon.

U.S. Federal Penatentary at Leavenworth, Kansas.
Despite the shadow cast by those prisons, Fort Leavenworth stood as a monument to something greater. It was a place of heritage, reflection, and deep military tradition. For my father, the CGSC experience was transformative. It shaped his approach to leadership and helped define the rest of his career. For our family, it was a time of adaptation, growing pains, and strength. And for me, Fort Leavenworth stirred something inside — an early reverence for history, heroism, and the cavalry legacy that connected us all.

Dad receiving another medal at the Command & General Staff College with my mother by his side.
Front Gate to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

This History of Command & General Staff College

The United States Command and General Staff College is one of the crown jewels of military education. Established in 1881 by General William Tecumseh Sherman as the School of Application for Infantry and Cavalry, it was designed to train officers in the complexities of tactics, operations, and command. By 1907 it had become the School of the Line, and eventually evolved into what is now CGSC. Its mission remains timeless: to educate and develop agile, adaptive leaders who can operate in joint, interagency, and multinational environments — and to advance the art and science of the profession of arms.

Seal of the U.S. Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Seal of the U.S. Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

Famous Alumni of Command & General Staff College

My father knew that the college had shaped some of America’s greatest military minds. Its alumni list reads like a hall of fame: Eisenhower, MacArthur, Marshall, Patton, Bradley, Westmoreland, and later, Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkopf. To follow in their footsteps — even to walk the same halls — was both humbling and inspiring.

Family Lives Off-Post in Redwood Gardens in Kansas City

Since on-post housing was limited and claimed quickly, our family settled down in a modest townhouse in a small civilian development called Redwood Gardens, located about 35 miles southeast of Fort Leavenworth, in Kansas City, Kansas. Though a few other military families lived there, it lacked the closeness, safety, and camaraderie of post living. For us kids, it was an isolating and sometimes chaotic environment.

Civilian housing at Redwood Gardens in Kansas City where we lived while my father attended the U.S. Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth.
After returning from his first tour in Vietnam in 1967, my father received prestigious orders to attend the United States Army Command and General Staff College (CGSC) at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. This wasn’t just another stop on the military carousel — it was a pivotal milestone in his ascending career. Being selected early for CGSC was a mark of distinction. It signaled that the Army saw him not only as a skilled officer but as a leader with long-term potential.

Front Gate to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
The Command and General Staff College is one of the crown jewels of military education. Established in 1881 by General William Tecumseh Sherman as the School of Application for Infantry and Cavalry, it was designed to train officers in the complexities of tactics, operations, and command. By 1907 it had become the School of the Line, and eventually evolved into what is now CGSC. Its mission remains timeless: to educate and develop agile, adaptive leaders who can operate in joint, interagency, and multinational environments — and to advance the art and science of the profession of arms.

Seal of the U.S. Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
My father knew that the college had shaped some of America’s greatest military minds. Its alumni list reads like a hall of fame: Eisenhower, MacArthur, Marshall, Patton, Bradley, Westmoreland, and later, Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkopf. To follow in their footsteps — even to walk the same halls — was both humbling and inspiring.
Since on-post housing was limited and claimed quickly, our family settled down in a modest townhouse in a small civilian development called Redwood Gardens, located about 35 miles southeast of Fort Leavenworth, in Kansas City, Kansas. Though a few other military families lived there, it lacked the closeness, safety, and camaraderie of post living. For us kids, it was an isolating and sometimes chaotic environment.

Civilian housing at Redwood Gardens in Kansas City, Kansas.
Our townhouse was cramped. My father turned a corner of the basement into a makeshift study where he would disappear for hours, immersed in maps, doctrine, and war histories. The workload at CGSC was intense, and the pressure to excel immense.

Carbone Family Portrait in the Command & General Staff College Yearbook “The Bell”
My own memories of Kansas City during that time are scattered and, for the most part, not especially fond. That year seemed filled with accidents and discomfort. Pamela fell down the basement stairs and had to get stitches on her face. Diana dove into the shallow end of the neighborhood pool and broke her front tooth in half, eventually receiving a dental cap. I got into a fight when I saw a bully beating up a younger kid — jumped in, broke my hand, and spent the rest of the summer in a cast.
One of my more cherished memories I have of our time in Kansas City was the day that Lynne, Diana, and I were all confirmed in the Catholic Church — on the same day — by the Archbishop of Kansas City, Bishop Edward Joseph Hunkeler. It was a peaceful and proud moment in an otherwise trying year.
On weekends when my father could sneak away from his studies, we would occasionally, we would make a special trip into the Italian section of Kansas City to stock up on authentic cold cuts — thin slices of mortadella, prosciutto, and provolone cheese — all tucked lovingly into crusty loaves of Italian bread. The vibrant tapestry of Kansas City in 1967 was interwoven with the rich history of its Italian community, particularly in the neighborhood then known as the North End. Having drawn immigrants — mostly from Sicily — since the 1860s, this area, which would soon be renamed Columbus Park, bustled with life centered around Holy Rosary Church and its many family-owned shops and markets. This self-sufficient “Little Italy” offered more than just delicious food — it was a place where tradition, language, and community thrived. Even as changes like the construction of Interstate 35 began to carve through its heart and displace families, the neighborhood remained a beloved reminder of cultural roots and Sunday flavors that felt like home.

Columbus Park “Little Italy” in Kansas City
But another memory stands out even more clearly — not for its peace, but for its intensity. Just a few doors down from our townhouse lived a parentless family of unruly boys who had clearly slipped through the cracks. They had long, unkempt hair — a growing trend in the late 1960s — and I remember them smoking on their back steps, jeering at us as we passed. One day, they went too far and scared my mother. That was a mistake.
I’ll never forget the moment my father found out. He calmly called out, “Hey, J.R.! Come with me!” and together we stepped into the backyard and walked down the road toward the rough boys’ unit. My father knocked on the door, and the oldest, cockiest of them answered. My father made it very clear: he didn’t want any of them speaking to his wife or his children again.
The kid smirked and said something along the lines of, “What is it to you? I don’t plan on stopping.” Without hesitation, my father grabbed the kid by his long hair and — in a move I can only describe as quiet thunder — drew his service Colt 1911 .45 caliber pistol and placed it gently but firmly under the boy’s jaw. His voice was low, measured, deadly calm. “This will be the last time that I warn you.” Then he released the boy, turned to me, and said evenly, “J.R., let’s get back to your mother… and never say a word about this to her.” That day left a mark on me. I had always admired my father, but in that moment, I saw him not only as a soldier but as a protector. I had never felt so safe in my life.
Despite all the challenges of civilian housing, my heart always returned to the post of Fort Leavenworth. Some of my fondest memories of that tour are tied to my personal fascination with the history of the fort — especially its deep connections to the U.S. Cavalry. I was captivated by the legacy of General George Armstrong Custer and his 7th Cavalry, as well as the legendary Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th U.S. Cavalry — the same regiment my father had served with during his tour in Korea. I felt a personal connection to that history, one that ran through the bloodline of my own father.

General George Armstrong Custor of the U.S. 7th Cavalry.

Buffalo Soldiers of the U.S. 10th Cavalry
The post was still very much a place of history. Many of the old red brick buildings from cavalry days still stood, preserved like time capsules from another era. I found myself drawn again and again to the Fort Leavenworth museum, which was filled with relics from Custer, the 7th Cavalry, and the 10th Cavalry. There were even artifacts and exhibits tied to President Abraham Lincoln’s visit to the post, which added another layer of reverence. My family often made Sunday day trips to the museum. Those quiet visits — walking through dusty uniforms, sabers, saddles, and faded photographs — lit a spark in me. Even as a child, I felt that Fort Leavenworth was hallowed ground.

Typical post housing at Fort Leavenworth dating back to its cavalry days.
The post itself dates back to May 8, 1827, when Colonel Henry Leavenworth established Cantonment Leavenworth along the Missouri River. It became the first permanent settlement in what would eventually become Kansas, and is today the oldest active Army post west of the Mississippi River. Originally serving as a quartermaster depot, arsenal, and garrison to safeguard the fur trade and commerce along the Santa Fe Trail, the post was briefly evacuated in 1829 and occupied by Kickapoo Indians before being re-garrisoned later that same year. On February 8, 1832, it was officially renamed Fort Leavenworth.

General Henry Leavenworth
Over time, the post developed a reputation not just as a military outpost, but as an intellectual center of the Army. It housed the prestigious Combined Arms Research Library (CARL), and it became a place where strategic thought and operational planning were forged and refined.

Combined Arms Research Library at Fort Leavenworth/
Yet there was another layer to Fort Leavenworth’s identity — its prisons. The United States Disciplinary Barracks (USDB), established in 1875, is the Department of Defense’s only maximum-security military prison. Right outside the gates, the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, operated by the Department of Justice, stood as a towering reminder of the civilian justice system’s reach.

U.S. Disciplany Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Both institutions had reputations for housing some of the most notorious figures in American criminal and military history — from military murderers and spies to civilian outlaws like George “Machine Gun” Kelly, labor leader Eugene V. Debs, and Robert Stroud, the so-called Birdman of Alcatraz. Their stories seemed to hang in the air like myths. Even as children, we sensed the gravity of their presence, and we were always reminded not to stray too far from home. There was mystery and menace just over the horizon.

U.S. Federal Penatentary at Leavenworth, Kansas.
Despite the shadow cast by those prisons, Fort Leavenworth stood as a monument to something greater. It was a place of heritage, reflection, and deep military tradition. For my father, the CGSC experience was transformative. It shaped his approach to leadership and helped define the rest of his career. For our family, it was a time of adaptation, growing pains, and strength. And for me, Fort Leavenworth stirred something inside — an early reverence for history, heroism, and the cavalry legacy that connected us all.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Civilian housing at Redwood Gardens in Kansas City, Kansas.

Dad sets up basement as Study

Our townhouse was cramped. My father turned a corner of the basement into a makeshift study where he would disappear for hours, immersed in maps, doctrine, and war histories. The workload at CGSC was intense, and the pressure to excel immense.

Carbone Family Portrait in the U.S. Command & General Staff College Yearbook "The Bell".

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Carbone Family Portrait in the Command & General Staff College Yearbook “The Bell”

The bad memories of Kansas City

My own memories of Kansas City during that time are scattered and, for the most part, not especially fond. That year seemed filled with accidents and discomfort. Pamela fell down the basement stairs and had to get stitches on her face. Diana dove into the shallow end of the neighborhood pool and broke her front tooth in half, eventually receiving a dental cap. I got into a fight when I saw a bully beating up a younger kid — jumped in, broke my hand, and spent the rest of the summer in a cast.

Lynne, Diana and I get Confirmed

One of my more cherished memories I have of our time in Kansas City was the day that Lynne, Diana, and I were all confirmed in the Catholic Church — on the same day — by the Archbishop of Kansas City, Bishop Edward Joseph Hunkeler. It was a peaceful and proud moment in an otherwise trying year.

Papa Carbone Dies

The saddest memory I have from our time in Kansas City was the death of my grandfather, Papa Carbone (Anthony Benjamin Carbone). He had just retired and moved to Florida with my grandmother when he suffered a fatal stroke. I remember my father calling me into my bedroom one evening. I could see that he was upset, and at first I worried I had done something wrong. We both sat on my bed, and he said quietly, “I have some bad news. Your grandfather—my father—died today.” I don’t remember another word after that, but what has stayed with me all these years is that my father cried. It was the first time I had ever seen him cry, and in my whole life with him, I would only see him cry once more. My parents quickly flew to Florida for the wake and funeral, while Auntie Norma came to Kansas City to care for us children.

Photograph of my grandfather, Papa Carbone (Anthony Benjamin Carbone the tailor) holding me when I was about one year old.  Gray haired gentleman wearing a suit and tie holding a toddler boy in his arms.  Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Papa Carbone holding me when I was about one year old.

Columbus Park–The Italian Section of Kansas City

On weekends when my father could sneak away from his studies, we would occasionally, we would make a special trip into the Italian section of Kansas City to stock up on authentic cold cuts — thin slices of mortadella, prosciutto, and provolone cheese — all tucked lovingly into crusty loaves of Italian bread.

In 1967, Kansas City’s vibrant tapestry reflected the rich history of its Italian community, especially in the neighborhood then known as the North End. Since the 1860s, Sicilian immigrants actively built a lively, close-knit area—soon renamed Columbus Park—centering it around Holy Rosary Church and filling it with family-owned shops and bustling markets.

This self-sufficient “Little Italy” offered more than just delicious food — it was a place where tradition, language, and community thrived. Even as changes like the construction of Interstate 35 began to carve through its heart and displace families, the neighborhood remained a beloved reminder of cultural roots and Sunday flavors that felt like home.

Columbus Park "Little Italy" section of Kansas City.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Columbus Park “Little Italy” in Kansas City

My Badass Father the Soldier

But another memory stands out even more clearly — not for its peace, but for its intensity. Just a few doors down from our townhouse lived a parentless family of unruly boys who had clearly slipped through the cracks. They had long, unkempt hair — a growing trend in the late 1960s — and I remember them smoking on their back steps, jeering at us as we passed. One day, they went too far and scared my mother. That was a mistake.

I’ll never forget the moment my father found out. He calmly called out, “Hey, J.R.! Come with me!” and together we stepped into the backyard and walked down the road toward the rough boys’ unit. My father knocked on the door, and the oldest, cockiest of them answered. My father made it very clear: he didn’t want any of them speaking to his wife or his children again.

The kid smirked and said something along the lines of, “What is it to you? I don’t plan on stopping.” Without hesitation, my father grabbed the kid by his long hair and — in a move I can only describe as quiet thunder — drew his service Colt 1911 .45 caliber pistol and placed it gently but firmly under the boy’s jaw. His voice was low, measured, deadly calm. “This will be the last time that I warn you.” Then he released the boy, turned to me, and said evenly, “J.R., let’s get back to your mother. And never say a word about this to her.” That day left a mark on me. I had always admired my father, but in that moment, I saw him not only as a real soldier. I had never felt so safe in my life.

History of Fort Leavenworth

Despite all the challenges of civilian housing, my heart always returned to the post of Fort Leavenworth. Some of my fondest memories of that tour stem from my personal fascination with the fort’s history, particularly its deep connections to the Cavalry. I actively explored the legacy of General George Armstrong Custer and his 7th Cavalry, as well as the legendary Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th U.S. Cavalry— the same regiment my father had served with during his tour in Korea. I felt a personal connection to that history, one that ran through the bloodline of my own father.

General George Armstrong Custer of the U.S. 7th Cavalry.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
General George Armstrong Custor of the U.S. 7th Cavalry.
Buffalo Soldiers of the U.S. 10th Cavalry.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Buffalo Soldiers of the U.S. 10th Cavalry

The Fort Leavenworth Museum

The post was still very much a place of history. Many of the old red brick buildings from cavalry days still stood, preserved like time capsules from another era. I repeatedly visited the Fort Leavenworth museum, eagerly exploring its relics from Custer, the 7th Cavalry, and the 10th Cavalry.

There were artifacts and exhibits tied to President Abraham Lincoln’s visit to the post, which added another layer of reverence. My family often made Sunday day trips to the museum. Those quiet visits — walking through dusty uniforms, sabers, saddles, and faded photographs — lit a spark in me. As a child, I regarded Fort Leavenworth as hallowed ground.

Classic Cavalry-Era Post Housing

Typical post housing at Fort Leavenworth dating back to its cavalry days.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Typical post housing at Fort Leavenworth dating back to its cavalry days.

The post itself dates back to May 8, 1827, when Colonel Henry Leavenworth established Cantonment Leavenworth along the Missouri River. It became the first permanent settlement in what would eventually become Kansas, and is today the oldest active Army post west of the Mississippi River. Originally serving as a quartermaster depot, arsenal, and garrison to safeguard the fur trade and commerce along the Santa Fe Trail, the post was briefly evacuated in 1829 and occupied by Kickapoo Indians before being re-garrisoned later that same year. On February 8, 1832, it was officially renamed Fort Leavenworth.

Portrait of General Henry Leavenworth.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
General Henry Leavenworth

Combined Arms Research Library

Over time, the post developed a reputation not just as a military outpost, but as an intellectual center of the Army. It housed the prestigious Combined Arms Research Library (CARL), and it became a place where strategic thought and operational planning were forged and refined.

Photograph of the Combined Arms Research Library at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Combined Arms Research Library at Fort Leavenworth/

US Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth

Yet there was another layer to Fort Leavenworth’s identity — its prisons. The United States Disciplinary Barracks (USDB), established in 1875, is the Department of Defense’s only maximum-security military prison.

Photograph of the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
U.S. Disciplany Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary

Right outside the gates, the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, operated by the Department of Justice, stood as a towering reminder of the civilian justice system’s reach.

Photograph of the U.S. Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas 

Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
U.S. Federal Penatentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas.

Famous Resident Convicts

Both institutions had reputations for housing some of the most notorious figures in American criminal and military history — from military murderers and spies to civilian outlaws like George “Machine Gun” Kelly, labor leader Eugene V. Debs, and Robert Stroud, the so-called Birdman of Alcatraz. Their stories seemed to hang in the air like myths. Even as children, we sensed the gravity of their presence, and we were always reminded not to stray too far from home. There was mystery and menace just over the horizon.

Despite the shadow cast by those prisons, Fort Leavenworth stood as a monument to something greater. It was a place of heritage, reflection, and deep military tradition. For my father, the CGSC experience was transformative. It shaped his approach to leadership and helped define the rest of his career. For our family, it was a time of adaptation, growing pains, and strength. And for me, Fort Leavenworth stirred something inside — an early reverence for history, heroism, and the cavalry legacy that connected us all.

Grant Hall at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.  Headquarters of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center.  Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Grant Hall at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Headquarters of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
4th Grade School Photo in Kansas City, Kansas while Dad was attending the U.S. Command & General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth. Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
4th Grade Class Photo from Kansas City, Kansas

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Chapter 6: A Year in Vermont as Dad Returns to His Alma Mater

Seal of Norwich University (Military College of Vermont) in Northfiield, Vermont. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

Return to Norwich University

After completing his tour of duty in Korea, my father received new orders that must have filled him with pride: he was to return to his alma mater, Norwich University — the Military College of Vermont — as an Assistant Professor of Military Science. For him, it was more than just a job; it was a return to the place that had shaped him as a young man and launched his military career. For our family, it became a unique and vivid chapter — one filled with snowy landscapes, small-town charm, and a few lessons we never forgot.

Photograph of Norwich University circa 1969 with snow covered quad.  Red brick academic buildings and barracks.  Cadet Chapel.  Part of biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Cadets walking on snow-covered campus of Norwich University.

We move to off-campus house in Northfield, Vermont

We moved into a modest white ranch house at the foot of the Norwich ski slope, within easy walking distance of the campus. The house was small but cozy, and the setting was pure Vermont. Behind us sat Trombley’s greenhouse, where we could buy ears of corn and other fresh vegetables. It was one of those places where the seasons announced themselves through what was available at the roadside stand.

Norwich University Ski Slope & Lift across the street from our home in Northfield, Vermont.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Norwich University Ski Slope & Lift across the street from our home in Northfield.
Our home on Terrace Place in Northfield, Vermont where we lived while my father was working at Norwich University (his alma mater) as the Assistant Professor of Military Science (PMS).
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Our home on Terrace Place in Northfield, Vermont where we lived while my father was working at Norwich University (his alma mater) as the Assistant Professor of Military Science (PMS).
Trombly's Greenhouse near our home in Northfield, Vermont where we bought fresh corn and eggs.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Trombly’s Greenhouse near our home in Northfield, Vermont where we bought fresh corn and eggs.

Lynne goes to 5th Grade in One-Room Schoolhouse

My oldest sister, Lynne, went to fifth grade in a tiny white, one-room schoolhouse located in Rabbit Hollow. The school was so small that it only served fifth graders.

One-Room Schoolhouse at Rabbit Hollow where my sister Lynne attended 5th Grade while we lived in Northfield, Vermont.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
One-Room Schoolhouse at Rabbit Hollow where my sister Lynne attended 5th Grade while we lived in Northfield, Vermont.

Diana and I attend 4th & 3rd Grade Together

Meanwhile, Diana and I were enrolled in a two-story gray schoolhouse in Northfield that taught only third and fourth grades. She was in fourth, I was in third — and I loved knowing she was just a floor away. We rode the bus together each morning and afternoon, and often shared lunch in the cafeteria tucked down in the basement.

Northfield Grade School in the Gray Building in Northfield, Vermont where Diana and I attended 3rd and 4th grade while my father worked at Norwich University.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Northfield Grade School in the Gray Building in Northfield, Vermont where Diana and I attended 3rd and 4th grade while my father worked at Norwich University.

My favorite school cafeteria

That basement cafeteria remains one of my warmest memories — especially on bitter Vermont winter days. The meals were like no other school lunches I’ve ever had. A typical menu might include a warm biscuit smothered in Chicken à la King, served alongside milk that came in small glass bottles sealed with silver foil tops. At least once a day, someone would drop a bottle, and it would shatter spectacularly on the floor. The room would erupt into clapping and cheers, as if we had just witnessed a performance.

Cold, fresh milk in tiny glass bottles

Children drinking milk from tiny glass milk bottles in the cafeteria in Vermont in the 1960s.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Drinking milk from small glass bottles in cafeteria.

Missed out on learning cursive penmanship

School life had its challenges, though. In Vermont, students were taught cursive writing with ink pens in the second grade. But I had just come from the German school system, where cursive wasn’t introduced until third grade. My new teacher seemed annoyed that I hadn’t learned it yet, and I remember feeling confused and even a little ashamed. It struck me as strange — even as an eight-year-old — that in a town with a military college, someone wouldn’t expect a student from out of state, or even another country. Eventually, my teacher allowed me to keep printing with a pencil, and I wouldn’t truly learn cursive until years later, when my college girlfriend Marianne patiently taught me proper penmanship. To this day, I still write in clear block letters and rarely use cursive.

Penmanship poster similar to the one hanging up in my 3rd Grade Classroom in Northfield, Vermont.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Penmanship Poster similar to the one hanging up in my 3rd Grade classroom.

While we were adjusting to Vermont life, my father was thriving. As the Assistant Professor of Military Science (PMS), he helped lead the Army ROTC program, teaching courses in close-order drill, map reading, and land navigation. I know he took real pride in shaping young cadets on the same campus where he had once marched across the quad himself. It must have felt like coming full circle.

Norwich Univeristy Cadet Handbook.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Norwich University Cadet Handbook

Winter and Hockey in Vermont

As you might expect, winters in Vermont were long, dark, and cold — but the locals seemed to thrive on it. Skiing and hockey weren’t just hobbies — they were part of the culture. Hoping I might assimilate, my father signed me up for hockey lessons offered by the Norwich University hockey coach. I gave it my best, but most of the kids had been skating since they could walk. On the other hand, I was stumbling around in skates that felt at least two sizes too small. I spent more time falling than skating, and one hard fall even chipped my front teeth. That was pretty much the beginning and end of my hockey career.

Norwich University Cadet Hockey Players and the Hockey Coach.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Norwich University Cadet Hockey Players and the Hockey Coach

Northfield Townies

Northfield was a tiny town — just over 3,400 residents in 1960. By 1967, Norwich had about 1,200 cadets, meaning they made up nearly a quarter of the town’s population. But despite that, there was always a strange tension between the college and the townspeople. For whatever reason, the locals didn’t seem particularly fond of the institution that helped sustain their town. The only time that changed was during hockey season — if the Norwich Cadets were winning, the townsfolk would turn out to cheer. Otherwise, the university and the town existed on mostly separate tracks.

Close to the Pietrantonis in Medford

One of the real blessings of that year in Vermont was our proximity to family. Northfield is less than three hours north of Boston, which meant we were finally living close to my mother’s side of the family in Medford. We visited my grandparents’ house often, and my aunts would come up to Vermont when they could. After years of being stationed far from home, it was special to have holidays, birthdays, or even just weekend visits that didn’t require a cross-country drive or plane ride. That closeness was a quiet comfort that made the cold winters feel warmer.

Photograph of a champagne colored 1967 Pontiac Tempest Stationwagon similar to the one my family owned.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
We drove in a 1967 Pontiac Tempest Stationwagon

Assassination of Senator Robert Kennedy (June 6, 1968)

It was the morning of June 6, 1968, and my mother had sent me over to Trombley’s Greenhouse to pick up some milk and eggs. The day was bright and beautiful, and I remember stopping in a field along the way to admire a robin’s nest with four perfect blue eggs inside. That simple sight filled me with joy. But when I returned home, the mood was completely different. I could sense immediately that something was wrong. My mother told me that Senator Robert Kennedy had been shot by an assassin. I was still too young to fully understand the concepts of evil and murder, but I knew it was something terrible.

Only a few years earlier, I had sat in front of the television as a very small boy when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Now, it was his younger brother. Just eight weeks earlier, on April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. had also been assassinated. As a young boy, I struggled to process it all — the war in Vietnam that I only partly understood, and these assassinations of leaders I heard my parents speak about with respect and admiration. It felt like the world was unraveling. I remember being deeply confused, wondering why so many good men were being taken away, and why violence seemed to surround everything I was trying to make sense of.

Time to Move Again

Our year in Vermont was brief, but it stands out in memory as something rare and quietly golden. There was a steadiness to life that year — a rhythm built on snow, school buses, cafeteria clatter, and my father’s cadets drilling in neat formation. It was a pause between larger, louder chapters. And though we didn’t know it at the time, those moments would stay with us longer than many others.

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Chapter 5: Dad’s First Tour of Duty in Vietnam (1966–1967)

Dad as Tactical Advisor to ARVN Cavalry Unit in Vietnam. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

Assignment to MACV as Cavalry Tactical Advisor in Vietnam

In 1966, the war in Vietnam escalated, and our family felt its reach personally. My father received orders from the Pentagon to deploy to the Republic of Vietnam, assigned to the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam — MACV — as a U.S. Army advisor. It was his first tour, and he would spend the next year embedded with Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) cavalry and armored units in the Mekong Delta, particularly near Bac LieuTan An, and Soc Trang. His mission was to help train, advise, and support the South Vietnamese military as they fought to reclaim and secure their homeland from the Viet Cong insurgency and the growing threat of the North Vietnamese Army.

U.S. Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV) Patch.  Worn by early American Tactical Advisors to the South Vietnamese.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
U.S. Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV) Patch

Dad Enjoyed His First Tour in Vietnam as a Tactical Advisor to an ARVN Cavalry Unit

My father seemed to genuinely enjoy this first tour, especially compared to the more grueling Special Operations tour he would undertake later. He fell in love with the Vietnamese people — their resilience, their warmth, and especially their children. His photo albums from this era are full of beautiful, candid photographs of everyday life in the Mekong Delta: women carrying baskets at the market, children waving at the camera, families riding bicycles, soldiers resting between patrols. He always had a camera slung over his shoulder and took great pride in arranging these moments into carefully assembled albums that told his story. His affection for the people and the land of Vietnam is evident in every image.

Dad (Captain Tony Carbone) with one of the many South Vietnamese officers that he advised.  Both are wearing the Vietnamese Tankers Badge proudly over their right chest.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Captain Carbone with one of the many South Vietname officers that he advised.

Dad is Awarded the ARVN Armor Officer Black Beret & Tankers Badge

Dad was member of MACV Advisor Team #63 in Sóc Trăng

MACV Adviosry Team #63 in Soc Trang where Captain Tony Carbone was assigned during his first deployment to Vietnam.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
MACV Advisory Team #63 in Sóc Trăng
Republic of Vietnam 17th Cavalry ready for inspection. This was the ARVN cavalry unit that my father (CPT Tony Carbone) served as tactical advisor.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Army of Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) 17th Cavalry ready for inspection.
Republic of Vietnam Armored Unit on Patrol in Mekong Delta.  Line of American made M113 armored personnel carriers (APCs) and M114 armored reconnaissance vehicles.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Republic of Vietnam Armored Unit on Patrol in Mekong Delta

The unenviable dangerous job of Tunnel Rat in Vietnam

Entrance to Viet Cong tunnel system.  The soldiers who took on the dangerous task of entering and clearing enemy tunnels were affectionately refered to as "Tunnel Rats".
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Entrance to Viet Cong tunnel system.

My father had a special love for the Vietnamese children

Dad (CPT Tony Carbone) was always taking photos of young Vietnamese children.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Dad with one of the many Vietnamese children he loved.

Dad met a lot of celebrities visiting the troops in Vietnam

While the duties of a MACV advisor were serious — often dangerous — there were lighter moments as well. Being based closer to Saigon gave my father access to some unique opportunities. He met a number of American celebrities who visited the troops to boost morale, including Ann Margret, Chuck ConnorsJames GarnerHenry FondaEfrem Zimbalist Jr.Don DeForeBob Meredith of the Dallas Cowboys, Dick Bass of the L.A. Rams, and Jerry Wilson of the St. Louis Cardinals. My father always had a deep appreciation for film, sports, and storytelling, and these moments added a personal highlight to an otherwise austere and high-stakes assignment.

CPT Carbone with Actor Efrem Zimbalist Jr, one of the many celebrities who visited troops outside of the safety of Saigon.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Actor Efrem Zimbalist Jr
Dad spent time with Actor Henry Fonda outside of Saigon.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Actor Henry Fonda

Professionally, his accomplishments during this year were significant. On February 1, 1967, he was promoted to the rank of Major. That same year, he earned two prestigious badges: the Vietnamese Armor Badge and the U.S. Combat Infantry Badge, a testament to his active engagement in combat operations alongside the Vietnamese forces he advised. He often went out with ARVN cavalry units into hostile territory, coordinating air strikes and artillery, gathering intelligence, and supporting civil pacification efforts. He used to send me letters with drawings of the elaborate Viet Cong tunnel systems he discovered — complete with false walls, hidden entrances, and escape shafts. As a young boy watching the Vietnam War unfold on our television every evening, I was both captivated and proud. His war stories made him larger than life to me.

Dad awarded the Combat Infantry Badge (CIB) in Vietnam

CPT Tony Carbone receiving the Combat Infantry Badge while serving as an Advisor for MACV in the Republic of Vietnam.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Dad being awarded the U.S. Army Combat Infantry Badge (CIB)
U.S. Army Combat Infantry Badge (CIB)

Dad gets promoted to Major while in Vietnam

Dad (CPT Tony Carbone) being promoted to the rank of Major during his first tour of duty in Vietnam.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Dad being promoted to Major.

While Dad was in Vietnam, we moved back to Medford

Back in the U.S., we were living in Medford, Massachusetts, on the first floor of a multi-family home at 44 Frederick Avenue. The building belonged to the parents-in-law of my godfather, Uncle George Pietrantoni, and we lived just downstairs from them. It was a warm, close-knit Italian-American neighborhood, and I saw Uncle George and Auntie Carole often.

44 Fredrick Avenue, Medford, Massachusetts. Carbone home in 1966. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Went to the Dame School

I was in second grade that year and attended the Lorin L. Dame School on George Street along with my sisters Dianaand Lynne. I had second grade with old Miss Collins.

The Dame Elementary School on George Street in Medford, Massachusetts. Where I attended 1st and 2nd Grades. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

The school was about halfway between our apartment and Nana and Papa Pietrantoni’s house on Winthrop Street, and I remember spending many weekends with my grandparents.

Nana & Papa Pietrantoni’s Home

My grandfather went grocery shopping every Saturday morning and always came home with fresh Scali bread and sliced Italian cold cuts. Sunday mornings were reserved for Mass at Saint Joseph’s Catholic Church, the same church where all of us kids were baptized, where I made my First Communion, and where three of my sisters would eventually marry.

After Mass, we’d gather at Nana & Papa’s for a traditional Italian Sunday dinner of spaghetti and meatballs. Uncle Aldo would show up just long enough to eat a couple of meatballs and play a tune or two on the upright piano in the dining room. Those weekends were loud, joyful, and full of love — and food.

My Godfather, George Pietrantoni

Uncle George was like a second father to me while mine was away. He’d often give me a quarter and send me down to the corner store to buy him a pack of Lucky Strikes. Back then, a six-year-old could do that without raising eyebrows.

If I was lucky, he’d give me an extra nickel or dime so I could grab a few pieces of penny candy. I felt so grown up, entrusted with money and a mission.

Buying penny candy from the corner store back in the 1960s. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

I also got to ride around with him in his stunning white 1960 Chevrolet Impala with red interior. I’d sit on his lap and “steer” the big red wheel while the windows were rolled down, the radio playing, and Lucky Strike smoke curling into the summer air. I remember those rides like they were yesterday.

Auntie Norma, meanwhile, was working at Harvard University and still living at home with Auntie Cynthia and Yvonne. She had just bought a beautiful record RCA console that played both 45s and 33 rpm LPs.

We’d all gather around to dance in the living room to songs like The Four Seasons’ “Sherry,” The Mamas and the Papas’ “Monday, Monday,”and The Seekers’ “Another You.” The music made our home feel alive and connected — even as we all missed my father terribly.

My mother wrote my father every night

At home, my mother did everything she could to keep the family strong and grounded during his year-long absence. She wrote to him every single night. Every. Single. Night. My father, in turn, wrote back faithfully to her and to each of us. His letters weren’t just updates — they were expressions of love, encouragement, and longing. They brought him home to us in every envelope. I still have many of those letters today, yellowed with time but full of heart. I am amazed by how my parents stayed so deeply in love during such a prolonged and uncertain separation and know that their love letters helped — that steady rhythm of writing and receiving, day after day, page after page, was their emotional lifeline.

Red, White, & Blue striped envelopes used to send Air Mail.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.

R&R in Waikiki, Hawaii

In the middle of his tour, they were reunited for a brief but beautiful week of R&R in Waikiki, Hawaii, paid for by the military. The photographs from that vacation are among my favorites. My parents looked like newlyweds again — smiling, tanned, holding hands on the beach. You can see it in their eyes: how much they missed each other, and how much they cherished every second of that week. Love, real love, endures like that.

Mom and Dad on R&R at Waikiki, Hawaii during his first tour of Vietnam.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Mom & Dad on R&R at Waikiki, Hawaii during his first tour of Vietnam.

The Apollo One Disaster (January 27, 1967)

I still remember one cold evening in our apartment at 44 Frederick Avenue in Medford. It January 27, 1967 around 6:30 PM, and we were gathered around the television as the Apollo 1 spacecraft was preparing for liftoff. In those days, America was captivated by the space race, and for young boys like me, NASA was nothing short of magical. But that excitement turned to horror. A fire erupted inside the command module during a pre-launch test, killing astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee. The tragedy shocked the nation and forced NASA to halt manned missions until major safety changes could be made. I was just a boy, but I never forgot that night. It was the first time I realized that even heroes could be vulnerable, and that the pursuit of exploration carried real danger.

MARS Calls from Vietnam

On a happier note, every few months the Army arranged MARS (Military Auxiliary Radio System) calls so that soldiers could connect with their families. These long-distance conversations, relayed through ham radios, required us to speak in military fashion — ending each phrase with “Over.” One particular call still makes me laugh to this day. My father had said, “I’m making you a tape,” referring to a new cassette recording. But my mother misheard him and replied, “You want me to send you a cake? Over.” The radio operator, patiently relaying both sides, jumped in to clarify: “Ma’am, I believe your husband said he is making you a tape, not a cake.” We all burst into laughter on both ends of the line.

Military Auxillary Radio System (MARS) was a network of HAM radio operators used by the military in Vietnam to communicate with family back in the United States.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
My mother on the telephone with my father, most likely using the MARS system.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
My mother on the telephone with my father in Vietnam.

Cassette Tape Messages

That was a time when compact cassette recorders, newly developed in Japan, allowed us to exchange audio messages across continents. We’d record ourselves talking about school, daily life, or just saying, “I love you,” and mail them across the ocean. My father would send his replies back, and we would sit together and listen to his voice on the living room floor. I wish we still had those tapes today. I would give anything to hear my parents’ voices again — those tender, hopeful, loving voices carried across time and space

One of the early SONY cassette recorders used to make recordings of messages and conversations.
Part of the autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone, Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.

This first tour in Vietnam marked a profound chapter in my father’s career — and in our family’s life. It tested our endurance, but it also revealed the depth of our bonds. While he was advising and fighting alongside his ARVN brothers in the Mekong Delta, he was still husband, father, and family man — writing letters, making tapes, taking photographs, and dreaming of home.

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Chapter 3: A New Airborne Officer’s Career

New 2nd Lieutenant Cavalry Officer Tony Carbone in Uniform. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

Army Commissions Father a Cavalry Lieutenant

My father as a newly commissioned 2nd Lieutenant Armor Officer at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
My father as a newly commissioned 2nd Lieutenant Armor Officer

Father Receives Orders for Fort Knox, Kentucky

After graduating from Norwich University on December 18, 1958, the President of the United States commissioned my father into the United States Army as a Cavalry Officer. His first assignment brought him and my mother the U.S. Army Armor Officer Basic Course at Fort Knox, Kentucky. The Army designed this several-month training program to transform him from a generalist cavalry officer into a specialist in armor and mechanized warfare.

We lived in a modest government house nestled in the company grade officer neighborhood of Fort Knox during that time. Though the housing was simple, it felt more spacious and comfortable than the trailer we had come from in Missouri. For my mother, this was a slight reprieve — finally, a bit of stability while my father threw himself into his next round of training.

Front gate to Fort Knox, Kentucky — Home of the U.S. Armor Branch and School.
Fort Knox, Kentucky Front Gate

Father Receives Orders for Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri

After completing the Armor Officer Basic Course at Fort Knox, my father received orders to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri in 1959, where the Army put him in charge of a training platoon. It was the beginning of his official military career — an ideal soldier stepping into the long shadow of duty, discipline, and sacrifice.

Dad (2LT Tony Carbone) as a new lieutenant (with “Tiny” Minoski) at Fort Leonard Wood
Father as a new lieutenant (with “Tiny” Minoski) at Fort Leonard Wood

Family Living Off-Post in a Tiny Trailer in Missouri

But for my mother, this period was anything but glamorous. She moved into a tiny trailer off base with my two sisters, Lynne and Diana. The trailer had no telephone, no car, and very few luxuries. Isolated in rural Missouri and far from her family in Medford, Massachusetts, my mother often described those early days as some of the most difficult in their marriage. It was a time of intense homesickness and growing pains — where she began to understand what it truly meant to be an officer’s wife.

Mother with sisters Lynne and Diana by our trailor at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri
Mother with sisters Lynne and Diana by our trailer at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri

My Birth, December 3, 1959

In the winter of 1959, my mother made a brave decision. Wanting to be close to her family and the familiar care of her longtime doctor, she traveled alone — with no car and no support from the Army — back to Medford, Massachusetts, to give birth to me. My father remained on duty at Fort Leonard Wood, unable to accompany her. I was born on December 3, 1959, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, delivered by Dr. Trodella — the same physician who had brought my sisters Lynne and Diana into the world. Not long after my birth, my mother bundled up her newborn son and returned to Missouri, where our now family of five squeezed back into the same little trailer.

Anthony Joseph Carbone Jr born December 3, 1959.
Anthony Joseph Carbone Jr born December 3, 1959.
Baby crib Name card for Anthony J. Carbone Jr. showing date of birth December 3, 1959 at 8:35 PM.

My Mother’s Younger Sister Greyhound from Boston to Missouri Alone

Then a story about my aunts and Fort Leonard Wood always surprised and impressed me. My mother’s younger sisters — Norma, Cynthia, and Yvonne — decided to visit her all the way from Boston. They didn’t have much money, and none of them had ever traveled so far. But they pooled what they had, boarded a Greyhound bus, and rode all the way across the country to rural Missouri.

Greyhound Bus like the one my 3 young aunts road from Boston to Fort Leonard Wood c.1960.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero

This was long before mobile phones or even reliable landlines. When they finally arrived, they sat at the local bus station for hours, waiting patiently for my father to get off duty and pick them up. During their visit, there were now eight people living in that little trailer. My mother described it as cramped and chaotic, yet she said it was one of the most joyful and loving visits of her life. Laughter, babies, stories, and sisterhood filled that small space, reminding all of us that even in humble surroundings, family makes room for family.

Father Sent to Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia

Upon completion of his assignment at Fort Leonard Wood in 1960, my father received orders to attend paratrooper training at the U.S. Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia. Over the course of three grueling weeks, he trained relentlessly to earn the coveted silver paratrooper wings. The jumps were real. The risks were real. My father stood determined and proud when he completed the course and became a paratrooper, a distinction he carried with pride for the rest of his life.

Jump towers at Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
250-Foot Jump towers at Airborne School, Fort Benning, Georgia
Dad (CPT Tony Carbone) making a perfect Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) on the drop zone at Fort Benning.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Dad making a perfect Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) on the drop zone at Fort Benning.

Father Receives Orders for 10th Cavalry Regiment in Korea

Shortly after completing his airborne training, my father actively served a year-long unaccompanied tour in South Korea from 1960–1961, leading as a Cavalry Platoon Leader and Squadron Adjutant with the 10th Cavalry Regiment.

I have photographs of him wrapped in his heavy Army-issue extreme cold weather parka and wearing those oversized insulated “Mickey Mouse” boots designed for sub-zero conditions. The images showed him standing beside tanks that had slid off icy roads and flipped completely over in the snow — gritty proof of the harsh terrain and rugged conditions he endured.

Dad (Tony Carbone) and long-time friend, Tiny Minosky, enjoying winter in Korea.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Dad and Tiny Minosky enjoying winter in Korea
Father as a Cavalry Lieutenant in South Korea.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Father as a Cavalry Lieutenant in South Korea

My godfather, Uncle George, stepped in to help

During that year, while my father braved the Korean winter, I was just one to two years old, too young to understand his absence but old enough to feel its impact. My godfather, Uncle George Pietrantoni, only about 18 at the time, stepped into the void, becoming a familiar presence in my life. But when my father returned, I had entered the “Stranger-Danger” phase of childhood, wary of unfamiliar faces — even his. My instinctive withdrawal stung him deeply, planting the seeds of an awkward tension that lingered between us for years, a quiet rift neither of us fully knew how to bridge.

We Live With Nana Pietrantoni

While my father served in Korea, my mother brought us back to our haven in Medford, Massachusetts, to live at my nana’s house. That house, a bustling three-story home, was our true home away from home. My grandparents lived on the second and third floor, along with my nana’s sister, my great aunt Concetta, three of my mother’s sisters (Aunties Norma, Cynthia and Yvonne), and eventually — my mother and her three children. 

The house was always alive with movement and voices. Family members came and went in a constant stream, and my nana seemed to be cooking from sunrise to midnight. The smell of garlic and fresh tomato sauce filled every hallway. My papa was always in the backroom sewing on his vintage Singer sewing machine with a rhymthic chucka sound. It was noisy, crowded, and warm — and to me, it was the safest place on earth.

Mom, Lynne, Diana, Anthony Jr, and Auntie Yvonne at 143 Winthrop Street in Medford.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Mom, Lynne, Diana, Anthony Jr, and Auntie Yvonne at 143 Winthrop Street in Medford
Photograph of my mother with my older sisters Lynne and Diana dressed up for mass.  At my Nana & Papa Pietrantoni's house in Medford, Massachusetts.  Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Mum with my two older sisters, Lynne and Diana
Auntie Norma holding me (Anthony Carbone Jr) at my grandparents’ house in Medford, Massachusetts.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Auntie Norma holding me at my grandparents’ house in Medford, Massachusetts
Lynne, Diana and Anthony Carbone Jr. Formal Portrait.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Lynne, Diana and Anthony Jr.
Young Lynne, Diana, and Anthony Jr Carbone celebrating with their mother, Edda Carbone, at Nana Pietrantoni's house in Medford, Massachusetts.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Christmas 1960 at Nana & Papa Pietrantoni’s house while my father was in Korea.

Father Receives Orders for 101st Airborne DIvision at Fort Campbell, Kentucky

After completing his tour in Korea, the Army sent my father to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where he served from 1961 to 1963 with the prestigious 101st Airborne Division, the “Screaming Eagles.” He served as the Adjutant for the Headquarters and Headquarters Company of the division. Once again, our family lived in government quarters on post, adjusting to the routines and rituals of a new Army installation.

Dad in the living room of our post quarters at Fort Campbell, Kentucky.  Classic mid-century furniture and furnishings.  Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
Dad in the living room of our post quarters at Fort Campbell, Kentucky
With my mother (Edda Carbone) when I was about 3 years old. This photo was taken behind our goverment quarters at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.
With my mother behind our quarters on Fort Campbell, Kentucky

My father wearing his paratrooper wings and 101st Airborne Division patch with his father and sister, Rosemarie. Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
My father wearing his paratrooper wings and 101st Airborne Division patch with his father and sister, Rosemarie.

The Cuban Missile Crisis

During this same period, in October of 1962, the United States faced one of the most dangerous confrontations of the Cold War — the Cuban Missile Crisis. This 13-day standoff between the United States and the Soviet Union began when American reconnaissance aircraft discovered that the Soviets were installing nuclear missiles in Cuba, just 90 miles from Florida. President John F. Kennedy responded by ordering a naval blockade of the island and demanding the immediate removal of the missiles. For nearly two weeks, the world stood on the brink of nuclear war. Thankfully, U.S. and Soviet leaders eventually resolved the crisis through diplomacy, though only after extraordinary tension and heightened military readiness.

New York Times front page from October 23, 1962 with headline "U.S. Imposes Arms Blockade on Cuba on Finding Offensive-Missile Sites; Kennedy Ready for Soviet Showdown".  Photo of President John F. Kennedy.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
NY Times Article from October 1962 on the Cuban Missile Crisis

Dad and the 101st Airborne Prepare to Invade Cuba

Most history books record that elite Army units, including the 101st Airborne Division, were mobilized and staged in Florida and Georgia in anticipation of a possible full-scale invasion of Cuba. However, what most people don’t know — and what I know from my own father’s account — is that he was part of a classified mission to Puerto Rico. As the Adjutant for the Command & Control Battalion of the 101st Airborne Division, he and a select group of officers were quietly deployed to Ramey Air Force Base in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, during the height of the crisis. Their presence there was never officially acknowledged in the open-source historical record, but it’s part of our family’s private history.

I remember overhearing fragments of the story growing up — how the tension was palpable, the operation strictly need-to-know, and the mood deadly serious. My father never glorified the moment, but the fact that he was trusted to be part of such a critical, behind-the-scenes operation speaks volumes about the kind of officer he was becoming. The Cuban Missile Crisis may have been narrowly avoided through diplomacy, but my father and others in the 101st were prepared to act at a moment’s notice.

U.S. Marine Corps Forces Preparing for Ination of Cuba on Puerto Rican Island during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
USMC Forces Preparing for Invation of Cuba on Puerto Rican Island

Dad Gets Promoted to Captain

My father was promoted to the rank of Captain on my third birthday. This was while serving as the Adjutant for the Command & Control Battalion of the 101st Airborne Division.

Mom pinning on Captain’s bars on my newly promoted father (CPT Anthony J. Carbone).
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero.
Mom pinning on Captain’s bars on my newly promoted father.
Captain Carbone staning in front of our quarters at Fort Campbell, Kentucky while assigned as the Adjutant to Headquarters company of the 101st Airborne Division.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Captain Carbone staning in front of our quarters at Fort Campbell, Kentucky.

Father Gets Orders for Fort Benning, Georgia

In 1963, was father received orders sending him back to the U.S. Army Infantry School and Center at Fort Benning, Georgia to attend the Infantry Officer Advance Course. This was considered an honor and special assignment for an Armor officer.

Famous “Follow Me” Statue at the U.S. Army Infantry School & Center at Fort Benning, Georgia.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Famous “Follow Me” Statue at the U.S. Army Infantry School & Center at Fort Benning, Georgia.

President & Mrs. Kennedy Travel to Texas and the World Changed

And then came Friday, November 22, 1963. I was not yet four years old, but I remember that day with the kind of clarity that defies age. It was the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. The world stopped.

President John F. Kennedy with his wife Jackie Kennedy in Presidential Limousine with Texas Governor Connoly and his wife moments before his assassination on November 22, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
President Kennedy with Jackie in Presidential Limo in Dallas

The Moment of the Assassination of the President in Dealy Plaza

John F. Kennedy in the presidential limousine the moment he was assassinated by unknown assassin on the Grassy Knoll in Dealy Plaza, Texas on November 22, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Moment of JFK’s Assasination from the Grassy Knoll in Dealy Plaza Dallas

Walter Cronkite Officially Announces the Death of President Kennedy on Live Television

Our home fell into an eerie silence. My parents sat motionless, tears in their eyes, staring at the black-and-white television. I didn’t fully understand what had happened, but I knew it was something terrible. Even as a young boy, I already knew about the Secret Service. I also knew the President was the most powerful man in America. And now, even he could be shot in broad daylight. That single realization shattered something inside me.

Walter Cronkite as he removes his glasses while announcing the death of President John F. Kennedy on CBS News, as seen from a television monitor on November 22, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Walter Cronkite as he removes his glasses while announcing the death of President John F. Kennedy on CBS News, as seen from a television monitor on Nov. 22, 1963

I suddenly understood the world wasn’t safe and being afraid that my father would now have to go to war. I already knew — instinctively — that war was a bad and dangerous place.

That weekend was unlike any other. We were all home, transfixed by the television as we watched President Johnson get sworn in on Air Force One and saw Kennedy’s casket return to Washington.

Lee Harvey Oswald is Assassinated on Live Television

I heard the panicked interviews of Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas — and then, we watched in disbelief as Oswald was shot and killed by Jack Ruby live on TV just two days later.

Jack Ruby assassinates Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas Police Station on live television on November 24, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Jack Ruby Assasinates Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas Police Station on live television on November 24, 1963,

The Late President’s Funeral Procession

And then came the long, beautiful, sorrow-filled funeral procession. I still see John-John’s heartbreaking salute. The Old Guard soldiers. The late President’s casket on the caisson. Black Jack, the riderless horse. The muffled drums. The silence of millions.

President John F. Kennedy's Funeral Procession with casket on a caisson pulled by members of the 3rd Infantry Divisions "The Old Guard" on November 25, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
President Kennedy’s Funeral Procession led by members of the 3rd Infantry Division’s “The Old Guard” on November 25, 1963.
John Kennedy Jr salutes his father's casket during the late President Kennedy's funeral on November 25, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
John Jr Salutes his father’s casket during funeral
The Riderless Horse "Black Jack" led by a member of The Old Guard of the 3rd Infantry Division, during the funeral procession for the late President John F. Kennedy on November 25, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Riderless Horse Black Jack during President Kennedy’s Furneral Procession
Burial of the Late President John F. Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery on November 25, 1963.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
Burial of the Late President John F Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery

The Infamous Warren Commission Report

The trauma of that moment stayed with me. It gave me nightmares for years. It also ignited a lifelong obsession with understanding what really happened. The very first nonfiction book I ever read was The President’s Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy. Even as a child, I could tell it wasn’t right. The Warren Commission’s report was filled with holes — chapters openly admitted that facts and testimony had been disregarded simply because they didn’t fit the predetermined outcome.

The Official Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy first published on September 27, 1964.
Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: A Son in the Shadow of a Green Beret Hero
The Official Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of President John F Kennedy

I didn’t buy it. I was one of the earliest skeptics I knew. Sixty years later, I’m still studying that moment in history. That day in November didn’t just end the Kennedy era. For me, it ended childhood.

Father Receives Orders for Germany

Shortly afterward, my father received new military orders. In early 1964, we packed up once again and prepared to travel to Germany for our first of three tours to Europe.

But I left a part of my innocence behind in America — along with the memory of a young president whose life, and death, which taught me that truth is not always what it appears or what we’re told.

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Chapter 2: Family, Courtship and Commitment

Mom & Dad at my mother's prom. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You See — A memoir of Service, Shame and the Search for Truth

My Young Father Sent to Bordentown Military Institute

My father was the youngest of four children. His three sisters — Lucille, Theresa, and Rosemarie — absolutely adored their little brother throughout their lives. He was a typical roughhousing boy who loved sports and was constantly in trouble. As a result, my grandparents sent him away to military boarding school — Bordentown Military Institute in New Jersey. Bordentown turned out to be the magic solution, helping straighten out my father into an ideal soldier. It marked the beginning of an honorable 50-year military career.

Cadets from Bordentown Military Institute, New Jersey on parade (c. 1950s).
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Bordentown Military Institute, New Jersey

My Father as a Cadet at Bordentown Military Institute

My father (Cadet Tony Carbone) in his Bordentown Military Institute uniform during his high school years (c.1953).
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Dad at Bordentown Military Institute
My grandparents, Nana & Papa Carbone, visiting my father (Cadet Tony Carbone) at Bordentown Military Institute, in New Jersey (c.1954).
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Nana & Papa Carbone visiting my father at Bordentown Military Institute

Carbone Family Moves to Stoneham, Massachusetts

By that time, the Carbone family had moved to Stoneham, Massachusetts, just outside Boston, where my grandfather worked in the garment district. One day while my father was on leave from Bordentown, he attended a high school party in Medford, Massachusetts, where my mother lived. That’s where they met — and from that night forward, my father was in love for the rest of his life. They corresponded while apart. My mother was slower to fall for him, but eventually, he won her heart.

Mom (Edda Pietrantoni) and Dad (Cadet Tony Carbone) at my mother’s prom at Medford High School, Medford, Massachusetts c.1954.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Mom and Dad at my mother’s prom at Medford High School

Father Enters Norwich University

After graduating from Bordentown, my father attended Norwich University, the Military College of Vermont, as an Army cadet. My mother was working as a secretary at Hood Milk in Boston.

Cadets in formation outside of Old Jackman Hall, Norwich University (c.1950s).
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Corps of Cadets at Norwich University

My Parents Marriage

On November 25, 1955, my father convinced my mother to elope. The elopement caused an uproar. His parents insisted they actively marry in a church before living together, which they did on December 22, 1955.

My parents always celebrated both anniversaries.

My parents’ (Anthony Carbone and Edda Pietrantoni) church wedding reception December 22, 1955 in Medford, Massachusetts.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
My parents’ church wedding reception December 22, 1955

Parents Get Settled at Norwich

Norwich University wasn’t happy about the marriage either — cadets were forbidden to wed — so my father was busted in rank. His father cut him off financially, forcing him to work up to three jobs at once to finish school and ROTC training. They were assigned to the “pre-fab” apartments where married cadets lived.

Mom & Dad at Norwich in front of the Prefabs near Norwich University campus when my father was a married cadet
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Mom & Dad at Norwich in front of the Prefabs

Birth of My Sister, Lynne

My oldest sister, Lynne, was born in 1957, and my father graduated from Norwich University on December 18, 1958 — the same day my second sister, Diana, was born.

My mother (Edda Carbone) with my oldest sister Lynne Elizabeth Carbone (c.1957).
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
My mother with my oldest sister Lynne Elizabeth.

It wasn’t until after the wedding, when both families finally met, that an incredible coincidence emerged: my maternal grandfather had been working in a factory owned by my paternal grandfather for years — without either of them realizing their future connection. The discovery delighted both families, and the two grandfathers became great friends.

Death of my Father’s Sister Lucille and Brother-in-Law Patrick

Tragedy would strike the Carbone family once again. My father’s eldest sister, Lucille, and her husband Patrick Bonesera of Medford, Massachusetts, were killed by a drunk driver near their home in Lawrence Estates on Valentine’s Day. They left behind two young children, my cousins Margie and Ricky — who were raised by my Uncle John and Auntie Rosemarie Antonelli. The loss was devastating and left a permanent mark on the family’s story. My father kept a news clip with the drunk driver’s name in his wallet for many years to come.

My father’s oldest sister Auntie Lucille Bonesera & his brother-in-law, Uncle Pat Bonesara, before they were killed by a drunk driver in the 1950s.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Auntie Lucille & Uncle Pat Bonesara

My Father’s Sister Theresa Marries Uncle Arthur McDonald

My father’s second sister was Theresa B. Carbone was born on July 4, 1926. She married an Irish-American, Arthur F. McDonald, and the two of them had seven children: Dennis, Thomas, Michael, James, Arthur, Jeffrey and Susan.

My father's second sister Theresa B. Carbone and her husband Arthur F. McDonald with their firstborn, my cousin Dennis McDonald.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Uncle Arthur, Auntie Terry, and Cousin Dennis McDonald

Uncle Arthur at Kennedy Space Center

My Uncle Arthur worked for Grumman Aerospace at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida for 30 years in the Apollo Program, and focusing on the Grummun Lunar Module. I remember during the exciting early years of the American space program, Uncle Arthur would send me astronaut patches, photographs, and models of each of the space ships.

Dr. Carbone’s Autobiography: Grumman Aerospace’s Lunar Module for the Apollo Program being worked on at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Kennedy in the 1960s. My Uncle Arthur.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Grumman Aerospace Engineers Working on the Apollo’s Lunar Module at Cape Kennedy.

My Father’s Sister Rosemarie Marries Johnny Antonelli

My father’s youngest sister Rosemarie married Johnny Antonelli, a celebrated American professional baseball player. Together, they had four children, Lisa, Donna, John Jr, and Regina and were raised in Rochester, New York.

Uncle John & Auntie Rosemarie (Carbone) Antonelli. Uncle John served in the Old Guard (3rd Infantry Regiment) that guards the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Uncle John & Auntie Rosemarie Antonelli. He served in the Old Guard (3rd Infantry Regiment) that guards the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.

Uncle Johnny Antonelli the Professional Baseball Pitcher

My uncle was a left-handed starting pitcher, he played for the Boston / Milwaukee Braves, New York / San Francisco Giants, and Cleveland Indians between 1948 and 1961. Noted at the outset of his career as the recipient of the biggest bonus in baseball history when he signed with the Braves for $52,000 in 1948, Antonelli became a six-time National League All-Star, a two-time 20-game winner, and an essential part of the 1954 World Series champion Giants’ pitching staff. His success brought a sense of pride and celebrity into the family at a time when hope was deeply needed.

Uncle Johnny Antonelli pitching for the New York Giants (Baseball Card).
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Uncle Johnny Antonelli pitching for the New York Giants

My Parents Meet and Fall in Love for Life

My parents met during their high school years and quickly fell in love — a love that would last for more than fifty years of marriage. Their bond was something rare and beautiful, marked by a constant affection that made them seem more like sweethearts than a long-married couple. My father often called my mother “Ellie Mae” and proudly referred to her as his girlfriend. Even after decades together, whenever they were in the same room, you could still see the spark between them. Their love never faded — it only deepened with time.

Mom and Dad in an automatic photo booth in the early 1960s.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography.
Mom & Dad were boyfriend & girlfriend for life.

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Chapter 1: The Italian-American Tailors’ Legacy

Vintage Singer sewing machine used by my tailor grandfathers. Autobiography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

Believe Nothing You Hear, and Only Half of What You SeeA Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

Both Grandfather’s Emegrated From Italy

Both of my grandfathers came to America at the turn of the 20th century, part of the great wave of Italian immigrants who left their homeland in search of a better life. What they lacked in money, they made up for in skill and determination. Remarkably, they shared the same trade: both were tailors — men who stitched suits with care, who worked with their hands, and who built their lives one hemline at a time.

Paternal Grandfather: Antonio Benjamino Carbone

My paternal grandfather, Antonio Benjamino Carbone, was born near Rome, Italy on January 8, 1899. His father was Giuseppe Carbone and his mother was Lucia Montemurro. He sailed from southern Italy and landed in New York City after passing through Ellis Island. He originally settled in the Jamaica Queens, a borough of New York City overflowing with dreams and the pungent smell of coal smoke and tenement kitchens.

The Carbone Family Coat of Arms & Notables

Carbone Family Coat of Arms displaying notables such as the Marquis of Padua, a Cardinal, a Senator, and a Tribune of the Roman Republic Army. Military tribunes were among the most senior officers in a legion. They were responsible for leading troops, maintaining discipline, and ensuring the soldiers’ welfare. They were often young men from the equestrian or senatorial classes (wealthy and influential families) who sought military experience. This position served as a stepping stone.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
Carbone Family Coat of Arms displaying notables such as the Marquis of Padua, a Cardinal, a Senator, and a Tribune of the Roman Republic Army.

Carbone Family Genealogy

Leather bound, hand-typed, genealogist report on the Carbone Family written in the 1960s.  Biography of Dr. Anthony J. Carbone.

In the 1960s, my grandfather, Papa Carbone, commissioned a genealogist in Italy to trace the Carbone family history. I find this fascinating, because it was decades before the invention of the Internet. This genealogist had to travel from town to town, office to office, archive to archive, piecing together the Carbone lineage. He discovered something extraordinary: the Carbone name traces back to 500 BC.

He recorded his findings in a leather-bound book, hand-typed in both English and Italian.

The genealogist begins the book with the story of Gneo Papirio Carbone, a tribune of the common people in 92 BC. Historical records state that in 87 BC, he actively led one of four army corps in Marius and Cinna’s army.

The book goes on to describe tribunes, legionnaires, consuls, and soldiers; at least three Catholic cardinals; 14 barons; two marquises; multitude of authors; poet laureates; artists; even the baker for King Louis. One Carbone reportedly married Mary of England, King Henry VIII’s daughter. The family erected monuments in the Duomo of Naples, Sorrento, Rome, and other locations where they held noble privileges, including Capua, Reggio Messina, and Genoa.

Maternal Grandfather: Giovanni di Domenico Pietrantoni

My maternal grandfather, Giovanni di Domenico Pietrantoni was born on 13 February 1893, in Goriano Sicoli, L’Aquila, Abruzzo, Italy. His father, Domenico Pietrantonio, was 27 and his mother, Annantonia Ciccone, was 25. He emmigrated to Boston, Massachusetts via Ellis Island in 1921, and eventually settled on Hanover Street in the Italian North End of Boston.

Papa Pietrantoni’s War Medal from Italian Minister of Defense 1934

Both Families Emigrate to America

Their journeys were treacherous. They traveled by steerage, crammed into the lower decks of steamships — dark, foul-smelling, and disease-ridden compartments. They told stories of passengers who didn’t survive the voyage, of children lost to fever and old men who never made it above deck again. But for those who did survive, there was the unforgettable sight of Lady Liberty, rising out of the harbor like a promise.

New Immigrants Cheer at the Sight of the Statue of Liberty Upon Arriving to America.  Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
New Immigrants Cheer at the Sight of the Statue of Liberty Upon Arriving to America

Arrival at Ellis Island & Evaluation by Public Health Officers

At Ellis Island, their fates were further altered — not just by medical inspections and customs agents, but by the careless swipe of a pen. Immigrants were separated — men to one side, women and children to the other — and examined for any sign of disease. Then came the interviews. Names were lost in translation.

Public Health Officers Inspect Newly Arrived Immigrants at Ellis Island.  Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
Public Health Officers Inspect Newly Arrived Immigrants at Ellis Island

New American Names

My grandfather Antonio Benjamino Carbone became Anthony Benjamin CarboneGiovanni di Domenico Pietrantoni was simplified to John Pietrantoni. Their rich, lyrical names — each syllable a tribute to family, region, and history — flattened into something more “American.” But they didn’t complain. They were simply grateful to begin again.

Marriage of Nana & Papa Carbone

In 1922, Papa Carbone married Michelina Annarella, whose name was later changed to Margaret — though everyone called her “Maggie.” Her father was Francesco Annarella and her mother was Theresa Patriarca. Nana Carbone was a second-generation Italian-American born in Kings County, New York. Interestingly, the two Carbone brothers married two Annarella sisters. My Carbone grandparents had 3 daughters and 2 sons.

Nana & Papa Carbone's Wedding Portrait.  Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
Nana & Papa Carbone’s Wedding

Wedding of Nana & Papa Pietrantoni

Papa Pietrantoni married Giovanna Ranno, who was called “Jenny,” in the North End of Boston on January 16, 1926, in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States. They were both first-generation Americans and they were the parents of 4 sons and 5 daughters.

Nana & Papa Pietrantoni's Wedding Portrait.
Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
Nana & Papa Pietrantoni’s Wedding

I find it fascinating that although both grandfathers arrived in America with the same skill — tailoring — however, their destinies unfolded in dramatically different ways.

Papa Carbone the Tailor

My father’s father rose to great success. He became a sought-after designer, crafting uniforms for the U.S. military and bespoke suits for celebrities like Joe DiMaggio, Frank Sinatra and the Mayor of New York. Their home reflected that prosperity — a large house staffed by servants, a rarity for immigrant families of that era. My grandfather loved driving new Buicks and spending summers at Lake Ronkonkoma on Long Island.

My grandfather, Antonio Benjamino Carbone the tailor. Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
My grandfather, Antonio Benjamino Carbone

Death of the First Carbone Son Followed by Birth of my Father

Tragedy struck when their first son, Anthony Benjamin Carbone Jr., died in early childhood. So when my father was born on May 2, 1935, they named him Anthony Joseph Carbone. To ensure his survival, he was tended to by both a nurse and a wet-nurse, a testament to the lingering fear of loss and the privilege the family could afford by then.

My young father, Anthony Joseph Carbone.  Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
My father, Anthony Joseph Carbone

Papa Pietrantoni the Tailor

In stark contrast, my maternal grandfather, Giovanni Pietrantoni, also a classy gentleman tailor, lived a life of hardship. He raised ten children in a crowded tenement apartment at 4 Battery Street in Boston’s North End, the heartbeat of the city’s Italian-American community. Several of my grandmother’s relativeslived with them — multiple families under one leaky roof, scraping together a life one stitch, one meal, one paycheck at a time.

My maternal grandfather, Giovanni Pietrantoni the tailor.  Dr. Anthony Carbone's Autobiography: Chapter 1 The Tailors' Legacy
My maternal grandfather, Giovanni Pietrantoni

The contrast between the two households — one of elegance and status, the other of noise, love, and survival — would shape the family stories I heard growing up, and eventually, shape me.

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Prologue

BELIEVE NOTHING YOU HEAR, AND ONLY HALF OF WHAT YOU SEE — A Memoir of Service, Shame, and the Search for Truth

This prologue introduces the emotional and philosophical foundation of this memoir. While many of the events it alludes to are revealed later, it offers a glimpse of the deeper truths that shaped my life’s journey.

The Prologue

My father gave me that advice when I was a boy still learning to trust the world. “JR,” he said (short for Anthony Jr.), “believe nothing you hear, and only half of what you see.” I didn’t understand it then. I thought truth was obvious and justice inevitable. But as I got older, as life broke me down and built me back in ways I never expected, those words became my anchor.

I grew up in the long, complicated shadow of a Green Beret hero. My father was the kind of man little boys want to become, and grown men feel unworthy to follow. I spent my life trying to live up to his ideals—of duty, honor, country, family, courage—and paid a high price when I couldn’t.

I served my country–I wore the uniform. And later, I was a soldier and a healer. But under the surface, I was unraveling. Crushed by trauma I didn’t yet understand. Haunted by what I saw, by what I didn’t see, and worst of all, by what others chose to believe.

There’s a moment in every man’s life when he realizes the truth doesn’t always win. That moment came for me like a whisper—a rumor. One lie was enough to destroy a reputation I spent decades building. And it wasn’t the first. It wouldn’t be the last.

I’ve been judged for things I didn’t do. Lost friends, careers, my peace of mind. I’ve walked into rooms where the air went still. I’ve watched good people turn away because they heard something. That’s why I live by my father’s words now more than ever.

This memoir is not just about service—it’s about shame. It’s about how the system fails, how silence protects the wrong people, and how strength sometimes means learning to survive in your own skin.

I’m telling this story not to clear my name, but to reclaim my life. To show that even in the aftermath of lies, there is still truth worth telling—and a man still worth knowing.

So read what follows with open eyes. And remember what my father said.

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