- Home
- NATO Kosovo Force
- Operation Allies Refuge
- Operation Enduring Freedom
- Operation Freedom’s Sentinel
- Operation Inherent Resolve
- Operation Iraqi Freedom
- Operation New Dawn
- Operation Octave Shield
- Operation Odyssey Lightning
- Operation Spartan Shield
- Task Force Sinai
- U.S. Africa Command Operations
- U.S. Central Command operations
- The People Behind The Sacrifice
Army Spc. Michael S. Weger
Died October 12, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom
30, of Rochester, N.Y.; assigned to the 20th Engineer Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; killed Oct. 12 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his patrol vehicle in Baghdad. Also killed were Capt. Dennis L. Pintor and Spc. Jaime Moreno.
Miss. native killed in Iraq ‘never shirked’ from duties
By Holbrook Mohr
Associated Press
JACKSON, Miss. — Spc. Michael S. Weger, a Pascagoula native killed in Iraq last week, is remembered by his family as a good son and loving father who liked camping and rarely met a stranger.
Weger, 30, died Oct. 12 along with two other soldiers from the 20th Engineer Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division, when an improvised explosive device hit the Humvee they were driving in Iraq. The unit is based in Fort Hood, Texas.
“He was a good little guy. He never met a stranger — a really outgoing, really good father,” said Sonya Gentry, who married Weger’s cousin 12 years ago. “He had a little boy, 5 years old. Damion is his name. He was a really good dad, good son, good brother. He was just an all-around nice guy.”
Gentry, speaking to The Associated Press from her home in Moss Point, said she saw Weger last year when he returned to his hometown for his grandfather’s funeral. She said he seemed proud of his life as a soldier.
The Defense Department listed Weger’s hometown as Rochester, N.Y., but Greg Weger said his son was born in Pascagoula and lived in Houston before joining the Army.
“He had no resentments,” his father has said. “He never shirked from his responsibilities.”
Weger joined the Army in February 2003 and was sent to Iraq with the 1st Cavalry Division in March 2004.
“The 1st Cavalry is basically on peacekeeping missions and insurgent patrols,” said Fort Hood civilian spokesman Dan Hassett.
Hassett said Weger; Capt. Dennis L. Pintor, 30, of Lima, Ohio; and Jaime Moreno, 28, of Round Lake Beach, Ill., all died of injuries sustained in the explosion. The men worked as combat engineers.
“Combat engineers build bridges, work in construction, work with some explosive ordinance devices and some demolition work,” Hassett said. “Their basic task is to perform functions that allow the unit to enter a place — to break down obstacles.”
Gentry said the work of a combat engineer was probably a good fit for Weger’s abilities. “He’s very mechanical, very good with his hands and mechanically inclined,” she said.
Capt. David C. Woodruff Jr., Weger and Moreno’s former commanding officer, described both men as “true heroes and warriors.” Weger, who had been his driver until he changed command with Pintor, “was an outstanding soldier, father, brother and son,” Woodruff said. “He was a true hero and warrior, and I miss him.”
Weger, Moreno and Pintor were on a combat mission to find terrorists and search for IEDs, Woodruff said.
“That was their mission, and Bravo Company is the best at it,” he said. “They are the hardest working soldiers in their Area of Operations and they never stop.”