The Flag of His Father

Literally:

Like any Soldier, Pfc. Alexander Cesario always makes sure he has all his essential equipment before he goes outside the wire. For Cesario, that means his weapon, radio, and night vision goggles, as well as one special, personal item – an American flag his father brought home from Vietnam.

Cesario, a Somerville, N.J., native serving as a forward observer with Company A., Special Troops Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, has carried his father’s flag with him on every mission since being deployed to Iraq a year ago.

The flag was first acquired by Cesario’s father, Adam, 61, when he was a young paratrooper serving in Vietnam. The elder Cesario never let a day go by without unfurling the flag, no matter where he was or what he was doing.

“(My dad) flew that flag every day, even if he had to put it up on a radio antenna,” Cesario said.

At one point, a mission went wrong and Cesario’s father was cut off from the rest of his platoon. For three days, he had to hack it out of the jungle alone, with the Vietcong in hot pursuit. But even on the run, he still managed to raise the flag each day.

“He didn’t stop moving at all for those three days, except to fly that flag,” Cesario said.

When Cesario’s father returned from the war, he put the flag into safekeeping. He was so protective of it that even family members were rarely allowed to handle it.

“It was like his prized possession,” Cesario said.

Nothing could make the elder Cesario part with the flag until Alexander, 19, was deployed to Iraq this year. After he began patrolling the streets of Baghdad, Cesario decided he wanted to carry on his father’s tradition. After some arm-twisting, he convinced his dad to mail him the flag.

The flag arrived with step-by-step instructions on how to take care of it, Cesario said. He recalled the final step with a laugh: “If you lose it, don’t bother coming home.”

To allow such a priceless possession to go in harms way – that shows the truest possible love of country. In reading this, I was moved to the depths of my soul; and also made grateful to God that he allows us here in the United States to have such men as the elder and younger Cesario, ever willing to put all the have on the line for us.

4 thoughts on “The Flag of His Father

  1. Diana Powe's avatar Diana Powe January 3, 2008 / 9:15 am

    Mark,

    A great story. Thank you to Adam and Alexander Cesario for being willing to put themselves in harm’s way.

  2. AgentFear's avatar AgentFear January 3, 2008 / 3:05 pm

    Bravo!

    It’s a shame that your “war” preznit does not support the troops whose valor and commitment far outshine the example he set or continues to share with the world.

    This is how 43 supports the troops…

    The Army has temporarily halted bonus payments for more than 20 enlistment, re-enlistment and service extension programs pending enactment of authorizing legislation.

    President Bush, to the surprise of Congress and the Defense Department, vetoed the fiscal 2008 Defense Authorization Act on Dec. 29 after months bargaining with House and Senate leaders.

    In announcing the pocket veto, White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said the president objected to a single provision of the legislation that would delay the reconstruction of Iraq, and expose the Iraqi government to unwarranted law suits in U.S. courts.

    That’s right. Gotta delay those bonuses for the “reconstruction” of Iraq. And, those darn unwarranted lawsuits.

    Our troops didn’t need the money anyway.

  3. Kahn's avatar Kahn January 3, 2008 / 5:30 pm

    Agent, so you’re a vet? Know somebody serving? Brother? Sister? Someone close?

  4. Ken's avatar Ken January 3, 2008 / 10:27 pm

    I wonder how much pork the Dems added to the 2008 Defense Authorization Act. There had to be
    quite a bit of it for the bill to get the veto axe.

    anyway…

    Great Story, thanks for sharing.

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