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Belvoir Eagle news

On Friday, at the celebration of ACS’ 58th birthday, Garrison Commander COL Joseph Messina helped Braddye and her team open the first-ever Army food pantry.
“It’s kind of a big deal,” Braddye explained, “This will go a long way toward reducing food insecurity, which fits with the ACS mission of prevention and education. This is an opportunity for us to ensure our Soldiers and families remain food secure.”
Citing a recent survey of Exceptional Family Member Program participants across the armed forces this year, Braddye said the survey revealed that 35 percent of respondents stated they have faced food insecurity in the past year.
For the 23rd straight year, Fisher House Foundation’s Scholarships for Military Children program has awarded deserving children of U.S. service members scholarship grants, providing an early leg up in funding their higher education dreams.

In honor of the 75th anniversary of a presidential executive order prohibiting segregation in the military, Fort Belvoir held a ceremony this week to announce the renaming of Lee Road to EO 9981 Road.
Executive Order 9981, signed by President Harry S. Truman on July 26, 1948, declared it essential that U.S. armed forces maintain the highest standards of democracy, with equality of treatment and opportunity for all those who serve.
Lee Road’s name change came from a decision made by the congressional naming commission created in 2021 to study and make recommendations on renaming military assets with names linked to the Confederate Army in the Civil War.

Retired Col. Bruce Crandall, who repeatedly flew his helicopter under intense enemy fire to save dozens of wounded troops, is the subject of the latest graphic novel in the Association of the U.S. Army’s series on recipients of the nation’s highest award for valor.
Medal of Honor: Bruce Crandall tells of the Olympia, Washington, native’s actions on Nov. 14, 1965, when he flew 22 flights into Vietnam’s Ia Drang Valley, ignoring heavy enemy fire to deliver ammunition and evacuate as many as 70 wounded soldiers. The pivotal battle would later be made famous by the book We Were Soldiers Once … and Young: Ia Drang–The Battle That Changed the War in Vietnam and a subsequent movie.

Members of the National Ground Intelligence Center (NGIC), U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), U.S. Army senior leaders and distinguished guests, including representatives from partner nations, gathered for a change of command ceremony at the Center, at Rivanna Station, Charlottesville, VA, on July 14.
Col. Eric H. Haas, who most recently served as an instructor at the U.S. Army War College, assumed command of the NGIC from Col. Christopher C. Rankin.