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    State Department Recognizes New York National Guard Soldier for Iraq Service

    State Department Recognizes NY National Guard Soldier for Iraq Service

    Courtesy Photo | New York Army National Guard Sgt. Jhon Ortiz outside the nation’s capital September...... read more read more

    CORONA, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES

    09.05.2019

    Story by Col. Richard Goldenberg 

    New York National Guard

    WASHINGTON – New York Army National Guard Sgt. Jhon Ortiz received an award September 5 that most U.S. Soldiers will never see: the U.S. Department of State Meritorious Honor Award for outstanding performance while deployed in Iraq in 2018.

    Ortiz, a Corona, N.Y. resident, was recognized for a role most Soldiers don’t see: working with Diplomatic Security Service, a branch of the State Department that protects U.S. officials at bases, embassies and consulates abroad.

    During his nine-month deployment between in 2018, Ortiz was assigned to assist in receiving, storing, and transporting equipment and facilitating the movement of personnel in and out of Baghdad.

    "I was in charge of security, transportation, and lodging of U.S. military and government officials visiting Iraq,” Ortiz said. “I handled officials ranging from Congressmen and women to the highest levels of leadership in the U.S. military and NATO."

    Ortiz was deployed as part of the 10th Mountain Division Mobile Command Post Operational Detachment, a National Guard element that trains and readies itself to deploy with the 10th Mountain Division Headquarters for staff augmentation.

    Faced with increasing hostilities by Iranian-backed militias, the Basra consulate was closed in October 2018, requiring the evacuation of all personnel and securing its equipment.

    "I was located in the Baghdad Diplomatic Support Center, which was the only base that was close enough and had the capability of storing, housing, and transporting all of the Basra Consulate's people and equipment," Ortiz said.

    New York Army National Guard Col. Michael Bice, who deployed as the Base Commander for Garrison Operations at the Baghdad Diplomatic Support Center, picked Ortiz for the mission.

    “I knew that he was the one that could be counted on to get the job done. He was self-motivated, smart and well respected by the State Department,” Bice explained.

    Ortiz devised a system to store the massive amounts of cargo and equipment coming into Baghdad from the Basra location.

    "There were more than 200 trucks coming in during the span of two or three weeks,” Ortiz said, “all carrying containers that had just about half a ton of equipment in them, and all of them were being driven by local Iraqi contractors.”

    “Screening and security were a main concern, because we did not know who among those local people was sympathetic to hostile groups. Luckily, we did not have any incidents during that time," he said.

    The movement of State Department equipment and personnel required a tremendous amount of expertise to support the State Department Regional Security Team, Bice said.

    “Ortiz and his team were able to track and account for 58 flights which was comprised of 114 vehicles and over 662,333 pounds of materials with all personnel,” Bice said.

    The Department of State Meritorious Honor Award is not given lightly, said Phillip Smith a member of the State Department Regional Security Team, who nominated Ortiz for the award.

    It typically takes an above average Foreign Service Person a few years to obtain such a prestigious award, he said.

    “He earned it,” Smith added.

    “I was not expecting to receive any awards from my time helping the evacuation of the Basrah Consulate,” Ortiz said. “I enjoyed my time helping the Regional Security Officers during the mission. Receiving the Meritorious Honor Award was a great motivational boost and an honor -- there are so just so many people who get nominated for this award every year. It reminded me that the work that people do for the United States does not go unnoticed,” he said.

    State Department Assistant Secretary for Diplomatic Security Michael Evanoff presented Ortiz with the award and plaque that read, in part, "for exceptional devotion to duty, enthusiasm and exemplary conduct during the period of October 3 to 18, due to the evacuation of Consulate Basra."

    “Jhon was the right person at the right time to get this mission accomplished,” Bice said.

    Ortiz, a Middle Eastern Studies major at Dartmouth College, is expecting to graduate in the fall of 2020 and continue his masters studies in international relations. He is also a cadet in the Reserve Officer Training Corps. As a cadet, he will commission as a lieutenant upon graduation.

    “Listening to the stories of the other awardees reinforced my interest in working in the foreign service in the future,” Ortiz said.

    “It's pretty rare from someone in the armed services to receive a state department award," said Susan Redwine, director of the Dartmouth ROTC program. Ortiz quietly sets a high bar for other cadets who have received military commissions, she said.

    "When Jhon came back to finish his degree here, he didn't talk about Iraq all that much, because he is a soft-spoken guy,” Redwine said, “but he does assert himself in a quiet, confident way, and we are proud of him."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.05.2019
    Date Posted: 10.17.2019 15:26
    Story ID: 348022
    Location: CORONA, NEW YORK, US

    Web Views: 1,125
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN