Friends, colleagues memorialize fallen soldier

Posted By Scott Fontaine on November 3, 2009 at 5:19 pm Bookmark and Share Share this

Photo by Drew Perine/The News Tribune

Photo by Drew Perine/The News Tribune

One on of the last missions before he died, Spc. Kyle A. Coumas was tasked with carrying the extra ammunition for his squad. The extra 120 pounds of gear wore on the California native's body as he marched through southern Afghanistan.

He fell again and again. He waded through waist-deep water. He carried the equipment for miles. At one point, he fell 20 feet and plunged into the Arghandab River. His comrades had to pull him out.

"His face was beat up and bloodied," said Staff Sgt. Chad Brinkley, his former squad leader. "His clothes were covered with mud. Yet once he made it to the top, all he said was, 'Put my assault pack on my back please, and hand me my rifle.'

"Not once did he quit or complain."

Friends and colleagues gathered at Coumas' memorial service Tuesday at Fort Lewis remembered the 22-year-old as a soldier who was quiet but seemed to love his job as an infantryman. Even when the work was tough, they said, he never quit or complained.

Coumas, serving with 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, was killed Oct. 21 in Kandahar when a roadside bomb detonated near his Stryker. He served with the brigade's 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Division, which has spent the past few months clearing Taliban insurgents from the adobe villages and orchards that straddle the Arghandab River.

The battalion has lost 19 soldiers since it deployed in July.

Coumas first arrived at Fort Lewis in June 2007, four months after he enlisted. The 5th Brigade didn't have any equipment, so he was assigned to the brigade headquarters' operations section. He later served in the personnel section.

One of his assignments was to sort and distribute the brigade's mail. He carried this task when he deployed, sorting through stacks of letters and boxes from a shipping container.

"He was a one-man show – covered in dust, working out of a small shipping container in the 120-degree heat," Lt. Col. Patrick Gaydon, the brigade special troops battalion commander, said at Coumas' memorial service at Kandahar Air Field on Oct. 30. "The container was too small, he didn't have enough help, he didn't have a dedicated vehicle to pick up the mail, and 4,000 soldiers' loved ones kept sending care packages."

Gaydon, whose comments were read Tuesday by Lt. Aldebert Concepcion, echoed a common theme: "Not once did he complain. He just tried harder, working long hours in the mail room."

His family, in a statement, said Coumas long loved the military. His family sponsored a platoon deployed to Iraq in 2003; Coumas would pass out flyers, asking family, friends, neighbors and businesses for donations to help support the troops. He believed he was serving his country and was working toward a greater good, his parents, Michael and Lori Coumas, said.

He transferred to the 1-17 Infantry, with which he served as a Stryker driver, about two months before he died. Chaplain Capt. Ronaldo Silva said Tuesday Coumas had found his calling.

"Spc. Coumas tried many jobs," he said. "He became a mail clerk, which he did faithfully, but he remained passionate about being a combat infantryman. He found the purpose of his life – his calling, if you will. He did what he loved doing, and he gave himself fully to it."

"He lived a life of purpose."


Comments

Follow the comments on this post with RSS 2.0 Follow comments on this post via RSS 2.0

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part and abiding by these simple rules.

Leave a Reply