'Pain does not go away': Anger persists for family of U.S. Marine killed
in Kabul
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[August 17, 2022]
By Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The last text
message Darin Taylor Hoover sent his mother from Kabul's airport a year
ago was short but one she still reads every day.
"Mamma I'm safe, I love you," the 31-year-old Marine Corps staff
sergeant wrote as he worked to keep some semblance of order while
thousands of desperate Afghans tried to get on the last few evacuation
flights.
Taylor, as he was called by his family, was among the last 13 U.S.
troops killed in Afghanistan. An Islamic State bomber blew himself up at
an airport gate during the chaotic mission to evacuate Americans and
at-risk Afghans before a complete U.S. military withdrawal.
Darin Hoover and Kelly Henson, Taylor's parents, have spent the past
year trying to process the pain of losing their only son, re-reading the
letters he left some family members and replaying the last time they saw
him.
Their grief is mixed with anger, frustration and unanswered questions
about why he was sent on that mission in the first place.
"It just aggravates me to no end that they put them in that situation
that they should not have been in," said Hoover, who is a police
officer.
On the first anniversary of the withdrawal this month, some U.S.
officials and experts said there has not been public accountability for
mistakes in the evacuation, which took place as the Taliban regained
control of Afghanistan at the end of the United States' longest war.
'IT'S NOT REAL'
A linesman on his high school football team near Salt Lake City, Utah,
Taylor was nearly 6 feet tall and had wanted to join the military since
age 6. As an infantryman, he deployed to Afghanistan in 2011 and 2012.
Taylor's mother was used to being worried about her son, but saying
goodbye to him in March 2021 before his last deployment felt different.
"I just had a horrible feeling. I hate to say it, but I just knew that
was the last time," Henson said.
His deployment to the Middle East diverted to Afghanistan in August as
the U.S.-backed government was crumbling.
About six months after their last meeting in California, Kelly was
working from home on Aug. 26, 2021, when she saw news reports that there
had been an explosion in Kabul and watched as the death toll ticked up
to 13 American troops.
Later that night, as she was walking down to the laundry room, the
doorbell rang and she knew it meant her son was among those killed.
"I remember just thinking this isn't real. This is not real," she said.
The past year has been punctuated with events around the country to
remember Taylor and the other 12 troops who were killed that day,
including a NASCAR race.
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The 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old
Guard) Caisson Platoon, Marines from the "The President?s Own"
Marine Band, and Marines from the Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C.
(8th and I) conduct military funeral honors with funeral escort for
U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Darin Hoover in Section 60 of Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, U.S. September 24, 2021.
U.S. ARMY/Elizabeth Fraser/Handout via REUTERS
Taylor's family has slowly tried to return to everyday routines.
Kelly has slowly started going back to work, only working 15 hours a
week for now.
Darin has been able to immerse himself in his job, but there are
times when his emotions overcome him.
"It could be something as simple as a song on the radio. It could be
something as simple as talking to people and ... I'll get a rush of
it," he said.
'YOU SHOULD BE HERE'
One of the toughest days was July 24, which would have been Taylor's
32nd birthday.
"Of all the 'firsts' we've had to endure, this day and the one
coming up in the next month will really try me. You should be here
damnit," Darin wrote on Facebook that day.
"The pain does not go away," he added.
The family, including his parents, sister and grandfather among
others, went skydiving for the first time, something Taylor had
wanted to do.
They started a scholarship in Taylor's name for students who
demonstrate courage and community service, raising about $25,000 so
far.
Later this month, the family will mark the first anniversary of his
death on Aug. 26 at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington,
D.C.
Military officials have contacted Taylor's parents several times to
update them on an investigation into the deadly bombing that also
killed at least 170 Afghans. But the parents say the Biden
administration has not been willing to acknowledge that better
planning and earlier action could have reduced risks for troops.
The Biden administration portrays the pullout and extraction
operation - one of the largest airlifts ever - as an "extraordinary
success" that wound up an "endless" conflict. A military inquiry
said that the Kabul airport attack could not have been prevented
with the resources on hand.
"What I'd like for them to do is say, 'Hey, this was mess-up, and we
thank you for your son's service, and I'm sorry that it went down
that way,'" Taylor's mother said.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Mary Milliken and Cynthia
Osterman)
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