By PATRICIA M.
MURRET
Capital News Service
Thursday, January
25, 2007
WASHINGTON - National Guard Command Sgt. Maj. Roger Haller was tough --
training hundreds of
troops in tactics
and weapons, but
when he wanted quiet
he went to a
favorite spot at
Camp Baker
overlooking the
Potomac River.
At the spot known
among soldiers as
"Kilo," he was able
to enjoy the sunset
and reflect, his
friends said. When
he said good-bye he
often used "kilo"
meaning, "peace."
Now his friends
wish him "kilo."
Haller, 49, of
Davidsonville, the
highest-ranking
enlisted soldier of
the 70th Regiment,
Maryland Army
National Guard, at
Camp Fretterd in
Reisterstown, died
Saturday, one of 12
soldiers killed in a
UH-60 Blackhawk
helicopter crash
northeast of
Baghdad, Department
of Defense officials
confirmed Wednesday.
"He was the kind
of guy who would
give you the shirt
off his back. He
would take a bullet
for anybody -- he
would step in line
-- that's the kind
of guy he was,"
recalled Haller's
friend, retired
Command Sgt. Maj.
Kathleen Hurley.
A 24-year member
of the Maryland
Guard, Haller was
serving an active
tour of duty as a
senior liaison with
the National Guard
Bureau providing
guidance on
personnel issues to
soldiers and their
families. He
deployed in early
December to
Afghanistan on a
six-month rotation,
but recently
continued his
mission in Iraq.
As the senior
enlisted adviser of
the 70th Regiment's
Regional Training
Institute in
Reisterstown, Haller
was responsible for
educating sergeants
in the Maryland area
hoping to become
commissioned
officers, and he
taught basic and
advanced leadership
courses to Guard
recruits.
Haller often took
his trainees to the
Camp Baker woods for
weeks at a time to
teach small arms
artillery use,
mountaineering and
rappelling.
"In order to be
able to teach, you
have to walk the
walk by day," said
longtime friend and
fellow officer, Sgt.
1st Class John E.
Greer. "He was the
standard."
Hurley, who met
Haller 15 years ago
as a student and
later became his
boss, found him such
a good sounding
board that she
nicknamed him
"Jiminy" after
Jiminy Cricket, the
Disney character in
"Pinocchio" who
served as the wooden
puppet's conscience.
Haller's moving
e-mail accounts from
Afghanistan about
the plight of the
country's children,
prompted Hurley and
another friend to
help an organization
send coats and
scarves to
Afghanistan, she
said.
"No matter where
he was, he had a
friend before he
left," said Capt.
Liz Barnes, his
deskmate at the
National Guard
Bureau. "Roger was
the best person I've
ever met."
Hurley remembers
Haller fondly as a
"bull in a china
shop . . . a
go-getter, very
forward, very
outspoken."
"He had no
problem telling you
like it was," she
said. "He would bend
over backwards for
you, and sometimes
it got him in
trouble," she said.
Haller went to the
mat for what he
believed was right,
she said, especially
for his sergeants.
"He cared. He really
cared."
Haller, who
considered Cambridge
his hometown, spoke
often of his
children, Morgan,
21, and Kathryn
"Alex" Haller, 17,
of Cambridge, and
Army Sgt. Daniel
Haller, 22, his
friends said,
recently worrying
about his oldest.
But Haller also
delighted in the
military service of
his son, an Army
paratrooper with the
172nd Stryker
Brigade Combat Team
who served tours in
Afghanistan and Iraq
service. Haller
particularly enjoyed
the "tips" about
military life his
son provided.
On leave from
active duty, Daniel
Haller returned
three days before
Haller deployed and
spent Thanksgiving
with his father.
Funeral
arrangements are
pending. |