NEWS RELEASES from the United States Department of Defense
No. 489-06 IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 31, 2006
DoD Identifies Marine Casualties
The Department of Defense announced today the death of two Marines who were supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Corporal Richard A. Bennett, 25, of Girard, Kansas
Captain Nathanael J. Doring, 31, of Apple Valley, Minnesota
Both died May 30, 2006, following a non-hostile helicopter accident near Al Taqaddum, Iraq, on May 27, 2006. Both were assigned to Marine Light/Attack Helicopter Squadron-169, Marine Aircraft Group-39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, California.
Media with questions about these Marines can call the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing Public Affairs Office at (858) 577-6000.
1 June 2006:
After college, Nathanael Doring followed his dreams of flying and landed in the Marines, where the 31-year-old Apple Valley man met the second love of his life: his wife. The two served as captains in Iraq, and in April, he extended his second tour of duty so he could return to the U.S. this summer, shortly before she would.
Nathanael Doring, who flew attack helicopters with the Marines, died this past weekend when his AH-1 Cobra crashed into a deep lake about 45 miles west of Baghdad.
Searchers recovered his body from the cockpit Monday, along with that of a 25-year-old corporal, and their families were notified of their deaths. The accident happened during a routine maintenance test flight near an airbase and was not combat related, according to the military.
The cause of the crash is still undetermined, Doring’s family said. He was the 32nd Minnesota military member to die in the Iraq war.
Cara Skoglund said her younger brother looked forward to returning to the United States in August and planned to spend time with Alexander, his 7-year-old son from a previous relationship. The boy, who lives in Maryland with his mother, learned Tuesday of Doring’s death.
Skoglund and other family members remembered Doring as an independent spirit who loved the camaraderie of the military. Soccer and aviation were his greatest passions, which he took to early. While still a student at Apple Valley High School, he completed ground classes in aviation and played soccer or served as a referee.
He later attended the Milwaukee School of Engineering, graduating with honors in electrical engineering in the late 1990s before joining the U.S. Marine Corps.
“Everything he did was his own path,” said Jim Doring, Nathanael Doring’s father, standing with Doring’s older sister and younger brother Wednesday outside the family’s Apple Valley home.
Marine Capt. Lisa Christenson Doring will accompany her husband’s casket back to the U.S. this week, where he will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery. A memorial service has been tentatively scheduled for June 10 at the Berea Lutheran Church in Inver Grove Heights.
The two married three years ago in a ceremony at the Marine Corps base at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
During the opening salvos of the war, Doring’s squadron launched operations from Kuwait into Iraq. He was among the 24 pilots of Helicopter Squadron-369 who received air medals in June 2004 for their extensive missions in combat zones.
The twin-engine AH-1W Super Cobra, the latest version of an aircraft that first saw service in Vietnam, is used by the Marines for attacking armor, armed escort and reconnaissance, among other duties.
Doring’s uncle, Rich Gamble of Inver Grove Heights, said he recalled a young man who was quiet and devoted.
“He pursued a dream to fly and was able to accomplish that,” said Gamble. “He was dedicated to that and dedicated to what he was doing.”
Gamble said Doring believed the U.S. involvement in Iraq was a good thing.
“From his perspective, I know he believed they were helping the people in Iraq,” he said.
Doring had already completed two tours of duty in Iraq and his unit had returned to Camp Pendleton in April, his uncle said. But because his wife still was serving in Iraq, he decided to stay in the Middle East.
Since his unit was stateside, Doring was assigned to act as a liaison between the military and defense contractors operating unmanned aerial vehicles, which are widely used in Iraq for surveillance and reconnaissance.
“He was flying these other missions for flight time, basically,” Gamble said. “It wasn’t part of his regular duties.”
Doring’s helicopter crashed Saturday into the deep water of a large lake near the Al Taqaddum airbase, the military said. Because special equipment had to be moved to the scene to search for and recover the helicopter, it wasn’t until Monday — two days after the crash — that Doring’s death was confirmed.
2 June 2006:
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA — The body of a California-based Marine helicopter pilot who grew up in Minnesota was recovered earlier this week in Iraq.
Captain Nathanael J. Doring, a 31-year-old Apple Valley, Minnesota, native was on a maintenance test flight in his AH-1 Cobra attack helicopter from the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing when it went down Saturday in the Anbar province. Two Marines were killed, the military said.
Officials have said hostile fire was not suspected as the cause of the crash. The Department of Defense confirmed the identities of the victims on Thursday. Doring’s uncle, Rich Gamble of Inver Grove Heights, said the family was told Saturday.
The pilot’s parents and sister still live in the Twin Cities area, Gamble said.
He said Doring had served two tours of combat duty in Iraq. His unit returned to the United States in April, but he decided to extend his tour in a noncombat role until his wife, Lisa, also a Marine officer, finished her tour in the fall.
“The impression that the family was given was that it was not a combat mission in any way,” Gamble said.
Doring’s wife will accompany his body back to the United States, but no date has been set, Gamble said. Doring will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, he said.
The couple lived on a horse farm in California when they weren’t deployed, he said. The Defense Department said Doring was based at Camp Pendleton.
Gamble said that as a young man, Doring was very focused. “He did what he did with a purpose,” he said. “Things did not happened to him, necessarily. He decided where he went.”
He said Doring joined the Marines right out of college with the intention of becoming a pilot. “I don’t think it started out as a helicopter pilot, he just wanted to fly.”
He said Doring had a young son from his first marriage who lived with his mother on the East Coast.
Marine With a Purpose Honored
Helicopter Pilot Served 2 Tours in Iraq Before Fatal Crash
By Arianne Aryanpur
Courtesy of the Washington Post
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Marine Captain Nathanael J. Doring was a career military man. After serving two tours of duty in Iraq, he was scheduled to come home in April, his family said.
But he requested to stay longer to be close to his wife, Lisa, a Marine captain also stationed in Iraq. Her tour of duty was to conclude in the fall, and until then, Doring was to work in a noncombat capacity.
The highly skilled helicopter pilot from Apple Valley, Minn., died May 30, 2006, of injuries sustained in a crash near Taqaddum on May 27, 2006. He was 31.
Corporal Richard A. Bennett, 25, of Girard, Kansas, also died in the crash. Both were assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 169, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, I Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Pendleton, California.
Yesterday, Doring’s wife and about 70 other mourners gathered under an overcast sky to honor him as he was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery. He was the 243rd person to die supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom to be interred there.
A military band escorted the mourners, which included many uniformed Marines, to the grassy plot in Section 60, Grave Site 8398, where Doring’s white headstone was placed.
Lieutenant Ron Nordan, a Navy Chaplain, delivered the sermon, and mourners bowed their heads as he offered a prayer. When the bugler played taps, the Marines stood at attention and saluted. Then, the U.S. flag that draped Doring’s coffin was folded and given to his wife as she wiped away tears. She hugged it to her chest, then placed it on her lap, holding a single red rose over it.
Doring’s uncle, Rich Gamble, told the Associated Press last month that his nephew was determined and focused.
“He did what he did with a purpose,” Gamble said. “Things did not happen to him, necessarily. He decided where he went.”
Doring graduated from Apple Valley High School in 1993 and received a degree in electrical engineering from the Milwaukee School of Engineering. He joined the Marines immediately after graduating from college, according to news reports.
Doring was gregarious and proud to serve his country, recalled Corporal Martin R. Harris, who met him in 2004. “The first time I talked to him, we talked for two hours,” Harris said.
Doring was among 24 pilots in his squadron to be awarded Air Medals in 2004, granted for missions completed in a combat zone during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Doring was an AH-1W Super Cobra pilot. He flew helicopters over troops at high speeds, providing fire support.
The aircraft are “kind of like the F-18s of the helicopter world,” Harris said, adding that Doring knew everything about them.
“He was confident in his stance and confident in the abilities of himself and his unit together,” he said.
The Patriot Guard Riders, a motorcycle group that attends some military services to pay respect to the fallen, created an online forum for Doring last month.
Rider Bruce L. Clements wrote: “Rest in peace Marine. . . . You’ll be remembered as an American Hero always.”
DORING, NATHANAEL JAMES
- CAPT US MARINE CORPS
- DATE OF BIRTH: 05/30/1975
- DATE OF DEATH: 05/30/2006
- BURIED AT: SECTION 60 SITE 8398
- ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY
Michael Robert Patterson was born in Arlington and is the son of a former officer of the US Army. So it was no wonder that sooner or later his interests drew him to American history and especially to American military history. Many of his articles can be found on renowned portals like the New York Times, Washingtonpost or Wikipedia.
Reviewed by: Michael Howard