
ARLINGTON, Va. - He didn't introduce himself. He didn't have to.
President Obama simply stuck out his hand and asked for my name as he stepped toward me amid a bone-chilling drizzle in the Gardens of Stone.
This was Section 60 of Arlington National Cemetery. I wasn't there as a reporter, but to visit some friends and family buried there when Obama made an unscheduled stop - a rare presidential walk among what Lincoln called America's "honored dead" - after laying a Veterans Day wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.
What I got was an unexpected look into the eyes of a man who intertwined his roles as commander in chief and consoler in chief on a solemn day filled with remembrance and respect for sacrifices made - and sacrifices yet to be made.
I'm sure the cynics will assume this wasjust anotherObama photoop.
If they'd been standing in my boots looking him in the eye, they would have surely choked on their bile.
His presence in Section 60 convinced me that he now carries the heavy burden of command.
I had stopped at Arlington to see the resting place of Ken Taylor, Ed Lenard and Dave Sharrett. Ken and Ed survived their service, in World War II and Korea, and died as old men. Dave did not leave Iraq alive. He was 27.
Obama arrived just before noon at the serene Section 60, where many of the dead from Iraq and Afghanistan are buried together - and where many more heroes will undoubtedly be laid to rest before this President leaves office.
It's a section typically bustling with those visiting loved ones. Every time I go there, more and more graves have been dug into the earth.
The President and First Lady Michelle Obama emerged from their armored limousine hatless in the frigid downpour and took a slow stroll into the soggy rows of white marble headstones.
They stopped first at the grave of Medal of Honor recipient Ross McGinnis, an Army private who threw himself on a grenade in Iraq three years ago to save four buddies.
A sad-faced woman reached for Obama's hand and pointed him to a nearby plot.
The face of another woman - who had grimly sat in a folding chair for hours next to a headstone she'd arranged flowers around - suddenly broadened into a smile as she stood to embrace Obama and thank him for paying his respects.
She was so overcome with emotion that a soldier from the Army's Old Guard had to console her afterward.
The President patted backs of adozen other Gold Star relativesand troops visiting buddiesnow in the ground.
He gave hugs. He shook wet, chilly hands. He wanted to know something about each fallen warrior.
He began to slowly trudge back toward the motorcade - and to another White House huddle with his war council, which is advising him whether to send up to 40,000 additional troops into harm's way in Afghanistan.
And then Obama noticed a tall, bearded figure. He probably didn't see the mud-caked combat boots I trudged around Afghanistan in a few years ago.
"What's your name?" a somber President asked as he extended his hand.
"James Meek, sir," I replied, struggling to pull off my wool glove and pull my hood back from my head. "I'm here visiting a friend, Pfc. David H. Sharrett II, who was killed in Iraq last year."
He asked how I knew Dave. I explained that his father, also named David, was my high school English teacher in nearby McLean, Va. My classmates and I knew Dave as a little boy playing at our feet.
"He became a star football player and was one of the toughest soldiers in the 101st Airborne Division," I told Obama.
I didn't tell the commander in chief that Dave was killed by friendly fire. Or that the Army bungled notifying Dave's parents of a probe that concluded his lieutenant tragically mistook him for a terrorist in the dark and shot him. Or that his family had to fight for accountability - which two battlefield commanders promised but stateside generals derailed.
That wouldn't have been appropriate, Dave's deeply grateful father later agreed.
"Well, we appreciate his service very much," Obama told me.
I then told him I'm a reporter for the Daily News - but was just there to visit friends.
"Well, James," he said, looking me in the eye, "just because you're a journalist doesn't mean you can't honor your friends here."
The First Lady smiled and squeezed my hand. I thanked her for coming to Section 60.
Her face opened up into a smile filled with warmth and comfort, a welcome antidote for the weather and sadness around her. She said there was no finer place to be on Veterans Day.
Ironically, I was ready to leave the cemetery an hour earlier, but it went into lockdown because of Obama's visit.
"Sorry for any inconvenience," a terribly polite Secret Service agent whispered in my ear.
As the Obamas ended their pilgrimage through Arlington's hallowed ground, inconvenience was hardly what I felt standing there as the rain pelted my coat, staring at blades of grass around a headstone etched with a name and a date I will never forget.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2009/11/12/2009-11-12_my_solemn...
Karen Millen
"The President and First Lady Michelle Obama emerged from their armored limousine hatless in the frigid downpour and took a slow stroll into the soggy rows of white marble headstones" (cue the sad music)
"Her face opened up into a smile filled with warmth and comfort, a welcome antidote for the weather and sadness around her. She said there was no finer place to be on Veterans Day." (cue the birds singing overhead)
he might not have been there as a reporter but he certainly reached into the cheese bag to write this fluff.
1Of course it couldn't be his actual experience of the event.
2i would have much rather heard a first hand account rather than a piece that is trying to hard.....
3meh. that's what a lot of journalists do when they're not comfortable in the style of writing. this guy usually does hard news (i think), so doing a more personal piece is probably a stretch for him.
4I agree with everyone. I'm sure this was his experience, but I generally hate this cheesy style of writing. And snarky, you're right, I'm sure he's just not as well versed in writing about these types of experiences.
5"i would have much rather heard a first hand account rather than a piece that is trying to hard..."
It IS a first hand account. The reporter was there visiting a grave.
6Yeah, definitely a little cheesy, but a nice article nonetheless. I'm glad our President was out there yesterday honoring our fallen soldiers. It's rather touching.
7I don't envy that walk I wouldn't be able to keep it together I'd be crying and making everyone else cry.
8steph, i know he was there. "First Hand" to me means not fluffing it up. and if i have to roll my eyes at the descriptions and "mood" settings...than its fluff.
9"First hand account" already has a specific meaning.
10whatever steph you know what i mean, quit trying to argue.
11Sure, when you quit pretending that your responses to any Obama story have anything to do with the story.
12Why are reporters the only one's allowed to relay a good story? He's not talking to his chum at the bar he's trying to relay the experience to a public. The way he wrote it is appropriate IMO.
13oh here you go.
My reaction,,,was on the story Steph. Not on obama. so back off, you dont know everything and you CERTAIN-F-ing-LY dont dont me or whats behind any comment I make. Got it?
14"Got it?"
15How old are you?
again with the personal attacks.
keep going.
16How old are you, a 40-50 year old trolling websites called sugar??? calling others immature ?? who is the mature one now>?
17Just when i though things were getting better around here, we continue the bullsh*t antics!
It's too bad that there couldn't have been any "first hand accounts" of President Bush as he strolled through Arlington Cemetary. But of course, that focus would've been solely on how he killed those he was visiting.
18The article was surely fluffy, but I don't think Obama visitted for a photo op. I would hope he would visit more often than 1 day a year. That place is so eerie, it filled me with a lot of emotion. maybe it was because next to nobody was there when I visitted and the sun was setting and there was a fog rising from the ground because of the warm day and wet ground. I cried when visitting the tomb of the unknown soldier. I wish he wrote the article more on his experience of the situation rather than focussing on the Obamas.
19When did George W. Bush stroll through Arlington Cemetery?
20Good grief! Can we please keep things civil on here and try not to be so damn touchy?
21re: photo op, I wouldnt put it past Obama to do it though. late at night he asked several family members of fallen soldiers if they would allow his to take a photo next to their loved ones coffins as they came off the planes.. He got 1 approval. I think that is pretty tacky to want to take a picture of yourself paying respects to fallen soldiers. I kind of rethought the whole photo op think, because why is there a picture of him walking out with his hand extended, you have to admit it does appear to be a staged photo.
22It may be a photo op, but every politician and President does photo ops, it is just the way it works.
It was Veteran's day and he is the Commander in chief, he has to do something commemorative. I do not really see anything wrong with that.
Also, steph, yes Bush has been to Arlington...
23Been to Arlington yes, but Dave referred to strolling through Arlington - as President, Bush never went beyond the official ceremonies.
24How do you know??? Maybe he did it and not for publicity so there are no photos.... showing bias, maybe???
25It's called research - look it up yourself if you want to prove me wrong.
26OMG you are the one the said he'd nver done it, you prove your claim. I asked you how did you know, you come back with a snarky remark... Did you know that president bush attended numerous landings of planes carrying fallen soldiers? Can you find this in typical research? No... it just came out in first hand accounts... so much you dont know, don't care to know, just quickly spout off your bias opinion while calling others out for your assumption of them doing the same thing... girl you need to take a deep breath and stop trying to be so catty
27Keep it civil please.
28I don't know how many times Bush visited Arlington.
I do know he didn't hestitate to work the food line in Iraq and serve the troops. I do know the rooms erupted in applause whenever he walked in, far more so than they do for Obama.
So, Obama can have his trips to Arlington. I like the guy that does more for the people who are still alive and fighting.
29You raised the possibility of a secret visit, you give us reason to believe there was one.
30That's fine Haus, I was referring to Dave's comment
31"It's too bad that there couldn't have been any "first hand accounts" of President Bush as he strolled through Arlington Cemetary."
So it's the Democrats who keep dragging Bush back into the discussion, right?
32I don't care about the cheesy writing.
I don't care about which president did more for the troops than the other. Active or fallen.
What I DO care about is that our veterans were honored yesterday. Let's focus on that, instead of who's being snarky today.
33Well said, Sarah.
34I concur, Sarah!
35No its the democrats that salivate over articles like this as if O's you know what doesn't stink.
He's just a politician, like all other politicians. And they are all just people.
36Oh my God he went to Arlington! Oh my God he spoke to someone!
:swoon:
37All this is, is an Obama
fest...

38God I thought it was a sweet story. Does there have to be so much anger over this?
39It's not about anger... it's just about gaining some perspective and bringing it back down to Earth.
This was a nice thing he did, good for him. People do lots of nice things, even GWB, but at the end of the day it's the policies that effect the country that mean more.
40Nice story. I agree with those who say it is kind of sloppily written, but if he typically writes hard news, that would makes sense.
The amount of bitterness is not all that surprising although you would think people from both sides of the aisle would be happy to see him honoring veterans and taking the time to talk to people.
41"The face of another woman - who had grimly sat in a folding chair for hours next to a headstone she'd arranged flowers around - suddenly broadened into a smile as she stood to embrace Obama and thank him for paying his respects.
She was so overcome with emotion that a soldier from the Army's Old Guard had to console her afterward."
A lovely article. I found this part especially moving. It's a shame that someone's personal story has been turned into a reason to complain and bash.
42I don't blame people for suspecting that this is a photo op on the part of the President because even if it was the last thing on his mind when he did it the byproduct of him taking his stroll is a complete photo op, so the speculation is legitimate. You either think it was or it wasn't and that's that.
43see comment 19....
44Some of you are unbelievable. How about we let Veteran's Day be about honoring veterans instead of bashing our President. I never bashed GWB for showing respect for the fallen and I will never bash Obama either. Jeeze.
45
Yeah, I say we should listen to the one actual --veteran here--HF.
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