A son’s voice, full of hope, carried across the world just days before everything shattered.
A proud father listened, unaware it would be the last time his boy shared good news.
Then came the drone, the fire, the names read on national television. One of them was only twe… Continues…
In the span of a single week, Sgt. Declan Coady went from sharing the thrill of a long‑awaited promotion with his father to being mourned as one of six U.S. soldiers killed in a brutal drone strike tied to Operation Epic Fury.
At just 20, he had already earned multiple service ribbons,
deployed to Kuwait, and was studying cybersecurity and computer science online, determined to someday become a commissioned officer.
His commanders saw talent; his family saw a bright, kind young man who happened to wear a uniform.
Now, his promotion has been granted posthumously, a title he earned but never got to wear in life.
Loved ones cling to memories of late‑night conversations about the future, of plans for when he came home.
As leaders promise vengeance and the war grinds on, those closest to
Declan and his fellow fallen are left with a quieter battle: learning to live in a world they never imagined facing without them.