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The mother-of-two special operator killed hunting ISIS: Navy cryptologist Shannon Kent's husband...
2024-05-08
[Daily Mail, where America gets its news] …tells the story of a warrior in a top secret unit taken away from her sons by a suicide bomber in Syria.

Shannon Kent's story is detailed in Send Me: The True Story of a Mother at War.

Joe Kent was on a classified mission overseas when a friend pulled him aside to say four Americans had been killed in a suicide bombing in Syria.

Two of them were women, and Kent knew deep down that one of them was his wife Shannon.

The Navy cryptologist had been hunting ISIS cells and their leaders in Manbij - when a man walked into a popular kebab restaurant frequented by U.S. personnel and detonated his suicide vest.

The mother of two young boys was 35 years old, and killed while working alongside the nation's most secretive intelligence office, the National Security Agency, to track down terrorists.

Even her husband didn't know the full details of the work she was doing or exactly where she was.

Over five overseas combat tours she became an expert in gleaning information from almost anyone.

She was responsible for finding militants to give their locations to Delta Force, SEAL Team 6 or pilots so they could be taken out with precision strikes.

Chief Kent wasn’t going for a leisurely lunch when the fireball ripped through the dining room in January 2019.

'I love you,' Joe texted her when she informed in she was going out on a mission in what would be their final exchange.

She was doing what she had done for most of her storied 15-year career: Gathering intelligence in the world’s most dangerous places.

The Islamic State claimed credit for the attack and she became the first female service member to be killed in Syria since American troops arrived in 2015.

Kent suddenly became a Gold Star husband, had the impossible task of returning home to his two sons.

At just one and three years old, they were too young to fully grasp what had happened. They had barely gotten to know their warrior mother.

Like other grieving families, he didn’t have a stranger knock on his door to deliver the unbearable news.

He then contacted Shannon’s parents to make sure they got the worst phone call imaginable from someone they knew.

Then he had to get out of the middle of nowhere and return home to face his new normal.

His wife’s heroic story and how Kent dealt with her death in is in her biography Send Me: The True Story of a Mother at War, co-written by journalist and filmmaker Marty Skovlund Jr.

Her legacy and reputation was made abundantly clear by the thousands who showed up to her memorial at the Naval Academy’s chapel in Annapolis, Maryland.

She was posthumously promoted to senior chief petty officer.

The five medals and citations she received described her Special Operations work supporting the NSA while assigned to Cryptologic Warfare Activity SIXTY SIX.

Her name was added to the Cryptologic Memorial Wall alongside the inscribed words ‘They Served in Silence’.

Chief Kent was fluent in seven languages and was the first woman to complete the Naval Special Warfare Direct Support Course.

She also ran marathons, could march for miles with a 50-pound rucksack and do a dozen pull-ups.

Shannon even had a bout with thyroid cancer.

She didn’t tell Joe, who was overseas at the time, until after the surgery and was back at work a few days later.

She learned four Arabic dialects so she could be at the heart of the post-9/11 wars.

Her skills took her into meetings with sources who knew the whereabouts of some of the world’s most wanted terrorists, including ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

Some of the men she came face-to-face with even balked at the fact she was a woman.

But she was still able to extract exactly what was needed.

Her work was so classified that she was given the title of ‘cryptologist’, and the full details of what she was doing may not be known for years.

Cryptologic warfare 'encompasses signals intelligence (SIGINT), cyberspace operations, and electronic warfare (EW) operations in order to deliver effects through sea, air, land, space, and cyber domains at all levels of war,' according to the Navy.

But her work was much more than translating documents or decrypting messages

Growing up in the small town of Pine Planes, in New York, she rode horses at an early age.

Her knack for languages came when she learned Spanish so she could speak to Argentinian stable hands at a polo field.

She enlisted for the Navy in 2003 inspired by her state troop father and Staten Island firefighter uncle, both of whom were responders when the planes struck the twin towers on September 11, 2001.

In 2004 she graduated from boot camp at Recruit Training Command in Great Lakes, Illinois, in February 2004 and joined the Navy's linguist program.
Posted by:Skidmark

#5  Did a conference at NPS an the Presidio, nice neighborhood!
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2024-05-08 14:09  

#4  /\ DLI be hard.
Posted by: Besoeker   2024-05-08 10:48  

#3  I've heard the Defense Language Institute courses were quite good. I wonder if they offer Ebonics or Jive.
Posted by: SteveS   2024-05-08 10:41  

#2  /\ Last three of the above.
Posted by: Besoeker   2024-05-08 10:17  

#1  In August 2022, DoD released DoDI 1340.27, Military Foreign Language Skill Proficiency Bonuses, announcing major policy changes to DoD FLPB practices. Pursuant to DoDI 1340.27, substantial changes have been made to Navy FLPB policy. ... As of March 1, 2023, all languages are FLPB restricted. What this means is that in order to receive FLPB for any language, you must meet one of the following criteria:
Be a CTI, FAO, or NSW (SEAL/SWCC); or
Be a graduate of the Defense Language Institutes’ basic language acquisition course for the language in question; or
Be assigned to a billet specifically coded for the language in question; or
Use the language in question during a contingency operation.
Posted by: Huputle+Cherelet4131   2024-05-08 09:55  

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