(Photo courtesy of AP of Jonathan Leicht, left, and Jesse Leicht, right, pose with a photo of their brother, Marine Cpl. Jacob Leicht) Not that an
May 30, 2010

leicht_637bd_0_0.jpg (Photo courtesy of AP of Jonathan Leicht, left, and Jesse Leicht, right, pose with a photo of their brother, Marine Cpl. Jacob Leicht)

Not that any death is acceptable, but there's a sad irony to this news coming on Memorial Day Weekend:

The 1000th American serviceman killed in Afghanistan had already fallen once to a hidden explosive.

Marine Cpl. Jacob C. Leicht was driving his Humvee over a bomb in Iraq that punched the dashboard radio into his face and broke his leg in two places. He spent two painful years recovering from that 2007 blast. The 24-year-old had written letters from his hospital bed begging to be put back on the front lines, and died less than a month into a desperately sought second tour.

The Texas Marine's death marks a grim milestone in the Afghanistan war. He was killed this week when he stepped on a land mine in Helmand province that ripped off his right arm.

An Associated Press tally shows Leicht is the 1,000th U.S. serviceman killed in the Afghan combat, nearly nine years after the first casualty was also a soldier from the San Antonio area.

"He said he always wanted to die for his country and be remembered," said Jesse Leicht, his younger brother. "He didn't want to die having a heart attack or just being an old man. He wanted to die for something."

I wish I knew what that something was. Perhaps it might give some comfort to his family, but after nine years, I don't know what it is. I just hope that we don't have another 1,000 deaths to note before we finally re-think our involvement in Afghanistan.

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