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Representative, former pro football player speak at luncheon 
By Sgt. Benjamin Crane, 100th Missile Defense Brigade (Ground-based Midcourse Defense) Public Affairs  
MDB Lunch 
Command Sergeant Major for the 100th Missile Defense Brigade (Ground-based Midcourse Defense), Command Sgt. Maj. Russ Hamilton, catches a pass from former NFL player and Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance founder Rikki Ellison during the Missile Defense business luncheon Feb. 2, 2011, in the Falcon Club at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. The luncheon honored the 100th MDB’s Echo crewmen for their hard work and dedication. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Benjamin Crane, Colorado National Guard/RELEASED)

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (2/2/11) – Congressman Doug Lamborn was the guest speaker at a luncheon designed to honor missile defenders at the Air Force Academy here Feb. 2. 

More than 200 Soldiers and civilians attended. The Soldiers present represented the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command and the Colorado Army National Guard, while the civilians represented the National Defense Industrial Association and Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance.

Former NFL player and Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance founder, Rikki Ellison, was the master of ceremonies at the luncheon that honored the Soldiers of the 100th Missile Defense Brigade’s Echo crew for their hard work and dedication to the Missile Defense mission.

Lamborn, who represents Colorado’s 5th Congressional District, which includes Colorado Springs, spoke about the importance of dedication to defending the home skies.

“All of us here share a desire for a strong national defense,” said Lamborn. “Whether it be through our jobs, military service, public or voluntary service, we have a shared dedication to protecting our homeland.”

The commander of the 100th MDB(GMD), Col. Gregory Bowen, spoke about how proud he was to be leading this unit and how important missile defense was to him.

“I’ve got the best job in the United States Army,” said Bowen. “I am working in a program that I believe in passionately. I am commanding a one-of-a-kind unit in the U.S. Army, and that unit is manned with the finest Soldiers that I have ever served with in my entire 28 years in the uniform.”

“In the late 1960s early 1970s, during the height of the Cold War, I remember as a little boy doing duck and cover drills,” said Bowen. “I remember at the time not fully understanding the implications of what they were having us do but it scared the hell out of me. And now as a father I don’t want my little girl to go to bed at night and have to worry about bad things coming out of the sky like I did.”

Ellison passed out autographed footballs to several key people leading the missile defense agency into the future, including Bowen and the Command Sergeant Major for the Missile Defense Brigade, Command Sgt. Maj. Russ Hamilton. 

Following the ceremony, Ellison passed out coins and posed along with Lamborn for photos with the Soldiers from the 100th.

About the 100th Missile Defense Brigade (Ground-based Midcourse Defense)

U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command and the Colorado Army National Guard activated the nation’s first ground-based Midcourse Defense Brigade Oct. 16, 2003.

The brigade operates the first part of the integrated Ballistic Missile Defense System, which, in concert with sister services, is designed to protect the nation from accidental or intentional limited ballistic missile attacks. It’s manned both by Colorado Army National Guard and active-component Soldiers.

The brigade provides expertise to U.S. Northern Command’s command and control operations from the Cheyenne Mountain Operations Center.

Echo crew is one of five crews comprised of five controllers monitoring the skies over the U.S. 24-hours a day, seven days a week.

2/2/2011