Posted on May 4, 2017
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Responses: 30
SSG Mark Tsunokai
Deployed to Kuwait in September 2001 to 2002, under Operation Southern Watch. SECFOR mission designated Operation Desert Spring for the USAF.
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From AR 600-8-22
2–14. Southwest Asia Service Medal
a. The SWASM was established by EO 12754, 12 March 1991, as amended by EO 12790, 3 March 1992. It is
awarded to all Servicemembers of the Armed Forces of the United States serving in SWA and contiguous waters or
airspace there over, on or after 2 August 1990 to 30 November 1995. SWA and contiguous waters, as used herein, is
defined as an area which includes the Persian Gulf, Red Sea, Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden, that portion of the Arabian
Sea that lies north of 10 degrees north latitude and west of 68 degrees east longitude, as well as the total land areas of
Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, and United Arab Emirates.
b. Servicemembers of the Armed Forces of the United States serving in Israel, Egypt, Turkey, Syria, and Jordan
(including the airspace and territorial waters) between 17 January 1991 and 30 November 1995, will also be eligible
for this award. Servicemembers serving in these countries must have been under the command and control of the U.S.
Central Command or directly supporting military operations in the combat theater.
c. To be eligible, a Servicemember must meet one or more of the following criteria:
(1) Be attached to or regularly serving for 1 or more days with an organization participating in ground or shore
(military) operations.
(2) Be attached to or regularly serving for 1 or more days aboard a U.S. naval vessel directly supporting military
operations.
(3) Be actually participating as a crewmember in one or more aerial flights directly supporting military operations in
the areas designated above.
(4) Be serving on TDY for 30 consecutive days or 60 nonconsecutive days. These time limitations may be waived
for people participating in actual combat operations.
d. The SWASM may be awarded posthumously to any person who lost his or her life while, or as a direct result of,
participating in Operation DESERT SHIELD or Operation DESERT STORM without regard to the length of such
service, if otherwise eligible.
e. One bronze service star will be worn on the suspension and service ribbon of the SWASM for participation in
each designated campaign (see para 6–8 for further information on the bronze service star). (The designated campaigns
for SWA are listed in app B.)
f. See AR 672–20 for the Civilian Service in SWASM.
2–14. Southwest Asia Service Medal
a. The SWASM was established by EO 12754, 12 March 1991, as amended by EO 12790, 3 March 1992. It is
awarded to all Servicemembers of the Armed Forces of the United States serving in SWA and contiguous waters or
airspace there over, on or after 2 August 1990 to 30 November 1995. SWA and contiguous waters, as used herein, is
defined as an area which includes the Persian Gulf, Red Sea, Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden, that portion of the Arabian
Sea that lies north of 10 degrees north latitude and west of 68 degrees east longitude, as well as the total land areas of
Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, and United Arab Emirates.
b. Servicemembers of the Armed Forces of the United States serving in Israel, Egypt, Turkey, Syria, and Jordan
(including the airspace and territorial waters) between 17 January 1991 and 30 November 1995, will also be eligible
for this award. Servicemembers serving in these countries must have been under the command and control of the U.S.
Central Command or directly supporting military operations in the combat theater.
c. To be eligible, a Servicemember must meet one or more of the following criteria:
(1) Be attached to or regularly serving for 1 or more days with an organization participating in ground or shore
(military) operations.
(2) Be attached to or regularly serving for 1 or more days aboard a U.S. naval vessel directly supporting military
operations.
(3) Be actually participating as a crewmember in one or more aerial flights directly supporting military operations in
the areas designated above.
(4) Be serving on TDY for 30 consecutive days or 60 nonconsecutive days. These time limitations may be waived
for people participating in actual combat operations.
d. The SWASM may be awarded posthumously to any person who lost his or her life while, or as a direct result of,
participating in Operation DESERT SHIELD or Operation DESERT STORM without regard to the length of such
service, if otherwise eligible.
e. One bronze service star will be worn on the suspension and service ribbon of the SWASM for participation in
each designated campaign (see para 6–8 for further information on the bronze service star). (The designated campaigns
for SWA are listed in app B.)
f. See AR 672–20 for the Civilian Service in SWASM.
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CPL Chris Palmberg
The dates for the SWASM include the period after the Iraqi withdrawal when the Northern & Southern NoFly zones were being established for due to genocidal attacks by the Ba'athist regime against Kurds and Shiites respectively.
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PV2 Chris Jackson
Yeah, I joined the Army in 1998, and all my paperwork from the VA says I'm a veteran of the gulf war area yet I was in junior high school during desert storm
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Maybe because Desert Storm ended in 1991? You should be eligible for the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal for supporting Operation Southern Watch.
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SN John Weigel
While on Westpac in 94 with the USS PELELIU LHA -5 Was awarded the Armed Forces Expeditionary medal as being in support of the stuff happening in Mogadishu in 94 sat of the coast of Somali for 3 months mar- June 94.
Requested the Humanitarian Service medal but the DOD, D of Navy denied it.
Classified as a DS veteran.
Requested the Humanitarian Service medal but the DOD, D of Navy denied it.
Classified as a DS veteran.
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MSG John Duchesneau
PO3 Patrick Bolger - The SWASM is only for service in the Middle East from 1990 to 1995.
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MSG John Duchesneau
SN John Weigel - Somalia was a combat rather than a humanitarian operation. That's why you didn't get the HSM.
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As a veteran, I requested my whole military recorders be sent to me. I then check out DA Form 2-1 Section VII. This section has all of my assignments and MOSs. This is where you should look at also. It will be located in your 201 file. Good luck with you search.
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Nothing, unless you were there in 2003 for invasion. Maybe tax free status
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look first of all you need to keep a copy of your own records for this reason. Took me 2 days to get the information right on my DD-214. as soon as I saw they didn't have my jump school on their I was like"hold the fuck on! WTF!" I read that thing line for line and they where missing awards, deployments, units I was in, training certificates, ext. apparently they didn't have I went to basic and was missing 5-6 years of my service. I was lucky I kept the staff duty call sheets for all my old units. I started making calls and didn't leave till all that stuff was fixed. Still couldn't find what happened to the info for 2 of my awards. I had the paperwork but my previous units lost their paper work and it couldn't be verified. but I said it was good enough
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CPL Cord Nipper
I had some great drills who told us from day 1 to make copies of everything with your name on it.
I did and it came in handy multiple times.
I did and it came in handy multiple times.
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Thanks for all the answers. I knew DS was over well before I arrived. It was just strange that my orders said I was deployed in support of Desert Storm. One thing I forgot over the years being out of the military... Stop trying to make sense of why and how they do things.
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Maj (Join to see)
When your orders said “in support of Desert Storm,” it was probably just a catch-all. BUT—you have orders which say “Desert Storm”! That should be all the evidence that you need. You won’t be able to get any medals or ribbons, except maybe some random U.N. medal which only the Air Force recognizes. But if all you’re trying to do is get it on your DD-214, that you’re a Desert Storm veteran, then those orders SHOULD be all you need. If your service has an admin section to call, try going through them, otherwise there’s always the Board for Correction of Air Force Records.
Now, the window for the Southwest Asia ribbon ended in 1995, so that maybe the end of what they considered eligible Desert Storm time—but it’s relevant that you weren’t mobilized under Provide Comfort, Southern Watch, or any others.
Also, depending on the precise series of your orders, your individual service may have been outside a window. For example, I was activated domestically for Enduring Freedom, but while other specific order series were specifically named as authorized for a deployment ribbon, mine was omitted.
So I’d say, hold those orders high, and see what they can do to change your DD-214. It could affect your VA status someday, and the worst outcome is that they simply say ‘no.’
Now, the window for the Southwest Asia ribbon ended in 1995, so that maybe the end of what they considered eligible Desert Storm time—but it’s relevant that you weren’t mobilized under Provide Comfort, Southern Watch, or any others.
Also, depending on the precise series of your orders, your individual service may have been outside a window. For example, I was activated domestically for Enduring Freedom, but while other specific order series were specifically named as authorized for a deployment ribbon, mine was omitted.
So I’d say, hold those orders high, and see what they can do to change your DD-214. It could affect your VA status someday, and the worst outcome is that they simply say ‘no.’
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Well Desert Storm was 9 years earlier, so why would you have a ribbon for it?
Was it a 2 week deployment? Was it an Air Force fly there and back deployment?
What are the specifics of this?
I was there while in the Marine Corps, before Desert Shield and left after Desert Storm. I was there more than 9 months.
I received CAR, SWAM, KLMS, KLMK, Over Seas Deployment Ribbon, and a few more.
Was it a 2 week deployment? Was it an Air Force fly there and back deployment?
What are the specifics of this?
I was there while in the Marine Corps, before Desert Shield and left after Desert Storm. I was there more than 9 months.
I received CAR, SWAM, KLMS, KLMK, Over Seas Deployment Ribbon, and a few more.
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Does it list the southwest Asia service ribbon? That was the ribbon I received for being there.
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