Frantz, Ken, Col

Engineer, Construction And Equipment
 
 TWS Ribbon Bar
Life Member
 
 Service Photo 
 Service Details
127 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Reflection Shadow Box View Time Line View Family Time Line
Current Service Status
USMC Retired
Current/Last Rank
Colonel
Current/Last Primary MOS
1302-Combat Engineer Officer
Current/Last MOSGroup
Engineer, Construction And Equipment
Previously Held MOS
521-Basic Marine, Enlisted
9901-Basic Officer
5702-Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Officer
1330-Facilities Management Officer
9904-Colonel, Logistician
Primary Unit
1997-1999, 9904, G-4, III MEF
Service Years
1967 - 1999
Other Languages
Spanish
Official/Unofficial USMC Certificates
Cold War Certificate
Plank Owner Certificate
Officer Collar Insignia
Colonel

 Official Badges 

USMC Retired Pin USMC Retired Pin (30 Years) US Marines Corps Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Cold War Veterans AssociationMarine Corps Mustang AssociationMarine Corps Veterans AssociationMarine Corps Engineer Association (MCEA)
Officers' Christian FellowshipMarine Corps Heritage FoundationMarine Corps Together We ServedMarine Corps Association and Foundation (MCA&F)
Society of American Military Engineers (SAME)American Military Retirees Association (AMRA)Texas Area Marines
  1968, Cold War Veterans Association
  1993, Marine Corps Mustang Association
  1999, Marine Corps Veterans Association
  1999, Marine Corps Engineer Association (MCEA)
  2004, Officers' Christian Fellowship
  2006, Marine Corps Heritage Foundation
  2006, Marine Corps Together We Served
  2007, Marine Corps Association and Foundation (MCA&F)
  2008, Society of American Military Engineers (SAME)
  2012, American Military Retirees Association (AMRA)
  2014, Texas Area Marines


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

Enjoying retirement on our family homestead in Washington State; In 2016, had to step down as Executive Director/Secretary/webmaster for the Marine Corps Engineer Association due to family healthy issues. After Diana passed away in March 2019, I moved to Spring Texas. Went back to volunteering with MCEA as Permanent Associate Director. In November 2019, elected to the Board of Directors and as Executive Director for Future Operations Base; a Houston non-profit assisting active duty military, veterans, first responders and eligible family members. In February 2020, became a foster dad to Honor, a yellow Lab, in support of The Rescue for PTSD and served as their Vice President and Prez. In October 2020, joined a start-up non-profit, WARRIORS EMPOWERED, as Executive Director and Board Member. In 2020, perchased acreage in WA and began developing it for the family. Moved to here in 2022 and now 10 of us family, 4 generations living on the property.
 

   
Other Comments:

After retiring in '99, operated our 200 Acre cattle ranch in Fla. before retiring again, then moved to N.Y. for seven years before settling in Conroe, Texas in Dec 2011.

   

 Remembrance Profiles - 52 Marines Remembered
  • Burgess, Albert, Cpl
  • Burkhart, Ron, SgtMaj
More...

 Tributes from Members  
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE posted by 04 Fuller, Ronald (Ron), MGySgt 2555
Thank you for your service posted by 03 Willis, Earl (EM), Sgt 20


Operation Continue Hope (Somalia)
From Month/Year
May / 1993
To Month/Year
March / 1994

Description

On 4 May 1993 the UN Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM II) assumed responsibility for operations, but the transition was badly managed. Basic U.N. deficiencies in planning, C3I, and political acumen were compounded by an expanded and intrusive mandate; greatly diminished military capabilities; more aggressive Somali opposition; uncertain support from the United States; differences within the coalition; and uncertainty by the Security Council, the Secretariat, and others.

Operation Continue Hope provided support of UNOSOM II to establish a secure environment for humanitarian relief operations by providing personnel, logistical, communications, intelligence support, a quick reaction force, and other elements as required. Over 60 Army aircraft and approximately 1,000 aviation personnel operated in Somalia from 1992 to 1994.

UNOSOM II became a badly flawed peace, with military forces which came to be seen by parties to the local conflict as co-belligerents rather than impartial peacekeepers. In Somalia, peace enforcement was only an implicit element of the original U.N. mandate, which focused on peace-building (disarmament, political reconciliation, and economic rehabilitation). However, after a confrontation between the Somali National Alliance (SNA) and the U.N. led to the killing of twenty-five Pakistani peacekeepers, the Security Council made the operation's peace-enforcement mission explicit. It was executed by both U.N. forces and a 1,000-man U.S. rapid-reaction force under U.S. operational control, with the authority of the United Nations. There was also a 3,000-man U.S. logistics unit under U.N. operational control. A lack of decisiveness, cohesion, and command and control by the undermanned U.N. mission (half the strength of UNITAF, with some 20,000 personnel) and a series of armed clashes between U.S./U.N. forces and the SNA created a virtual state of war and undermined the effectiveness of the U.N. operation. Confusion over the dual-command relationship between the U.S. and UNOSOM II was another complicating factor, with a U.S. general officer serving as both the U.N. deputy forces commander and commander of U.S. forces.

A clash on 3-4 October 1993 left eighteen U.S. personnel dead and seventy-eight wounded, along with over one thousand Somali casualties. Public outcry in the United States contributed to the decision to withdraw U.S. forces in March 1994. That, coupled with continued internal strife and SNA hostility toward the U.N., led to a total U.N. withdrawal in March 1995. This was executed skillfully, without casualties, in a carefully planned combined U.S.-U.N. action.

The killing of Army Rangers in Somalia provoked a resurgence of a debate that began before the Gulf War: when is it appropriate to use military force -- and, more to the point, can you justify using the military in regions in which Americans either do not see their interests at stake or are willing to help only so long as the costs remain very low? Somalia drove home the reality that the Gulf War experience could not serve as a model for other situations where the diplomatic lineup was more confused, the stakes less clear, and the difference between good guys and bad guys less simple to discern. It was also an early indication of the coming debate on the international community's role in internal strife.

   
My Participation in This Battle or Operation
From Month/Year
January / 1994
To Month/Year
March / 1994
 
Last Updated:
Mar 16, 2020
   
Personal Memories
   
Units Participated in Operation

MAG-29

 
My Photos From This Battle or Operation
No Available Photos

  551 Also There at This Battle:
  • Acevedo, Adrian, LCpl, (1992-1996)
  • Alexander, John, MGySgt, (1980-2005)
  • Amiel, Jeff, Cpl, (1990-1994)
  • Anderson, David, Sgt, (1984-1995)
  • Arnold, Randall, MSgt, (1969-2005)
  • Arnold, Todd, LCpl, (1991-1995)
  • Baker, Robert, Sgt, (1991-1997)
  • Ball, Bernie, SSgt, (1978-1998)
  • Bandani, Ahmad, LtCol, (1989-2010)
  • Bare, Chris, CWO3, (1992-2012)
  • Barth, Fritz, Col, (1981-2010)
  • Batman, James, MGySgt, (1988-Present)
  • Becker, Eric, Cpl, (1990-1996)
  • Becraft, Aaron, Sgt, (1992-1999)
  • Bell, Lenn, Cpl, (1989-1993)
  • Benoit, Paul, LCpl, (1990-1994)
  • Benter, Christopher, Sgt, (1992-2005)
  • Besson, Greg, Cpl, (1990-1994)
  • Bialous, Vic, Cpl, (1992-1996)
  • Biggert, Todd, Cpl, (1991-1994)
  • Billa, David, MSgt, (1991-Present)
  • Block iii, William, Sgt, (1992-2004)
  • Bock, Brian, Sgt, (1992-1997)
  • Bohannon-Yule, Spencer, SSgt, (1987-2007)
  • Boileau, Matt, Cpl, (1992-1996)
  • Boling, Joseph, Sgt, (1990-1996)
  • Bondanza, James, Cpl, (1990-1994)
  • Border, Chris, Cpl, (1989-1994)
  • Boudreau, Shawn, Sgt, (1990-1998)
  • Bowles, Todd, PFC, (1992-2000)
  • Bowman, Brent, Cpl, (1990-1994)
  • Boxold, John, Sgt, (1988-1995)
  • Bradley, Brent, Cpl, (1992-1996)
  • Brink, Michael, GySgt, (1990-2010)
  • Brown, Arthur, Cpl, (1991-1996)
  • Brown, Brian, Sgt, (1991-1995)
  • BROWN, GEROGE, Sgt, (1990-1995)
  • Brown, Jay, GySgt, (1985-2005)
  • Buck, Christopher, Maj, (1990-Present)
  • Buckley, Sean, Cpl, (1991-1995)
  • Burgandine, Shannon, LCpl, (1992-1996)
  • Burgess, Keith, Maj, (1991-2009)
  • Burrell, Christopher, MSgt, (1992-2015)
  • Bush, Kenneth, SgtMaj, (1978-2008)
  • Cabrera, Eddie, Cpl, (1990-1994)
  • Caesar, Arthur, SSgt, (1989-1996)
  • Caldwell, Jeffery, GySgt, (1989-2007)
  • Carpenter, Matt, CWO4, (1989-Present)
  • Carr, Michael, CWO4, (1988-2015)
  • Carr, Michael, MSgt, (1988-2007)
  • Cartwright, Harold, MGySgt, (1986-2016)
  • Castonguay, Richard, GySgt, (1992-Present)
  • Castro, Jose, Cpl, (1990-1994)
  • Chapman, Brandon, Cpl, (1991-1995)
  • Chapman, Carl, SgtMaj, (1983-2007)
  • Chopp, Nick, Cpl, (1992-1996)
  • Christiansen, David, Sgt, (1990-2003)
  • Clarey, Robert, Cpl, (1991-1995)
  • Clark, Jeff, GySgt, (1987-2007)
  • Cleveland, Brett, MSgt, (1990-2010)
  • Cline, Mitch, MSgt, (1983-2005)
  • Coffey, Ralph, SSgt, (1992-Present)
  • Coker, William, SSgt, (1992-2000)
  • Collins, Brandon, Cpl, (1991-1995)
  • Compton, Joseph, Sgt, (1991-1997)
  • Constable, Carl, Sgt, (1988-1994)
  • Cook, Austin, Cpl, (1993-1997)
  • Cook, Kenneth, LCpl, (1991-1995)
  • Cotter, Brian, MSgt, (1981-2002)
  • Coulter, Dave, CWO4, (1984-2012)
  • Cowan, Wayne, MGySgt, (1977-2006)
  • Creamer, Dennis, GySgt, (1991-Present)
  • Cress, Bob, GySgt, (1983-2006)
  • Crockett, Scott, MSgt, (1991-Present)
  • Crowe, Brian, Cpl, (1992-1996)
  • Culbert, Dan, LtCol, (1978-2003)
  • Dahlbach, Todd, Cpl, (1993-1997)
  • De Monte, Louis, LCpl, (1992-1996)
  • Deam, Alan, MSgt, (1988-2010)
  • DelValle, Rene, Sgt, (1989-1998)
  • Descheneaux, Raymond, LtCol, (1985-2007)
Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011