Nathan B. "Nate" Bruckenthal (July 17, 1979 – April 24, 2004) was a United States coast guardsman who was killed in the Iraq War, becoming the first to die in wartime action since the Vietnam War. Bruckenthal and two U.S. Navy sailors were killed while intercepting a waterborne suicide attack on an offshore oil terminal off the coast of Iraq in the northern Persian Gulf in 2004.
Bruckenthal joined the U.S. Coast Guard on January 5, 1999. He served on USCGC Point Wells, based out of Montauk, New York, prior to attending Damage Controlman "A" School.[4] After his schooling, he was assigned to Station Neah Bay in the northwest corner of Washington on the Makah Indian Reservation.[2]
His next assignment was to Tactical Law Enforcement (TACLET) Team South, at Coast Guard Air StationMiami. Bruckenthal's first tour to the Persian Gulf region was from April to June 2003. He departed home for his second deployment in February 2004 and was due to return that June. During both tours his detachment, LEDET 403, was assigned to the USS Firebolt.[3][4]
On April 24, 2004, Bruckenthal and two U.S. Navy sailors were killed while intercepting a waterborne suicide attack on the Khawr Al Amaya Oil Terminal off the coast of Iraq in the northern Persian Gulf.[3]
An account of the attack was included the May 2004 issue of U.S. Coast Guard Reservist magazine:[5]
In the early evening hours of April 24, a dhow (a lateen-rigged Arabian vessel) approached an oil terminal in the Persian Gulf. Bruckenthal, trained as both a boarding team member and boarding officer, was accompanied by one other Coast Guardsman and five sailors from the United States Navy. The group boarded a rigid hull inflatable boat (RHIB), taking off in pursuit. As the crew was poised to board the dhow, an explosion was detonated. Two Navy petty officers also died as a result of the waterborne attack: PO1 Michael J. Pernaselli, 27, of Monroe, N.Y., and PO2 Christopher E. Watts, 28, of Knoxville, Tenn. Injured were three Navy sailors and BM3 Joseph T. Ruggiero, USCG, 23, from Revere, Mass., who received the Purple Heart.
In 2001, Bruckenthal met his future wife, Pattie, while serving at U.S. Coast Guard Station Neah Bay. Pattie was a university student studying the Makah Indian tribe when Bruckenthal gave the students a tour of the station. Bruckenthal is survived by his wife, Pattie, and his daughter, Harper Natalie Bruckenthal, who was born after his death.
Legacy
He is the first U.S. Coast Guardsman to be killed in action in military conflict since the Vietnam War. Bruckenthal's death is noted in an article listing Jewish U.S. service members killed in Iraq.[8]
^Lagan, Christopher, "Coast Guard to name cutter for DC3 Nathan Bruckenthal", Coast Guard Compass: Official Blog of the U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Coast Guard
Silverstein, Judy L. "A Coast Guard Hero is Laid to Rest..."(PDF). U.S. Coast Guard Reservist Magazine. Vol. 51, Issue 5: U.S. Coast Guard. pp. 14โ16. Retrieved 26 April 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
"Nathan Bruckenthal". Our Military Heroes. U.S. Department of Defense. Archived from the original on 26 April 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2014.