Kent was born Shannon Mary Smith on May 11, 1983, in Oswego, New York.[2] Her father, Col. Stephen Smith, was the third-ranked police officer in the New York State Police.[3][4] Her mother was an elementary school teacher.[4][5] She grew up in Pine Plains, New York, attending Stissing Mountain J/S High School, where she was an honors student and an athlete, graduating in 2001.[3]
Career
Kent enlisted in the Navy on December 11, 2003, and graduated from boot camp at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Illinois, in February 2004.[6] She was assigned to Navy Information Operations Command, Fort Gordon, Georgia; Navy Special Warfare Support Activity 2, NAVSPECWAR, Norfolk, Virginia; Personnel Resource Development Office, Washington, D.C.; Navy Information Operations Command Maryland, Fort Meade; and Cryptologic Warfare Group 6, Fort Meade.[6] She was the noncommissioned officer in charge at the National Security Agency’s operations directorate for four years.[1] Kent reported to Cryptologic Warfare Activity 66 (CWA-66) at Fort Meade after the command was established on August 10, 2008.[6] Kent was considered a ‘rock star’ among the linguists.[6][7] She was fluent in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and Arabic, and rose quickly through the ranks as a cryptologist at Fort Meade.[1][8]
In 2007, Kent volunteered for an Individual Augment and was deployed to Iraq on an intelligence team supporting Navy SEALs.[9] In 2008, she underwent training for a permanent position on a SEAL support team, and she was deployed to Afghanistan to support a SEAL team in 2012.[9]
In February 2018, Kent received clearance to attend the Navy's doctorate psychology program at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, but the Navy reversed the move because her previous cancer diagnosis made her medically unfit to be commissioned as an officer.[10][1][9] She applied for a waiver and sought congressional help, but the Navy maintained its decision.[9] Kent was deployed to Syria in November 2018.[10]
Kent was the first female combat death in Syria since combat operations began against ISIS in Syria, and the first female U.S. service member killed by enemy fire in more than three years.[1][7] The 2019 Manbij bombing killed a total of 19 people, including Kent, a Special Forces soldier, two U.S. civilian contractors, allied coalition fighters of the Syrian Democratic Forces, and a number of civilians.[10][7][11][14] The three other Americans casualties were: Scott A. Wirtz, a former SEAL; Army Special ForcesChief Warrant Officer Jonathan R. Farmer; and Ghadir Taher, a translator with Valiant Integrated Service, a U.S. Department of Defense contractor.[7] Three other Americans were also wounded in the attack.[7] The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant claimed responsibility.[13]
Personal life
Kent was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in 2006 and was successfully treated surgically.[10]
Kent was posthumously promoted to senior chief petty officer and awarded the Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, and a Combat Action Ribbon.[6] The Navy also credited her for work done for the NSA's Operations Directorate in Special Operations.[1] Her work was used at the highest levels of SIGINT in deciphering the intelligence gleaned through message intercepts and foreign communications.[1]
After Kent's death, New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo ordered state flags flown at half-staff and Dutchess County state legislature Chair Gregg Pulver issued a statement praising her as a “Brilliant mind and a small-town hero.”[3] On February 14, 2019, Congressman Antonio Delgado introduced a resolution in the United States House of Representatives honoring the life of Senior Chief Petty Officer Shannon M. Kent.[19]