Army Expands Military Funeral Honors for Soldiers

By Sara Moore
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Dec. 17, 2008 - Starting early next year, the Army will allow full military funeral honors at
Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia for all soldiers killed in action.

Full military honors include a caisson, band, colors team and an escort platoon in addition to the
standard honors of a firing party, bugler and chaplain. In the past, the caisson was available only for
officers killed in action because of limited availability, Paul Boyce, an Army spokesman, said.

The cemetery has two caissons, or horse-drawn vehicles, which now will be available for officers and
enlisted soldiers killed in action on a first-come, first-served basis, Boyce said. The limited availability
may delay the funerals, he said, so families of deceased soldiers may decide to go forward with the
funeral earlier without a caisson.

In response to requests from families of deceased servicemembers, soldiers and veterans, Army
officials have been looking at changing the policy for military honors at Arlington since April, Boyce said.
Having the change in place now means the policy will take effect early next year.

"This brings a much more common standard to anyone who is killed in action or the family of anyone
killed in action who want to use Arlington National Cemetery," he said.

The policy change affects only funerals at Arlington, Boyce said, because Arlington is the only military
cemetery controlled by the Department of the Army and has unique assets. It also only applies to soldiers
killed as a result of:

-- Any action against an enemy of the United States;

-- Any action with an opposing armed force of a foreign country in which U.S. armed forces are or have
been engaged;

-- Serving with friendly foreign forces engaged in an armed conflict against an opposing armed force in
which the United States is not a belligerent party;

-- An act of any such enemy of opposing armed forces;

-- An act of any hostile foreign force;

-- An international terrorist attack against the United States or a foreign nation friendly to the United
States, recognized as such an attack by the secretary of the Army;

-- An act of any hostile foreign force during military operations while serving outside the territory of the
United States as part of a peacekeeping force; or

-- Action by friendly fire, defined as weapon fire while directly engaged in armed conflict, other than as
the result of an act of an enemy of the United States, unless the soldier's death was the result of the
soldier's willful misconduct.

"Arlington National Cemetery is an expression of our nation's reverence for those who served her in
uniform, many making the ultimate sacrifice," Army Secretary Pete Geren said in an Army news release.
"Arlington and those honored there are part of our national heritage. This new policy provides a common
standard for honoring all soldiers killed in action."

More than 300,000 people, including veterans from all the nation's wars, are buried at Arlington National
Cemetery. The cemetery conducts about 6,400 burials each year.

The new policy applies only to soldiers, though officials are awaiting word from the other services on
whether they wish to adopt a similar policy.