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Slain U.S. general buried with honors

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Retired Col. Susan Myers, right, stands with her daughter Amelia Greene and salutes as the casket of her husband, Army Maj. Gen. Harold Greene, is carried by an honor guard during a burial service at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Thursday.

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Members of the U.S. Army’s Old Guard carry the casket of Army Maj. Gen. Harold Greene during a burial service at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Thursday.

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Army 1st Lt. Matthew Greene, kneels by the casket of his father, Army Maj. Gen. Harold Greene, during a burial service at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Thursday.

ARLINGTON, Va. – The highest-ranking U.S. military officer killed in combat since the Vietnam War was buried with full honors Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery in a ceremony attended by his family and platoons of fellow warriors.

Maj. Gen. Harold J. Greene was killed Aug. 5 when a gunman believed to be an Afghan soldier opened fire at a military academy near Kabul.

During the ceremony, Greene’s adult son tightly clasped the hands of his mother and sister as soldiers folded the flag that draped his father’s casket. While the U.S. Army Band played “America the Beautiful,” Army First Lt. Matthew Greene handed a tissue to his mother, who dabbed at her eyes.

The 55-year-old two-star general went to Afghanistan in January. It was his first deployment to a war zone.

His burial included several ceremonial touches in deference to his rank. A riderless horse accompanied the caisson that carried Greene’s casket to his gravesite. The hundreds of people who gathered on a mild, breezy afternoon at Arlington were startled by a 13-cannon salute and again, later, by three rifle volleys.

U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno presented the flag that had covered Greene’s casket to his widow, Susan Myers, a retired Army colonel. He then handed three more flags that had touched the casket to Greene’s son; his daughter, Amelia; and his father, also named Harold.

Following the ceremony, Myers placed a rose on Greene’s casket and patted it as her son touched her back. Matthew, wearing his dress uniform, knelt by the casket, and then Amelia bent over and kissed it, supported by her brother.

The burial was preceded by a chapel service that was closed to reporters. Lt. Col. Juanita Chang, an Army public affairs officer, said the 650-seat chapel at Arlington was filled beyond capacity. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel attended and met with the family. Dozens of general officers also attended, and some could not find seats, Chang said.

Matthew Greene had the crowd laughing as he told stories about his father, Chang said, and Amelia Greene spoke about her father’s love of New England sports. She was inspired by his optimism about the Boston Red Sox, who went the first 45 years of his life without winning the World Series. The Red Sox since won three titles, and the family will attend a game at Fenway Park Saturday and be honored after the 5th inning, Chang said.

Greene, known as Harry, spent most of his 34-year Army career developing, building and supplying soldiers with equipment and technology.

Born in Boston and raised in New England and upstate New York, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Army Corps of Engineers in 1980 after graduating from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He later earned a Ph.D. in engineering from the University of Southern California.

From 2009 to 2011, he served as deputy commanding general of the Army’s Research, Development and Engineering Command and senior commander of the Natick Soldier System Center at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Aberdeen, Maryland. During that tour he gained the rank of brigadier general, and at his promotion ceremony in December 2009 he was lauded for his leadership skills and ability to inspire those around him.

“In every job I had we got things done that I think made our Army better, and it was done by other people,” Greene said at the promotion ceremony, according to the Albany Times Union. “All I did was try to pull people in the right direction and they went out and did great things.”

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