Interstate Shut Down as Thousands Line Up to Honor Marine Killed in Kabul Airport Attack

Thousands of people in St. Louis joined a funeral procession on Wednesday to pay their respects to Marine Lance Corporal Jared Schmitz, 20, who was the youngest U.S. military member killed in the Kabul airport bombing that killed more than 170 people.

Mourners brought American flags and firefighters flew even larger ones from the aerial ladders of their trucks. One thousand motorcyclists from the Patriot Guard joined the procession, which was so crowded it eventually forced Missouri State Highway Patrol to close the interstate to westbound traffic.

Luther Loughridge, a 60-year-old retired lieutenant with the U.S. Coast Guard, saluted Schmitz for more than 20 minutes.

"It's the last of the Afghanistan war, and he's the last victim," Loughridge told the Associated Press. "He gave his entire life and as a veteran, we respond to that."

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below:

Marine Funeral Procession
Members of the U.S. Navy Honor Guard transport the casket of Navy Corpsman Maxton Soviak at Morman-Hinman-Tanner Funeral Home, Wednesday in Berlin Heights, Ohio. Soviak was one of 13 U.S. troops killed in a suicide bombing at Afghanistan’s Kabul airport on August 26. David Dermer/AP Photo

Waiting for the hearse carrying one of the 13 U.S. service members killed in a suicide bombing in Afghanistan two weeks ago, Faye Hillis thought about all the military veterans she had mourned at her hometown's lone funeral home.

Her father who came home from World War II. Her cousin who died in Vietnam. Too many friends and neighbors to count.

"I'm having all these flashbacks," she said Wednesday as school children, families and veterans lined the village's two main streets to honor Navy Corpsman Maxton Soviak.

While the war in Afghanistan is over, its harsh reality is still coming home as Americans now are beginning to honor and bury the last casualties to come back from a 20-year war that claimed more than 2,400 American lives.

Stars and Stripes of all sizes and homemade signs saying "thank you for your service" decorated the procession route through northern Ohio where Soviak, 22, grew up before joining the Navy.

These are scenes that will repeat in the coming days in places including Omaha, Nebraska; Laredo, Texas; Logansport, Indiana; and Sacramento, California; for the 13 who died in the bomb attack on August 26 at Afghanistan's Kabul airport during the frantic airlift in the conflict's final days.

On a clear morning in rural Ohio, military veterans on motorcycles escorted Soviak's remains the final 8 miles (13 kilometers) to his hometown, first passing through the neighboring village where inventor Thomas Edison was born and then by the stadium where just five years ago, Soviak was a football captain for the Edison High Chargers.

One final turn took the procession by the Soviak family's home and onto a road dedicated to Army Sargent David Sexton, who was killed in the Vietnam War, which up until now had been America's longest war.

Right across the street from the funeral home, some of Soviak's relatives watched from their front porch as a military honor guard carried his casket inside—just a week after the United States completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan.

The community will come together in a few days to honor Soviak at a public visitation Sunday at the high school. The funeral will be Monday morning at the school's football stadium.

"We're all struggling a bit," said Kami Neuberger, a neighbor who thought of "Max" like another brother. "I just never thought it would happen."

Just one year younger than Soviak, her older brother, who's now a Marine, graduated from high school with him in 2017.

"He was always right alongside my brother, making fun of me, teasing, being goofy," she said. "He tried to make everyone smile."

A few houses down, Elyse Colwell sat on a blanket with her two toddlers. She thought about when she was in middle school and her father left for Afghanistan with his Ohio National Guard unit.

And she thought about how Soviak and many of the others killed in the bombing would have been right around the age of her own two children when the war in Afghanistan began shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11.

"These kids were toddlers when this began. It's almost like they grew up with it," said Colwell, adding that she's worried about what will come next. "Just because we left doesn't mean it's over."

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