Time selects military as Person of the Year

  • Published
  • By K.L. Vantran
  • American Forces Press Service
Three 1st Armored Division soldiers -- Sgt. Ronald Buxton, Spc. Billie Grimes and Sgt. Marquette Whiteside -- graced the cover of Time magazine Dec. 22. They represent "The American Soldier" -- all men and women in uniform -- who have been chosen as Time's 2003 Person of the Year.

"For uncommon skills and service, for the choices each one of them has made and the ones still ahead, for the challenge of defending not only our freedoms but those barely stirring half a world away, the American soldier is Time's Person of the Year," editor-at-large Nancy Gibbs wrote in the opening essay of the magazine.

"By naming the American soldier as Person of the Year, we're using that term in its broadest sense, to stand for all of those in a U.S. uniform who go in harm's way, including (sailors, airmen and Marines)," managing editor Jim Kelly wrote in a letter to readers.

The magazine cover is a "fitting tribute to these young men and women who have volunteered to serve their country and are over there doing a superb job," said Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Richard B. Myers.

Time officials said the magazine's naming of a Person of the Year recognizes "the person or persons who most affected the news and our lives, for good or for ill, and embodied what was important about the year, for better or for worse."

The war in Iraq dominated the magazine's covers during the last year, said Mark Thompson, Washington correspondent for Time. In the October-November timeframe, he said nominees included President Bush and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.

Thompson said the more Time officials talked about the cover, the more they realized that it should be the carpenter's tools and not the carpenter they honored, so they opted for the soldier.

"It's a grand choice," said Thompson, who has been in Afghanistan and flown over northern Iraq with U.S. troops.

The photo, taken by James Nachtwey, was shot a few hours before a grenade landed in the Humvee he and Time reporter Michael Weisskopf were traveling in. Weisskopf lost his right hand when he attempted to throw the grenade from the vehicle. Natchtwey and two soldiers also were wounded in the attack. All are recovering from their injuries.

Time's tradition of naming a Person of the Year began in 1927 when the Man of the Year honor, as it was then called, went to Charles Lindbergh for his solo flight over the Atlantic.

This is not the first time the magazine has chosen U.S. servicemembers for its annual honor. "The American Fighting-Man" was Time's Man of the Year in 1950 as the Korean War was being fought.