An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | Jan. 15, 2013

From Kentucky to Africa, National Guard major defines service

By Staff Sgt. Steve Tressler Task Force Longrifles Public Affairs

CAMP LEMMONIER, Djibouti - What do you call someone who goes from being a medical officer to a nuclear chemical biological officer to armor officer to an artillery officer?

Easy - we call him Maj. Michael Benton.

Benton has done this ‘military thing' for the better part of three decades now. He began his military career in July of 1983. In that time he's seen a lot. From Desert Shield to Desert Storm; from Afghanistan to Iraq to Egypt and finally to Djibouti.

Now his newest mission here has taken him almost 8,000 miles away from his home.

Being in the Horn of Africa isn't easy by itself. The temperatures reach over 130 degrees in the summer with over 80 percent humidity daily. Plus, to say it's not your typical ‘military mission,' is putting it lightly.

The tasks here for his men, Taskforce Longrifles out of Kentucky's 138th Fires Brigade, stretch from entry-control points on base to force protection to teaching English to those wanting to learn. And there are many who do.

While the full extent of his job duties deals with Soldiers on a day-to-day basis, he uses his free time to volunteer.

One such occasion was Nov. 2 2012, when Benton volunteered to go on yet another volunteer mission. This time to a place called the ‘Wound Clinic.'

Thirty seconds after shutting the van door, he was bombarded by people seeking medical attention. The first in line was a man who had open sores and lesions up and down his legs. With a Navy surgery team from the USS New York by his side, Benton found himself wearing scrubs and latex gloves, and cleaning the Djiboutian stranger's wounds and applying clean dressings. Not a typical day for a ‘former National Guard medic' who day-to-day as a civilian works at the Smuckers-Jif plant in Lexington, Ky.

When asked who he wanted to say a special hello and thank you to at his job back in Lexington he responded, "I don't have time to thank them all, too many people have been there for me. It's my turn."

Michael Benton will retire from the military after 30 years of service when he returns home next year at the completion of his deployment here in Africa.

 

 

Related Articles
A CH-47 Chinook helicopter assigned to the 1st Battalion (General Support Aviation), 189th Aviation Regiment transports an MEP-806 power generator by sling load during a joint field training exercise at Fort Harrison, Montana, June 26, 2026. The mission validated a new operational capability between the Montana Army National Guard and the 219th Red Horse Squadron, strengthening the Montana National Guard's domestic operations capabilities through joint aviation and engineering training. Photo by Senior Master Sgt. Devin Doskey.
Montana Guard Conducts Joint Sling Load Training
By Senior Master Sgt. Devin Doskey, | June 29, 2026
FORT HARRISON, Mont. – Montana National Guard Soldiers and Airmen, assigned to the 1st Battalion, 189th Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation) and 219th Red Horse Squadron, successfully executed the first operational...

A Lorica Technologies Inc. Mule 28 unmanned aerial system carries a live, primed M1A3 Bangalore torpedo toward a concertina wire obstacle moments before release June 22, 2026, on Range 22 at Orchard Combat Training Center, Idaho. Soldiers with B Company, 741st Brigade Engineer Battalion, 41st Infantry Brigade Combat Team, conducted the proof-of-concept drone-delivered breach as the culmination of months of planning by the battalion's drone working group. The Mule 28 was custom-built by the Ashland, Oregon, manufacturer to lift and release the demolition charge. Photo by Maj. W. Chris Clyne.
Oregon Guard Engineers Test Drone-Delivered Breach Capability
By Maj. Wayne Clyne, | June 26, 2026
ORCHARD COMBAT TRAINING CENTER, Idaho – Oregon Guard Soldiers breached a wire obstacle with a drone-delivered Bangalore torpedo after months of innovation by engineers whose work could help save lives.In combat, breaching...

Soldiers from C Company, 1st Battalion, 112th Aviation Regiment conduct training missions June 6-20, 2026, at the Army Aviation Support Facility 2, Pangborn Airfield in Wenatchee, Washington. The unit took part in one of its busiest annual training cycles, with opportunities to train, build partnerships and recognize the Soldiers in the unit. Courtesy photo.
Washington Guardsmen Sharpen Warrior Skills, Wildfire Response
By Joseph Siemandel, | June 26, 2026
CAMP MURRAY, Wash. – Washington Army National Guard aviators expanded the state’s emergency response capability while supporting real-world wildfire and counterdrug missions during one of C Company, 1st Battalion, 112th...