SUNNYVALE, California – Sgt. Michael Tayaotao, a 27-year-old Marine, may be the first Igorot Filipino American ever to be killed in action in Ambar Province in Iraq early this month.
Tayaotao, a bomb disposal technician with the Camp Pendleton-based 7th Engineer Support Battalion, was killed Aug. 9 in Al-Anbar province, the Pentagon has said. The Marine joins the 3,697 other American troops killed in the war, according to the Department of Defense’s latest tally. It was his third tour of duty.
Tayaotao,
a Fremont High School graduate, volunteered for one of the war’s
most deadly combat duties.
Scores
of his friends who fondly called him “Toyota,” mourned his
passing.
“He’s
responsible for hundreds of lives, not just Marines, but Iraqis,”
said Chief Warrant Officer Bryan Stotts. “I’ve buried many
Marines like Sgt. Tayaotao and every one has been a selfless
individual. Guys like Tayaotao know what the risks are, and they go
to the funerals of their buddies, but they continue to do their job
and go back to Iraq."
In
a simple funeral service that served as prelude to a military burial
in Southern California scheduled for last week, Tayaotao’s grieving
mother, father and sister sat red-eyed in the front row of the Lima
Family Santa Clara Mortuary as a succession of friends, relatives and
former Marines attempted to put words to their grief. In shaky
voices, they poked fun at Tayaotao’s poor volleyball skills,
praised his impeccable aim while hunting and remembered outings to
hookah bars.
“For
some of us here, he’s the best friend we ever had,” said his
uncle Felix Tayaotao, who lauded his nephew for serving his American
homeland and for his Filipino origins. “It is so hard for us here,
Michael, to lose your life, your love and your understanding you have
shown everyone. Now that your time has come, we’ll be missing you
so much."
Sgt.
Matthew Pierce, a friend of six years who served alongside Tayaotao,
remembered him for his competence on an assignment that can involve
disarming as many as a dozen improvised explosive devices in a day,
often under fire. Bomb disposal technicians are often first on the
scene after explosions, surveying the horror of shattered human
remains and keeping cool enough to write a report and send it back to
headquarters.
“One
thing about Mike, he always knew what was going on,” Pierce said.
“If
someone asked him, ‘What kind of bomb was that?’ he’d say, ‘It
has such and such parameters. You don’t want to touch it.’"