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Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that all product photographs, descriptions and specifications on this website are accurate. However, inadvertent errors may occur, and changes in design or materials, due to our continual effort to improve products, may result in some change in specifications before subsequent publications are issued.
Any Soldier® reserves the right to modify or change specifications without notice.

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Anjeanette Cole
- U. S. Navy -
Iraq
Anjeanette Cole
(Address not available or expired.)
Make a donation, please. Click HERE AFTER you get an address.
(This address has been requested 0 times.) (NOTE **)
APO/FPO: FPO AE (Note 1*)
Added here: 01 October 2005
End date: 21 Dec 2005 (Note 3*)
Contact for approx number of Males: 20, Females: 20 (Note 5*)
Unit is from: North Carolina (Note 6*)

Note: Anjeanette Cole was dropped from this list on 20 Jan 2006 due to 60 days of no contact.

21 Nov 2005:
Good morning to all,

    Thank-you to all that have responded to us and continue to support our troops. Being part of the AnySoldier.com family has been truly heartwarming. I continue to be amazed at the generosity, kind words and encouragement from people throughout the county.

    As stated previously I have the unique opportunity to reach a vast amount of people but at the clinic and out in the field. Our corpsman have become both medical healers and givers of hope and a little piece of home. They often carry the Gifts with them on convoys and distribute them to the sailors, soldiers, and marines who often don’t receive anything from home. I’m still in awe when I see a marine smile from ear to ear because he received a bag of ground coffee or something as simple as a bottle of bubbles. Matter of fact, we recently received a box with 50 mini bubble containers and the guys had a hay day sitting around blowing bubbles and talking and joking together.

    The days are long here and there is no such thing as an 8 hour work day. Honestly, we often forget what day of the week it actually is. However, everybody knows what time mail call is and it is a family affair with everybody opening letters, boxes and sharing the contents with each other. I still laugh when our male corpsman take and use the “girly lotions” and then say hmmm smell my arm…grape!!! Or they talk about how good there feet feel because they found some peppermint foot scrub. It is the little comfort things that lighten the mood here.

    The service men and women do an amazing, difficult, and often thankless job here. I am proud to say I work beside them and am motivated by their stamina, courage, and sense of honor and duty. Because we work in a clinic we are reminded daily of our immortality but also see courage and strength in the people we take care of. We will all be home safe soon and I know that we are looking forward to being reunited with our families and with the country that continues to support us.

The words thank-you just don’t adequately describe what you have all done for us. It’s not the physical gifts, it is the love, strength, courage, and encouragement that is packed into every letter or box that is sent this way.

Thank-you,

LTJG Anjeanette Cole


01 Oct 2005
Most live in hard buildings but many still living tents. Food items such as coffee, tuna packs, snacks of any type appreciated. I represent multiple medical providers and we assure that troops forward also get packages. Especially the men and women in the field that are often hard to reach and don't get the opportunity to receive comfort items from home. Females request anything that makes them feel/smell/ or look femine. Popular items lotions, shampoos, conditioner, hair gel, and foot care (pedicure) items. Also very popular for male and female sailor/marines/soldiers is stationery or cards to send home. No need for stamps. Thank-you for supporting or troups and letting them know they are not forgotten. Especially around the holidays.

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IMPORTANT! DO NOT PRINT THIS PAGE!!!

Why? Because this list changes all the time due to unit movements, soldier transfers, or even soldier casualties.
It is also illegal. ALL content on this site is copyright Any Soldier Inc.
DO NOT send any letter or package to a soldier's address unless you check this web site the same day you mail your packages.
Please do not burden the soldiers or the APO/FPO by sending things when the soldiers are gone. If a soldier is not listed here anymore then that soldier's address is expired. Check here often!

Note that some of the units do not have ranks shown on their addresses.
This is done at the unit's request, but ALL of our contacts ARE Servicemembers.

Be sure to change the "ATTN" line to "ATTN: Any Female Sailor if your package is for a female!

DO NOT use this program if you expect or require a reply!
DO NOT expect, or require, a reply from a Sailor!
A supporter said it perfectly, "I mean, these guys and gals have other things on their minds, y’know? Like...oh, STAYING ALIVE?"


(NOTE *): Effective 1 May 2006 this web site added a major layer of security to our contacts' information. This change is necessary to protect our troops and ensure that Any Soldier will continue to operate.
The ONLY changes are that the addresses of our contacts are now hidden and the number of addresses you can get are limited. You may obtain addresses simply by clicking on the link provided and correctly filling out the form, the address will then be emailed to you immediately.

(NOTE **): The number shown is how many times a form was submitted requesting this address. This does NOT necessarily mean that this contact will be helped by that many folks. Rule of thumb is that anything 5 requests or less may in fact be no support at all. No way to tell exactly unless the contact lets you know in his/her update how much support they are getting.

(Note 1.): Note that postage to APO AE and FPO AE (E = Europe) is only to NY where the connection to the APO/FPO (APO = Army Post Office)(FPO = Fleet Post Office) is, or to San Francisco for APO AP and FPO AP (P = Pacific), so you don't pay postage all the way to Iraq/Afghanistan. You might consider picking contacts closer to your mailing area to help cut the cost of mailing. If you live on the East Coast, pick "AE", West Coast, pick "AP", Midwest, well...uh, Thank You for your Support! ;)

New with us (December 2005) you might notice "APO AA" and "FPO AA". This is for units in the Caribbean/South America. Normally. However, due to the nature of some units they may be in Iraq but have an address showing "FPO AA". Mail addresses to "AA" goes out of Miami, Florida.

(Note 2.): Why are military addresses weird? There isn't a street address or city. What gives? Correct, just about everything about the military is weird to civilians. Military units are very mobile, they move around a lot, often they even become part of another unit. The APO (Army Post Office) and FPO (Fleet Post Office) assign APO and FPO numbers as needed, they are NOT static. An APO/FPO number may be for a large unit, or a location. An APO/FPO number for Baghdad today may be for Frankfurt tomorrow.

(Note 3.): The "Expect to not mail past" date is only an approximate and is one of the least reliable things on this web site. It is because of this that you must check often before you send anything to this unit. There are a few reasons this date is not reliable, to include: it IS the Military, we ARE dealing with the APO/FPO/DPO. The only thing that does not change in the military is that things will change. PLEASE NOTE that a Contact is dropped off our active list 30 days PRIOR to their date leaving to help avoid mail bouncing.

(Note 4.): (Removed for OPSEC reasons)

(Note 5.): The lines, "Contact with approx number of Soldiers:" and "Approx how may Female Soldiers:" have NOTHING to do with unit strength. They are approximately how many other Troops the Contacts believe they can get packages to. This helps you understand that you should not send 100 packages to someone who only deals with 10 Troops.
Don't forget that if your package is for a female Soldier, be sure to change "ATTN: Any Soldier®" to "ATTN: Any Female Soldier".

( Note 6.): This is simply where the unit this contact is from. This is NOT a true picture of the folks in the unit as most all units are made up of folks from all over the United States.) A "Composite Unit" is one made up of other units and is usually temporary for a particular mission.

( Note 7.): Updated APO/FPO/DPO mailing restrictions> courtesy of Oconus.com (gone now) (Note: About Restriction "U2": "U2 - Limited to First Class Letters", Box "R" is for retired personnel that live overseas and are still authorized an APO/FPO box. Their address will be something like Box 3345R. Doubt you will see anything like that in Afghanistan or Iraq or ...)(Please Note: Sometime in August 2013, Oconus.com changed the code on their page and our form doesn't work with them anymore, so a link to their page is the best we can do, sorry.)


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Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that all product photographs, descriptions and specifications on this website are accurate. However, inadvertent errors may occur, and changes in design or materials, due to our continual effort to improve products, may result in some change in specifications before subsequent publications are issued.
Any Soldier® reserves the right to modify or change specifications without notice.