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(CNN) — President Barack Obama gave a special salute Monday to Americans who lost their lives fighting in the Korean War, noting the upcoming 60th anniversary of the conflict’s end, and asked Americans to remember the troops’ work in Afghanistan as that war winds down.

“Last Memorial Day, I stood here and spoke about how, for the first time in nine years, Americans were no longer fighting and dying in Iraq. Today, a transition is under way in Afghanistan, and our troops are coming home,” the president said after laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns. “This time next year, we will mark the final Memorial Day of our war in Afghanistan.”

He delivered Memorial Day remarks the week after addressing America’s controversial counterterrorism strategies and a rash of sexual assaults in the military that he said could threaten national security.

Calling Virginia’s Arlington National Cemetery “a monument to a common thread in the American character,” Obama asked the audience not to forget the “men and women who are willing to give their lives and lay down their lives” for the freedoms the nation enjoys.

A serviceman recently wrote the president to say he feared “our work in Afghanistan is fading from memory,” Obama said. “And he’s right. As we gather here today, at this very moment, more than 60,000 of our fellow Americans still serve far from home in Afghanistan. They’re still going out on patrol, still living in spartan forward operating bases, still risking their lives to carry out their mission.

“And when they give their lives, they are still being laid to rest in cemeteries in the quiet corners across our country, including here in Arlington.”

Obama cited a handful of troops by name who were buried at Arlington after making the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan:

• Capt. Sara Cullen, a West Point graduate and Black Hawk helicopter pilot, died after a crash during a training mission near Kandahar.

• Staff Sgt. Frankie Phillips, a combat medic, was killed by a roadside bomb while on patrol. “He was so humble that his parents never knew how many lives he had saved until soldiers started showing up at his funeral from thousands of miles away,” Obama said.

• Staff Sgt. Eric Christian served five tours of duty because he felt responsible for his team and “was determined to finish the mission.” He was killed escorting a U.S. official to meet with Afghan leaders.

“For those of us who bear the solemn responsibility of sending these men and women into harm’s way, we know the consequences all too well,” Obama said. “I feel it every time I meet a wounded warrior, every time I visit Walter Reed and every time I grieve with a Gold Star family.”

Chuck Hagel, a former Army sergeant who volunteered for the Vietnam War and is the first enlisted combat veteran to hold the post of defense secretary, told CNN’s Barbara Starr that he remembers soldiers who served alongside him, including a captain who was killed 14 days into his tour. Hagel was next to him when he died, he said.

“Anybody who has ever been in combat remembers the names, remembers the faces, remembers the fun, remembers the uniqueness of every person,” the defense secretary said.

Obama arrived at the cemetery amid a 21-gun salute and was met by Hagel, cemetery Executive Director Kathryn Condon and Maj. Gen. Michael Linnington, commander of the Army’s military district of Washington.

Linnington escorted the president to the tomb, where Obama laid the wreath and observed a moment of silence before speaking at the Memorial Amphitheater.

Home and Away: Remembering those we have lost

The president, who used last year’s occasion to pledge his support for Vietnam War veterans, spoke Saturday about the “1% of the American people (who) bear the burden of our defense.”

“They are heroes, each and every one,” he said. “They gave America the most precious thing they had, the last full measure of devotion. And because they did, we are who we are today: a free and prosperous nation, the greatest in the world.”

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He continued, “They risk their lives, and many give their lives, for something larger than themselves or any of us: the ideals of liberty and justice that make America a beacon of hope for the world. That’s been true throughout our history — from our earliest days, when a tiny band of revolutionaries stood up to an empire, to our 9/11 generation, which continues to serve and sacrifice today.”

Obama further urged Americans to “do more than remember:” to care for the loved ones the fallen soldiers leave behind; to ensure that veterans have adequate care, jobs and benefits; and to support military missions at home and abroad.

To read more of this story, click here: CNN.com

Article Courtesy of CNN

Picture Courtesy of Getty Images and CNN