Operation Insight
Join us on Operation Insight as we host Sergeant First Class Diane Cole Phipps of the U.S. Army! In this episode, SFC Diane Cole Phipps takes us on a journey through family, service, and a career that sat at the intersection of history and humanity. Born and raised in St. Louis with a Southern family legacy, Diane’s story begins amid motorcycles, hard work, and a household where the rules were clear: you earned what you received. She grew up watching a self-taught mechanic father provide for a big family and a determined mother who demanded discipline and achievement. That upbringing shaped Diane’s grit, her respect for duty, and her unflinching work ethic. In 1974, at just seventeen years old, Diane began working at the National Personnel Records Center—only a year after the catastrophic fire that destroyed millions of military files. Diane’s reverence for the files she handled transformed into a mission: these weren’t just folders, they were people. As she sifted through charred, waterlogged, and missing records, Diane became a “special searcher,” conducting what she calls detective work to reunite veterans and families with the stories locked in their files. Her careful hands pulled the service file of Alex Haley, helped verify names for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and pieced together fragments of lives that many thought were lost to the flames. Diane’s family history—four brothers and a sister woven into military life—adds another layer to the episode. From brothers drafted into Vietnam to a household grappling with civil rights-era fears of government, Diane’s life explores how trust and duty evolve across generations. She later navigated the military herself, choosing dual status as both an Army Reservist and a civilian government employee to protect her livelihood and continue serving during an uncertain reduction-in-force era. This episode blends history with Diane's personal life: the 1973 NPRC fire and the surge of genealogy interest ignited by Roots; the stubborn pride of a father who never learned to read but could beat any engine into submission; a mother who insisted on success and stability. Through Diane’s voice, we hear archival work as sacred stewardship—an act of empathy that honors the quiet sacrifices of service members and preserves their memory for future generations. (00:00) Disclaimer (01:01) Opening Theme (01:30) Introduction (53:12) Part II (1:18:23) Iraq Deployment (1:27:44) Burn Pits & Multiple Myeloma (1:34:44) American Legion Post #404 (1:42:36) The Honor Flight & Legacy (1:59:33) Closing
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