Today at Pearl Harbor, in a change-of-command ceremony at Kilo Pier, Admiral Cecil D. Haney became the new commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. He succeeds Admiral Patrick M. Walsh, who was the commander for the past two years, who is now retiring after 34 years in the Navy. Walsh was honored for his service with many stories of his accomplishments, as well as a few laughs, while his wife, Andy, was also honored during the ceremony for her service as a leader among Navy spouses. Speaking at the ceremony were Admiral Jonathan W. Greenert, the Chief of Naval Operations, and Admiral Robert F. Willard, Commander of U.S. Pacific Command.
Thanks go out to Pacific Fleet for inviting me to cover this event!

The USS Missouri and the USS Arizona Memorial served as the ceremony's backdrop.




Admiral Patrick M. Walsh salutes as he arrives at the stage.
No, we didn’t go to bed. Yes, we were silly with sleep deprivation. Happy New Year!











As many of you know, Ed and I are blessed to have the most wonderful dog in the world – our 2 year old Japanese Spitz, Kodachrome. We often brag that her only downside is the excessive amounts of white fur that plague our house and wardrobes (wearing our photographer-blacks means lint rollers are kept everywhere!), because she stays very clean on her own, despite being a white dog. However, there are times when she manages to somehow get herself dirty enough to require a bath, and so it’s off to the laundry room sink for her! Here are photos from today’s bath time, and I hope they amuse you as much as they amuse me – my dog makes the best expressions!

Dramatic punishment lighting.

Priceless expression of woe and resentment.

Sad dog is sad.
When talented makeup artist Natasha Stannard messaged me on Facebook to tell me she was coming home to Hawaii for the holidays and wanted to do a shoot, I jumped at a chance. (We previously worked together when I shot Mahina, Keegen, and Yvonne) I contacted my dear Helene, and out of our combined personal wardrobe of flowy skirts, this gypsy-themed shoot was born! I even made the shoulder-duster earrings the night before the shoot specifically for these two looks. Try as I might, I couldn’t narrow down my final picks any more than this. Hope you enjoy these as much as I do!












Model: Helene Watson
Photographer: Dallas Nagata White
Makeup/Hair: Natasha Stannard
Styling: Group effort!
(Shoulder duster earrings & black headband created by me!)
If you’d like to see some unedited 35mm film shots from the same shoot, please check them out here!

A U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III loaded with 25th Infantry Division Headquarters soldiers prepares to land at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (DMA HINB)
See the full photo gallery here.
The shadows of the Iraq War have long stretched far across the world, but this week that chapter finally came to an end. Though the conflict was ongoing for the entirety of my young adult life, in the early days I never thought that it would strike close to home. I was just a high school junior when the war began with the U.S. military’s invasion of Iraq on March 20th, 2003. Never did I imagine that eight long years later, I would be standing at the flight line on Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, watching a C-17 bring home members of Hawaii’s 25th Infantry Division, who were some of the last troops out of Iraq.
There is a name that has stood out for me since 2004, when my grandfather was interred in a niche at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl Crater. Before that, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were merely scenes on the television and words in news articles to me, as I had no real personal connection to the military aside from my World War II veteran grandparents. After losing my paternal grandfather in December of 2003, and my maternal grandmother in January 2004, I became a frequent visitor to Punchbowl, especially after moving to Oahu to begin college during the fall of 2004. The courtyard of niches was new at the time, and upon each visit, more and more names would appear on the white marble slabs, though the birth and death dates revealed that most of these were veterans and spouses who had lived full lives. One day though, merely ten spaces away from my grandfather’s resting place, a niche labeled MEDINA caught my eye. It wasn’t the name itself that drew my attention, it was the word and the dates below it: IRAQ, 1972-2004.
Staff Sgt. Oscar Medina, as my research tells me, had been a part of the 25th Infantry Division’s 84th Engineer Battalion, and died on May 1st, in Al Amarah, Iraq, when his convoy was ambushed. About two weeks later, he was the first Iraq War casualty to be interred at Punchbowl. I remember feeling a little stunned as I was finally struck with the reality of the war. From then on, whenever I visited my grandparents with flowers, I would take a moment to read his name and reflect.
The years passed by, and the Iraq War, officially called Operation Iraqi Freedom, continued to take the lives of the United States military, sometimes temporarily through deployment, and too often permanently, as our heroes like Staff Sgt. Oscar Medina made the ultimate sacrifice. Politics aside, the war has left its mark on the lives of many Americans, including me, much to my surprise. Without it, I might have never met my husband, Edward, who is an Iraq War veteran himself. Due to an injury he received while serving in Iraq (where he survived nine IED explosions as a humvee driver in the Infantry), he got the opportunity to transfer to Hawaii, and I will forever be thankful for that.
On December 18th, 2011, with my husband by my side, I watched the C-17 approach against the brilliant sunset backdrop. Three days earlier, the war in Iraq had been officially declared over by U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta during a ceremony in Baghdad. After landing, the military personnel aboard took a moment to raise the American and Hawaii flags before taxiing to the flight line, where military leadership stood waiting to welcome the soldiers home after their year-long deployment. 25th Infantry Division Commander Major General Bernard Champoux was the first off the plane, saluting as he was greeted with a hug from Lieutenant General Frank Wiercinski, Commanding General of the U.S. Army Pacific. Maj. Gen. Champoux then received a maile lei from Major General Darryll Wong, Adjutant General of the Hawaii National Guard, before leading his soldiers down the line of military and civilian greeters.
Once the soldiers were aboard their buses, we all headed up to Wheeler Army Air Field, where the families were anxiously awaiting the moment they would be reunited with their loved ones. While the soldiers went through the process of checking in and turning in their weapons in a separate room, children scampered gleefully, waving tiny American flags as the waiting spouses looked on. They sat facing a large wall covered in posters welcoming the soldiers home, and many of the children wore shirts saying “Welcome home, Daddy” or other variations of the sentiment. Every once in a while, Edward would wander off to say hi to friends who he had met during his years in the Army, many of whom had just returned themselves. Once the announcement was made that the ceremony was about to start, everyone cheered, and the returning soldiers marched into the hangar in formation while the band played.
During the ceremony, prayers were said and the Army song was sung. Lt. Gen. Wiercinski said a few brief words, and then he released the soldiers to their families. A year-long deployment is a difficult experience that I’ve had personally, and I was caught up in the wave of emotion as husbands, wives, and children were all reunited around me. I think we can all be grateful that all these families will have their soldiers home for the holidays, unlike so many who have lost loved ones to Iraq.
Thank you to all who serve and have served, and welcome home from Iraq…for the last time!

(Left to Right) U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. Darryll Wong, adjutant general of the Hawaii National Guard, U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Francis Wiercinski, U.S. Army Pacific commander, and U.S. Army Pacific Command Sgt. Maj. Frank Leota await the arrival of the C-17 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. (DMA HINB)

A U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III loaded with 25th Infantry Division Headquarters soldiers taxi's on the flightline at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (DMA HINB)

My friend Kaeo dives for a photo during sunset at my favorite Hickam beach.
Very last-minute photos of tonight’s total lunar eclipse as seen from Honolulu, Hawaii. I was totally unprepared so only had my 70-200mm f2.8L IS to shoot close-ups (most of which are cropped), and used a 24-105 f4L for the wide shots. I also woke up right at 4am after an hour-long nap waiting for the moon to reach totality, so I spent the first fifteen minutes of shooting forgetting to set my camera to mirror lock. Oh well! By 2014, when the next total lunar eclipse is supposed to happen, maybe I will have a 400mm+ lens by then!






Today, I had the privilege of attending another arrival ceremony hosted by the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command at Hangar 35 of Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. Six flag-draped transfer cases containing five unidentified military members from World War II, and one from the Vietnam War, were all carried down the ramp of a C-17 to waiting buses with full military honors. They were then transported to JPAC’s Central Identification Laboratory where the identification process will begin. The World War II remains were recovered from the United Kingdom, Canada, the Republic of Vanuatu, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, while the Vietnam War loss was recovered from the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, which demonstrates what a global effort the recovery process is.
According to their website, JPAC’s mission “is to achieve the fullest possible accounting of all Americans missing as a result of the nation’s past conflicts.” So far, since 2003, more than 608 Americans have been identified by JPAC, and this past August, JPAC broke ground on a new multi-million dollar state-of-the-art facility that will help them further progress in their mission. Though many Department of Defense organizations are facing budget cuts, JPAC has actually been issued a mandate by Congress to increase their identifications to 200 a year by 2015.
Photography Note: Last year, I attended a brief lab tour before the somber ceremony began, during which I took some of my favorite photographs of the entire year. This time around, I had the challenge of balancing a more difficult lighting situation with also trying to not take the same photos as last time. Though I am posting all black and white images, I have a color gallery available for viewing here.

The C-17 sits on the flight line outside Hangar 35 before the ceremony begins.

Military personnel from various branches stand ready before the ceremony begins.

Six sets of remains at once is an unusually large number for JPAC's arrival ceremonies.

Presenting the colors.











Taps is played.


Major General Tom, JPAC Commander, walks through the hangar after the ceremony.
Again, please check out the color versions of these images in the gallery!
My previous JPAC-related coverage:
I started photography doing black and white film darkroom photography, so sometimes I just like to take my digital images and color mix them into black and white photos, which is different than just hitting ‘desaturate’. Here are some of my favorites from the December 7th Pearl Harbor 70th anniversary event, except this time made into high-contrast monochrome images.














Photos and Words by Edward and Dallas Nagata White
Seventy years ago, a quiet winter morning much like today’s hung over Pearl Harbor. War had been ongoing in the Pacific since 1937, and in Europe since 1939. Despite the surrounding conflict, the United States and its citizens sought neutrality; war had yet to reach our shores, and there was no desire or expectation of involvement in any of the conflicts. The attack came out of the blue, both literally and metaphorically.
On December 7th, 1941 at 7:48 am, sailors in Pearl Harbor noticed fighters in the sky. Initially, most of the island’s military presumed that it was an exercise–it couldn’t possibly be an attack…America wasn’t at war.
Then the bombs began to drop.
Though there is still debate as to when World War II precisely began and ended, December 7th, 1941 is universally recognized as the point when the ongoing global conflicts began merging and becoming a single war–a date that will live in infamy, as then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared.
On that day seventy years ago, the Japanese sought to intimidate America by crippling the Pacific Fleet, and failed. On that day, the sailors and soldiers of Hawaii stood up and fought back, setting the tone for a nation newly at war.
Today, December 7th, 2011, we attended the 70th anniversary memorial ceremony of the attack on Pearl Harbor to pay our respect to those few survivors alive today, and those still entombed under the harbor’s still waters. It was a momentous occasion, widely attended by both survivors, family members, and officials from both the U.S. and the rest of the world.
Today’s memorial carried an air of reflection, perhaps more today than in other years. In addition to being the 70th anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attacks, 2011 also saw the ten-year anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The similarities between the two events and the timing were highlighted by both an open letter from Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus’ address.
When the opportunity presented itself, Ed would ask survivors about the parallels between December 7th and September 11th, and how the felt about the wars that occurred in the interim. The answers ranged from some survivors proclaiming that the nation must remain strong against dictators to preserve freedom to others feeling at a loss, as they had originally felt theirs had been the war to end all wars. All felt thankful for those that had laid down their lives then and now to preserve the freedom of America and her people.
To add to the poignancy of the occasion, William Muehleib, President of the National Pearl Harbor Survivors Association announced the disbanding of the association, citing the dwindling members. As if to drive the point home, upon returning home, I found an obituary announcing the death of a Pearl Harbor survivor who had been unable to attend today’s memorial.
During the ceremony, we felt particularly touched at the Japanese presence. Once a hated enemy, Japan has since become an invaluable ally in the Pacific. Though we spotted no Japanese Pearl Harbor pilots, there was a large delegation of Japanese religious groups who had come to offer prayers of peace and remembrance sitting intermingled with the various survivors.
After the ceremony, the survivors were ferried to the USS Arizona memorial to pay their respect to their brothers in arms, followed by the Japanese delegation, who were joined by one World War II veteran who stayed behind.
We were incredibly honored to celebrate the lives of these courageous individuals and remember the symbol of America’s will to fight when called upon to do so. This will likely be the last milestone of this caliber for many of the survivors, and we were glad to be there to capture it.
Best,
Dallas and Ed
