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  1. #1
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    Default US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat


    In these undated file photos provided by the U.S. Navy, Master-At-Arms 2nd Class (SEAL) Michael A. Monsoor , left, participates in a patrol in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Monsoor has been awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for diving onto a grenade to save his teammates in Ar Ramadi, Iraq on Sept. 29, 2006. Monsoor also received the Silver Star for his actions in May during the same deployment in 2006 when he exposed himself to heavy enemy fire to rescue and treat an injured teammate.

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    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- When a grenade bounced off his chest and fell to the floor near his fellow troops, Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Monsoor acted out of instinct.

    His actions didn't stem from a lack of training. His instant reaction was to protect his comrades.

    The Navy says he committed a selfless act: jumping on the grenade and taking the full force of the blast.

    President Bush presented Monsoor's parents with a posthumous Medal of Honor for their son at an emotional White House ceremony on Tuesday.

    Bush quoted one of the SEALS saved by Mansoor as saying, "Mikey looked death in the face that day and said, 'You cannot take my brothers. I will go in their stead.'"

    Monsoor was one of the U.S. military's most highly trained combatants, a Navy SEAL. He's the first SEAL to receive the Medal of Honor for actions in Iraq.

    On September 29, 2006, Monsoor was part of a major clearing and isolating operation to root out enemy fighters holding parts of Ramadi, the Sunni insurgent stronghold west of Baghdad.

    Monsoor was in a sniper position on a rooftop along with two other SEALs when a grenade flew into his location from out of nowhere. It bounced off his chest and landed in an area where it probably would have killed or seriously wounded all three of them.

    Monsoor was in a position to escape before the explosion but instead leapt on the grenade.

    "He recognized immediately the threat, yelled 'grenade' and due to the fact that two other SEAL snipers, our brothers, could not possibly escape the blast, he chose to smother it with his body, absorbed the impact and lost his life in the process," said Lt. Cmdr. Seth Stone, Mansoor's platoon commander.

    The blast did not kill him right away; he hung on for 30 minutes. His two comrades were wounded but survived the shrapnel that ripped through their bodies.

    Stone said: "He essentially saved [the] Navy SEALS on the rooftop and three Iraqi soldiers who were there."

    Until this month, when the White House announced that Monsoor would receive the Medal of Honor posthumously, few people knew of his story.

    Born in 1981 in Long Beach, California, Monsoor excelled as a high school athlete. He joined the Navy before the September 11 attacks.

    In 2004, Monsoor graduated from the basic SEAL training course as one of the top members of his class. By March 2005, he had completed his training and was assigned to SEAL Team 3, Delta Platoon.

    In April 2006, that unit deployed to Iraq's troubled and violent western provincial capital of Ramadi. Monsoor would not return home alive.

    His five-month stay in Ramadi was marked by constant attacks. As a heavy machine gunner, Monsoor had to stay behind the point man on foot patrols and protect the unit from attacks.

    Delta Platoon was involved in attacks on 75 percent of its missions in a highly contested part of Ramadi called the Ma'laab district, according to the Navy.

    On a patrol less than a month after arriving in Iraq, Monsoor showed some of his selfless instinct when gunfire hit a fellow SEAL in the leg.

    Monsoor "ran out into the street with another SEAL, shot cover fire and dragged his comrade to safety while enemy bullets kicked up the concrete at their feet," according to Navy documents.

    He received the Silver Star, the third highest award for valor in combat.

    His unit continued to endure the constant barrage of attacks and some 35 firefights with insurgent forces over the scorching Iraqi summer.

    Monsoor also was saddled with carrying heavy radio equipment on his back as the "SEAL communicator" who called in tank and other support during firefights.

    He received the Bronze Star for his work as an adviser for Iraqi troops.

    "His leadership, guidance and decisive actions during 11 different combat operations saved the lives of his teammates, other [U.S.-led] coalition forces and Iraqi army soldiers," according to Navy documents.

    But it was his instinct on his last operation on that Ramadi roof that solidified Monsoor's standing as a hero.
    Last edited by Caelius; April 08, 2008 at 06:03 PM.

  2. #2

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    damn, what a true hero.
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  3. #3
    Heinz Guderian's Avatar *takes off trousers
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    That man is cut from a special cloth. He saved his brothers.




  4. #4

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Always astonishing when you see people like this because it makes you wonder, Im pretty sure grenade thrown at me my first reaction would be to yell run and run away myself not jump on the thing. Even more remarkable he evidently was the only one with a clear way to get out of the way of the blast, his comrades didnt and instead of taking it his first reaction was his fellow soldiers. He is a hero by any definition of the word.

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    Heinz Guderian's Avatar *takes off trousers
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Quote Originally Posted by danzig View Post
    Always astonishing when you see people like this because it makes you wonder, Im pretty sure grenade thrown at me my first reaction would be to yell run and run away myself not jump on the thing. Even more remarkable he evidently was the only one with a clear way to get out of the way of the blast, his comrades didnt and instead of taking it his first reaction was his fellow soldiers. He is a hero by any definition of the word.
    thats a good point. Imagine being in that situation. He would'nt have had enough time to think about it. his "natural" personality came out to save the lives of others. I dont agree with the Iraq war at all, but this guy deserves unending repsect.




  6. #6
    mrmouth's Avatar flaxen haired argonaut
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    His platoon was attached to a Marine battalion. I read a more in depth article on his actions in the Marine Corps Times.

    The Iraqis he was with were SF, who themselves are often attached to SEAL platoons.

    The Iraqis apparently took his death very hard, and took it upon themselves to hunt down the specific fighter who tossed the frag. It was one of the only operations they ever conducted independent of US forces. They insisted on doing it, threatening to disband if they were not given the opportunity.


    There have been a few of these selfless acts in Iraq. They leave you speechless.
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    JP226's Avatar Dux Limitis
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    I don't think they wear ACU's, that's only army I believe
    Sure I've been called a xenophobe, but the truth is Im not. I honestly feel that America is the best country and all other countries aren't as good. That used to be called patriotism.

  8. #8

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Well in this case a picture really does say more than a 1000 words.

  9. #9

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Truly, this man deserved it fully. Only cold discipline, bravery and selflesness would ever make a man jump over a grenade to save his comrades.
    "Romans not only easily conquered those who fought by cutting, but mocked them too. For the cut, even delivered with force, frequently does not kill, when the vital parts are protected by equipment and bone. On the contrary, a point brought to bear is fatal at two inches; for it is necessary that whatever vital parts it penetrates, it is immersed. Next, when a cut is delivered, the right arm and flank are exposed. However, the point is delivered with the cover of the body and wounds the enemy before he sees it."

    - Flavius Vegetius Renatus (in Epitoma Rei Militari, ca. 390)

  10. #10
    Lawrence of Arabia's Avatar Citizen
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    There was a case of a green-card Marine who did this. An immigrant from Mexico who had yet to receive citizenship did a nearly identical deed. I don't know how these men do it. It takes a very high level of selflessness to even seriously think about sacrificing yourself like this, not to mention actually carrying it out.
    Quote Originally Posted by Empi Rapper View Post
    Go on Farnan, go and help those despicable thugs you call our soldiers to kill some of the poorest people on the planet.
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    Don't you realize that it is a good thing that so many British soldiers have already been killed as punishment for the invasion?


  11. #11

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Quote Originally Posted by Lawrence of Arabia View Post
    There was a case of a green-card Marine who did this. An immigrant from Mexico who had yet to receive citizenship did a nearly identical deed. I don't know how these men do it. It takes a very high level of selflessness to even seriously think about sacrificing yourself like this, not to mention actually carrying it out.
    Actually they were many cases of the exact same act done in 'Nam. When the one thing a soldier fears other than losing his life is losing a brother trooper. For if bullets fly the men you face death with day in and out, become brothers. Those saved by the act then faced survivors guilt and still do to this day. What the Iraqui squad did is that thing exactly.

    Personally, I think that U.S. hasn't paid enough attention to its Vietnam Vets, especially concerning survivors' guilt.

    It is a good and seemly thing that such a thing doesn't seem to happen in Iraq. A proof of that is the honor bestowed to such a worthy and distinguished individual. Ancient greeks used to say that a good life ends with a glorious death in battlefield, and for the life of me I cannot imagine a more glorious death than protecting your own.
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  12. #12
    mrmouth's Avatar flaxen haired argonaut
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Quote Originally Posted by Lawrence of Arabia View Post
    There was a case of a green-card Marine who did this. An immigrant from Mexico who had yet to receive citizenship did a nearly identical deed.
    One of those Marines was shot in the face after making entry with his squad, a frag came out of a room and he rolled on top of it to shield his battle buddy who had just started to dress the wound.



    On Nov. 10, 2004, in 30 minutes of close combat, Marine PFC. Christopher Adlesperger, a soft-spoken, religious young man who loved poetry and art, attacked an enemy stronghold in Fallujah Iraq, and killed at least 11 insurgents.

    Insurgents who were heavily armed and probably high on drugs (some had injected themselves with lidocaine, Novocain or adrenaline, allowing them to fight even after receiving mortal wounds, a spectacle the Marines called the "Night of the Living Dead.") — and who had just killed his close friend, Lance Cpl. Erick Hodges.

    He protected two wounded squad members from attack and saved innumerable Marines.

    When it was over, Adlesperger's face had been bloodied by shrapnel and he had bullets in his body. He refused to be evacuated until Hodges' body was recovered.



    Adlesperger, acting as the point man for the four-man fire team, had attempted to knock down a gate. Hodges moved forward and was immediately felled by a hail of bullets from inside, probably from a concealed opening in the masonry wall.

    As they rushed the house, Navy corpsman Alonso Rogero was hit in the stomach and Lance Cpl. Ryan Sunnerville in the leg. Grainy, shaky film of the incident shows Sunnerville hopping on one leg, still firing his M-16. Marines and insurgents exchanged gunfire from no more than 20 feet. From inside the building, the insurgents also threw grenades.

    The insurgents had hoped to spring what is called a Chechen ambush, named after the rebels who have fought Russian troops for years. The tactic is particularly successful when tanks cannot be used.

    The strategy, Marines determined later, had been to wound Marines attempting to enter the building. When other Marines came to help them, an insurgent sniper down an alleyway would pick off corpsmen, radio operators and officers. And when enough Marines or vehicles were gathered, insurgents would fire rocket-propelled grenades.

    Adlesperger fired at the insurgent machine-gun position as he ran toward Rogero and Sunnerville. He helped the two up the outside stairway to the roof. As insurgents tried to storm the stairway, Adlesperger killed them before they could reach the roof. Shrapnel ripped into his face.

    From his rooftop position, he could see insurgents peppering Hodges' lifeless body with bullets, including two to his head. When one ran from the building to seize Hodges' weapon, Adlesperger killed him with a single shot.

    Still, the machine-gun position inside the building had not been touched, and it was pinning down Marines gathering to assault the building from the front. With no time to consult officers, and with other Marine units engaged in firefights, Adlesperger was left to his own initiative.

    Unable to penetrate the building with his M-16, Adlesperger shifted to the grenade launcher. Standing on the roof, he blew holes in the building and then rained down gunfire on the insurgents below him. They returned fire and then fled.

    From his rooftop position, Adlesperger killed four insurgents who had fled into the courtyard, each with a shot to the head. By an Officer's estimate, Adlesperger killed a total of 11 insurgents. The actual number may be higher.

    Marines from adjoining rooftops joined Adlesperger and began preparing the wounded for evacuation. Once that was done and Hodges' body was removed, the Marines pushed in one side of the building with an amphibious assault vehicle. Adlesperger insisted on being the first Marine to search the building to make sure all the insurgents were dead.

    That night, a senior Marine went to Adlesperger to gather information for the official report. As Adlesperger spoke, he began to weep — not for the men he had killed, or even for the fact he had had to kill them, but for Hodges, a wisecracking Northern Californian who was on his second combat tour in Iraq and had turned 21 only the day before.

    "He just kept saying, 'Hodges, Hodges, we had to get him out,' "

    For his bravery, Adlesperger is among a handful of Marines who have been nominated for the Medal of Honor in Iraq.

    If an award is made to Adlesperger, his too will be posthumous.

    A month after the firefight for which he has been nominated, Adlesperger led Marines in storming another building where insurgents were hiding. He was shot in the heart and died instantly.
    The fascists of the future will be called anti-fascists
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  13. #13

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    This thread isn't about a marine, a Russian or anybody but Michael A. Monsoor . Plain and simple.

  14. #14

    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Quote Originally Posted by BarnabyJones View Post
    A month after the firefight for which he has been nominated, Adlesperger led Marines in storming another building where insurgents were hiding. He was shot in the heart and died instantly.
    Oh man, talk about unhappy endings
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  15. #15
    Duke_of_Bavaria's Avatar Vicarius
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Epic!

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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    A brave man.
    Too bad he died tho.
    This royal marine did the same thing but managed to survive with only a bloody nose
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle3646243.ece

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    Centurion-Lucius-Vorenus's Avatar Protector Domesticus
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Quote Originally Posted by TB666 View Post
    This royal marine did the same thing but managed to survive with only a bloody nose
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle3646243.ece
    Jesus Christ, Thats like real-life plot-hax.

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    Farnan's Avatar Saviors of the Japanese
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Navy Seals are SOCOM, they can wear what they want. Since they were on a normal patrol they probably wore ACUs so the enemy won't know they were special. They may have been attached to an Army unit at this time.

    Also, this man is a true hero, one of those truly deserving of the title. Not like those people who are simply good at a sport or music.... or good actors.

    Brings back this:

    "Greater love hath no man than this; to lay down his life for his friend." John 5:13
    “The nation that will insist upon drawing a broad line of demarcation between the fighting man and the thinking man is liable to find its fighting done by fools and its thinking by cowards.”

    —Sir William Francis Butler

  19. #19
    Panzerbear's Avatar Praeses
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    18 year old guys from regular infantry dove on enemy grenades in Chechnya en masse.

    Throw away all your newspapers!
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    Oldgamer's Avatar My President ...
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    Default Re: US Navy SEAL awarded Medal of Honor for Valor in Combat

    Sah-LUTE!

    Navy Seals are world-class athletes who put everything on the line, every time they deploy. The primary reason they do it is love of country. I have nothing but respect for them.

    @.Czar
    I certainly hope that their country honored them. They were worthy of Russia's highest honor, no matter the circumstances of the war, just as in Iraq.

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