From The American Thinker:
November 25, 2010
Be Thankful for Our Heroes
By Bob Weir
Three years ago and half a world away, on a cold, treacherous mountainside in Afghanistan, a young man, wearing the uniform of the U.S. Army, challenged a hailstorm of bullets in order to save his fellow soldiers. On November 16, President Obama, during a ceremony at the White House, awarded Army Staff Sergeant Salvatore Giunta the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry and great personal bravery in combat. Giunta, who is now 25, was 18 and working nights at a fast-food Subway store in Hiawatha, Iowa when he responded to a recruiting ad and decided to join the Army. Before long, he finished basic and advanced infantry training and was sent to Battle Company, 503rd Infantry Regiment, 173rd Airborne Brigade, and began two combat tours in Afghanistan totaling 27 months.
During his first deployment, four of his buddies were killed by a roadside bomb. He began his second tour of duty in the Korengal Valley, a six-mile-long, one-mile-wide hellish strip of mountainous terrain, notorious for the loss of American lives there at the hands of Taliban insurgents. Sgt. Giunta and his fellow soldiers engaged in firefights and daily attacks in a cloud of gunpowder smoke that hung ominously over the blood-drenched valley. On Oct. 25, 2007, two platoons of his Battle Company, walking patrol at about 8,000 feet high in the Korengal, were suddenly trapped in an L-shaped ambush, a classic enemy maneuver that brought them under fire from two sides. A firefight erupted. "Tracers, bullets, RPGs [rocket-propelled grenades], snaps, pops, cracks, explosions, wings, zings, dings" is how Giunta referred to it in an interview with "60 Minutes" a couple of weeks ago.
As Giunta told it, he and his men could see the muzzle flashes in the dusk as bearded men fired at them from within the distance you could throw a baseball. Soldiers dropped to the ground wounded in front of him. Giunta took a round to his chest, but the bullet was stopped by the ceramic plate in his body armor. Through the smoke and dazzling flashes of detonating grenades, Giunta suddenly spotted one of his buddies, Sgt. Joshua Brennan, badly wounded and being carried away by two Taliban gunmen, dragging Brennan by his hands and feet. Capturing an American soldier would be a major victory for the enemy and a psychological defeat for the U.S. Without hesitation, Giunta charged head-on into the Taliban guns, shooting and throwing grenades. Wearing several pounds of gear, and having sustained a blow to his upper body that would have stopped a linebacker, the adrenaline-infused warrior shot one of the two insurgents dead, while the other, who may have been mortally wounded, managed to stumble away and escape, but without the trophy he was hoping for.
When Giunta got to Brennan, the latter was badly wounded in the lower jaw. Although drifting in and out of consciousness, Brennan was aware that he had been rescued from the Taliban. "He knew we were there," Giunta told the "60 Minutes" interviewer, swallowing hard to hold back tears. The wounded soldier was carried to safety and placed in a medevac chopper for transport to a military hospital. Later that night, Brennan died in surgery at the age of 22, the same age as his rescuer. Giunta became the first living recipient of the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War. He joins 86 other living veterans who have been so honored. Every American who has served in military combat belongs to an elite brotherhood, whether medals adorn their uniforms at public gatherings or prayers are said over them at funeral services. It's readily apparent that Sgt. Giunta, having witnessed the nightmare of war and the stench of death, is too humble to cheerfully accept recognition of his bravery as something different from what his buddies would have done.
Reluctant to bask in the attention, when asked how he felt about being a hero, he said, "I'm not at peace with that at all ... people wanting to shake my hand ... hurts me. To be with so many people doing so much stuff [in Afghanistan] and then to be singled out and put forward ... " He shook his head woefully. "Everyone did something ... I'm average, I'm mediocre. This was only one moment. I don't think I did anything anybody else wouldn't have done. I was in a position to do it; it needed to be done, so that's what I did." I must respectfully disagree with Sgt. Giunta. There was nothing average or mediocre about what he did. Furthermore, I'm certain that Joshua Brennan would agree with me.
Bob Weir is a former detective sergeant in the New York City Police Department. He is the executive editor of The News Connection in Highland Village, Texas. E-mail Bob.
And this, related, from Gateway Pundit:
Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta… An American Hero
Posted by Lady Liberty on Wednesday, November 17, 2010, 3:57 PM
Staff Sergeant Salvatore Giunta, 25, has become the first living recipient to receive the Medal of Honor from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The Medal of Honor is the highest award for valor in action against an enemy force that can be given to an individual in the U.S. Army. Although there have been six other Medals of Honor awarded from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, their awards were posthumous.
Sgt. Giunta received the award for his actions in response to an ambush in Afghanistan’s dangerous Korengal Valley on Oct. 25, 2007. Two U.S. soldiers were killed in the ambush and several others were wounded.
(nowpublic.com)
Salvatore Giunta was working nights at Subway in Iowa when he saw a commercial on television for the Army. He decided to join. His first posting was in Zabul, Afghanistan with the 173rd and Battle Company. He had signed up for four years. When his tour was up he was stationed in the Korengal Valley in Afghanistan, located south of the Pech River in the Pech District of Kunar Province in northeastern Afghanistan. He was unable to leave the Army even though his tour was up because of the military’s Stop-Loss policy. Stop-Loss is a term used by the military. It is the involuntary extension of a service member’s active duty service under the enlistment contract in order to retain them beyond their initial end of term of service (ETS) date and up to their contractually agreed end of obligated service (EOS).
Sgt. Giunta was serving at the time as a team leader in Company B, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment when his squad was ambushed by insurgents, according to an account provided by the Army. His rank was specialist at the time. His squad was involved with Operation Rock Avalanche, a multiple-company mission that ran Oct. 19-25 in the Chapa Dara, Korengal, Shuryak and Pech river valleys.
Via USA Today -
Intense enemy fire from insurgents split Giunta’s team from the rest of his squad. Giunta was knocked down when a bullet hit him in his armored chest plate. He immediately charged straight into enemy fire in order to pull a comrade back to cover. As he attempted to link his team with the rest of the squad, he saw insurgents drag a badly wounded colleague off the battlefield. Tossing hand grenades, Giunta charged the enemy, killing one insurgent and wounding another. He recovered the colleague and immediately began providing first aid. The soldier later died from his wounds.
It was Giunta’s second tour of duty in Afghanistan. He had previously been awarded the Bronze Star.
Giunta has been quoted as saying of the night battle where he won his medal that “there were more bullets in the air than stars in the sky. A wall of bullets at every one at the same time with one crack and then a million other cracks afterwards. They’re above you, in front of you, behind you, below you. They’re hitting in the dirt early. They’re going over your head. Just all over the place. They were close—as close as I’ve ever seen.”
On Tuesday, November 16, President Obama formally presented Sgt. Giunta with the Medal of Honor. In brief comments after the ceremony, Giunta said that as much of an honor as the medal was, he would give it back in an instant in exchange for the lives of friends who died fighting in Afghanistan.
Sgt. Salvatore Giunta, Humble American Hero. God bless you and keep you, sir.
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