Category: Real Soldiers

  • I wouldn’t invade Nepal if I were you

    Tman sends us a link about Nepalese Corporal Dipprasad Pun, 31, THE BADDEST DUDE ON THE PLANET who was awarded the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross for single-handedly killing 31 Taliban who attacked his checkpoint;

    Pun fired more than 400 rounds, launched 17 grenades and detonated a mine to repel the Taliban assault on his checkpoint near Babaji in Helmand Province, southern Afghanistan, last September.

    Surrounded, the enemy opened fired from all sides and for 15 minutes Pun remained under continuous attack, including from rocket-propelled grenades and AK47 guns.

    At one point, unable to shoot, he used his machine gun tripod to knock down a militant who was climbing the walls of the compound.

    Two insurgents were still attacking by the time he ran out of ammunition, but he set off a Claymore mine to repel them.

    Pun was given his medal in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace in London on Wednesday.

    If just one of those little dudes can bring that kind of death and destruction, imagine what an Army of them can do.

  • Soldier foils bank robber

    Iraq veteran Staff Sgt. Eddie Peoples took time out from his vacation in Sarasota, FL this week to fight a bad guy here at home. Peoples was at the bank with his two sons when Matthew Rogers entered brandishing a gun and ordering everyone on the floor. Reports The Stars & Stripes;

    As the robber left and walked toward his get-away car, Peoples followed, leaving his kids in the bank. Peoples’ van was closer to the entrance and he reached his vehicle first. He said he hurriedly drove at Rogers’ car and blocked its escape.

    After a brief confrontation in which the bank robber trained his weapon on him, Peoples disarmed and subdued Rogers, and grabbed the bank bag. It took police a few minutes to sort out who was who before they arrested Rogers.

    “All of my deployments, except for the last one, have been hairy,” Peoples said. “I honestly didn’t look at it as a big thing. I really don’t consider myself a hero.”

    Turns out the gun was a BB-gun, but that doesn’t take anything away from the 34-year-old dad and soldier.

    Once Rogers was in police custody, Peoples returned to the bank to get his two boys. When he entered the lobby, the bank’s occupants erupted in cheers.

    As they should.

  • Army Ranger to be awarded MOH

    Jeff Schogol, our ninja at the Stars & Stripes sends news that Sergeant First Class Leroy Arthur Petry will be the second living recipient from the current wars of the Medal of Honor on July 12th;

    Leroy Arthur Petry was born on July 29, 1979. He is a native of Santé Fe, New Mexico and enlisted in the United States Army in September 1999. He attended Basic Training and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Benning, Georgia. Sergeant First Class Petry is currently assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment and attached to Special Operations Command (SOCOM) with duty at Joint Base Lewis McChord as a liaison for the SOCOM Care Coalition where he tracks and monitors injured Rangers returning from the Theater of Operations to the initial place of care to home station care.

    Petry has completed multiple combat tours to Afghanistan and Iraq totaling 28 months of deployment.

    Updated from the Army News Service;

    At the time of his actions in Afghanistan, Petry was assigned to Company A, 2nd Bn., 75th Ranger Regiment at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash. Petry’s actions came as part of a rare daylight raid to capture a high-value target.

    On the day of the actions that would earn Petry the Medal of Honor, he was to locate himself with the platoon headquarters in the target building once it was secured. Once there, he was to serve as the senior noncommissioned officer at the site for the remainder of the operation.

    Recognizing one of the assault squads needed assistance clearing their assigned building, Petry relayed to the platoon leader that he was moving to that squad to provide additional supervision and guidance during the clearance of the building.

    Once the residential portion of the building had been cleared, Petry took a fellow member of the assault squad, Pvt. 1st Class Lucas Robinson, to clear the outer courtyard. Petry knew that area had not been cleared during the initial clearance.

    Petry and Robinson, both Rangers, moved into an area of the compound that contained at least three enemy fighters who were prepared to engage friendly forces from opposite ends of the outer courtyard.

    The two Soldiers entered the courtyard. To their front was an opening followed by a chicken coop. As the two crossed the open area, an enemy insurgent fired on them. Petry was wounded by one round, which went through both of his legs. Robinson was also hit in his side plate by a separate round.

    While wounded and under enemy fire, Petry led Robinson to the cover of the chicken coop. The enemy continued to deliver fire at the two Soldiers.

    As the senior Soldier, Petry assessed the situation and reported that contact was made and that there were two wounded Rangers in the courtyard of the primary target building.

    Upon hearing the report of two wounded Rangers, Sgt. Daniel Higgins, a team leader, moved to the outer courtyard. As Higgins was moving to Petry and Robinson’s position, Petry threw a thermobaric grenade in the vicinity of the enemy position.

    Shortly after that grenade exploded — which created a lull in the enemy fire — Higgins arrived at the chicken coop and assessed the wounds of the two Soldiers.

    While Higgins evaluated their wounds, an insurgent threw a grenade over the chicken coop at the three Rangers. The grenade landed about 10 meters from the three Rangers, knocked them to the ground, and wounded Higgins and Robinson. Shortly after the grenade exploded, Staff Sgt. James Roberts and Spc. Christopher Gathercole entered the courtyard, and moved toward the chicken coop.

    With three Soldiers taking cover in the chicken coop, an enemy fighter threw another grenade at them. This time, the grenade landed just a few feet from Higgins and Robinson.

    Recognizing the threat that the enemy grenade posed to his fellow Rangers, Petry — despite his own wounds and with complete disregard for his personal safety — consciously and deliberately risked his life to move to and secure the live enemy grenade and consciously throw the grenade away from his fellow Rangers, according to battlefield reports.

    As Petry released the grenade in the direction of the enemy, preventing the serious injury or death of Higgins and Robinson, it detonated and catastrophically amputated his right hand.

    With a clear mind, Petry assessed his wound and placed a tourniquet on his right arm. Once this was complete, he reported that he was still in contact with the enemy and that he had been wounded again.

    After the blast that amputated Petry’s hand, Roberts began to engage the enemy behind the chicken coop with small arms fire and a grenade. His actions suppressed the insurgents behind the chicken coop. Shortly after, another enemy on the east end of the courtyard began firing, fatally wounding Gathercole.

    Higgins and Robinson returned fire and killed the enemy.

    Moments later, Sgt. 1st Class Jerod Staidle, the platoon sergeant, and Spc. Gary Depriest, the platoon medic, arrived in the outer courtyard. After directing Depriest to treat Gathercole, Staidle moved to Petry’ s position. Staidle and Higgins then assisted Petry as he moved to the casualty collection point.

    Higgins later wrote in a statement, “if not for Staff Sergeant Petry’s actions, we would have been seriously wounded or killed.”

  • I Have a Purple Heart

    I was an Army brat the first few years of my life. I have vague memories (or memories of memories?) of several Army posts; in Georgia, in Arizona, and another place or two. Then my dad was deployed to some place called Korea in 1950.

    Three additional memories are a bit more vivid – the day we were notified he was Missing in Action and, sometime later, that his remains had been recovered, and finally, his funeral. I wasn’t allowed to go.

    I have a Purple Heart.

    He is buried in our home town, and there’s a small memorial in the city park there with his name inscribed. I visit both as often as I can. Even though I was only five or six at the time and will be 65 in about a month I still miss him. I have pictures and memories, and…

    I have a Purple Heart.

    For many others, like myself, Memorial Day has a face.

    I’m heading up to Gettysburg shortly so a line from Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address comes to mind easily:  “that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion”

    So don’t wish me a happy Memorial Day because…

    I have a Purple Heart.

  • All’s Well That Ends Well

    Sorta…

    Forty years later.
    Vietnam hero cures an old Rutgers wound

    Forty years ago, he attempted to pursue a law degree upon his return from Vietnam and rehabilitation in veterans’ hospitals. He’d been through hell, and the last place he expected to face more of it was in academia. But the climate in the late 1960s and early ’70s was often inhospitable to those who had served in Vietnam, even the most highly decorated.

    Academia – Then and now?

    Because of opposition to the Vietnam War and an antipathy toward those who served, Christian said, the faculty made a circus of his attempt to earn a law degree. “If I got a grade that was marginal, they would release it to the newspapers and news media,” he said.

    Christian said certain of the deans had disputed the existence and severity of his war injuries, many of which are not obvious. “I was asked by the administration to disrobe in front of the student body because they didn’t think I was a disabled veteran,” Christian said.

    “At the time there was no Americans With Disabilities Act and there was no Privacy Act,” he said. “They couldn’t touch the politicians, but they could touch a war hero.”

    He said some faculty members would post lists of purported Vietnam heroes – lists that would include North Vietnamese names.

    I haven’t vetted this story, Jonn or someone else with more ready resources can do so. I can personally vouch for the atmosphere in many colleges back then and that’s why I decided to post this.  Consider this a history lesson if nothing else.

    Update:  Thanks to those who filled in the blanks, so to speak. Even I remembered the name, but this IS TAH.  So I added the caveat.

  • No Title, No Words… Just Outrage (Updated)

    Since I got Larry Bailey’s email I’ve been struggling to rationalize this evil? Sometimes it is hard.

    Concrete Bob did it for me.

    Last Wednesday, in Texarkana TX, some lowlife scumsucking asswipe murdered a good friend of mine and both of her children. Then the lowlife scumsucking asswipe set fire to her house to cover up the act.

    Amanda Prewett Doss was the most incredible person I’ve ever worked with. I met her in 2006 at the Veterans for the Truth/BootMurtha Rally in Johnstown PA. We immediately became friends. She was a tireless advocate for veterans, POW/MIA issues and she absolutely hated Murtha and Kerry, which immediately earned her a place in my heart. She was beautiful physically and mentally. She believed in what she did.

    She was a Soldiers Angel before the concept was ever thought of. Her support for Viet Nam veterans and the issues those veterans dealt with is legndary in our circles.

    I had the privilege of spending time with her, but, sadly, I didn’t stay in regular contact.

    An Angel indeed, thanks Bob.

    Update:  SKK is on this. As is Blackfive in the person of Laughing_Wolf.

  • Getting it Right

    Retired captain given belated medal
    Copley receives Distinguished Service Cross for actions during Vietnam

    FORT BENNING, Ga., May 4, 2011 — Capt. Jay C. Copley fought for three hours after sustaining a bullet wound through his neck. The men of 1st Battalion, 50th Infantry Regiment, assumed he was dead after they watched him be evacuated.

    They presumed he was dead for 40 years – until they noticed his name wasn’t on the Vietnam Wall.

    It took some help from congress, and the efforts of his fellow soldiers. From a separate article:

    Copley, who received The Purple Heart, was recommended for the Distinguished Service Cross but never received it because of an administrative error and three-year statute of limitation. U.S. Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, who attended, worked with U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss to get language in a defense appropriations bill to allow the award.

    Welcome home Captain Copley!

  • Welcome Home

    Vietnam-Era Green Beret Finally Returns Home

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — An Army soldier who ended up missing on a mission in Laos during the Vietnam War will be buried this weekend in North Carolina.

    The remains of Sgt. 1st Class Donald Shue, a Green Beret who had been on a secret special forces mission in Laos, were found on a farmer’s property in that country a few months ago. Shue’s sister Betty Jones tells The Associated Press that she didn’t initially believe Army officials who said her brother had been found.

    But she was convinced when they showed her a Zippo lighter, inscribed with his name, that was found in Laos. Shue hadn’t been seen since November 1969.

    Thousands are expected to pay their respects this weekend in Concord, where Shue was born, and nearby Kannapolis, where he was raised.