This is the heroism you never hear about.

StuToffee said:
Lets hope he's looked after. He's certainly given service above & beyond the call of duty. I know the Medal of Honor isnt awarded lightly, but this gentleman surely deserves it.
The world needs more heroes.
While we're on the subject, could anyone tell me why the award is sometimes (apparently erroneously!) referred to as the CONGRESSIONAL Medal of Honour? I just wondered.
We have the Victoria Cross here in the UK, another medal thats seldom awarded, and theyre made from metal (bronze, I think!) from cannon captured in the Crimean war.
Just for the record ....

The Medal of Honor has been awarded 3459 times, 296 of them to marines.
It was created in 1861.

The Victoria Cross used to be made from the metal of a cannon, it no longer is. Every one of them is made by Hancock & Co. in England. 96 Australians have been awarded the VC. (4 of them in Vietnam).
 
Here's to First sgt. Kasal, I hope he has a speedy recovery, if anyone deserves the CMOH it's this bloke.
This is the kind of stuff the media do not want us to hear; the stories of men like Sgt. kasal who are over there and believe that what they are doing is worthwhile.
By the way, Gajinoz, as far as I know the jewelry firm that makes the V.C still has a lump of that Russian cannon metal in It's vaults, It's not a very big lump of metal as things go but given that This type of award (the CMOH and the Vc) are but rarely bestowed on a serviceman, i think it'll last a while yet.
BTW, thanks to K.V Collucci for that interesting link on the CMOH. :)
 
Thats right. The VC is still made from the metal from the Russian cannon, but I believe there isnt much left of the "lump" now.
 
StuToffee said:
Thats right. The VC is still made from the metal from the Russian cannon, but I believe there isnt much left of the "lump" now.
An excellent resource about the VC can be found here. You can read the stories and citations of the individuals who earned them by displaying the sort of heroism displayed by Sergeant Kasal.

One such can be read HERE. Men like these and Brad Kasal are a special breed and we should be very greatful that they are keeping us safe!
 
Dont really how I happen to know this but eleven Victoria Crosses were awarded at Rorke's Drift in 1879, the most in a single action. I did a little searching but found no information on the single action in which the most Medal of Honors were awarded. Anyone have any idea?

In way of apologizing for drifting KV's thread, I will add that First Sergeant Kasal rightly deserves the Medal of Honor.
 
What a true hero. And the guys who truley are, always seem to be very low key about it.
 
tknife said:
And the guys who truley are, always seem to be very low key about it.
Very low key. I happened to be at an American Legion meeting a few weeks ago when after the meeting we had a few beers at the bar. A conversation was struck up about the war and the stories the media never tells you when one of the guys points out the old timer behind the bar to me. The conversation went something like this. I don't remember exactly what was said but I do remember the important parts.

"You see that guy behind the bar?"

"The older guy or the young guy?"

"The old guy."

"What about him?"

"He grabbed a grenade that was thrown into a bunker when he was in Vietnam. It went off just outside the doorway when he threw it out. Saved his CO's life and a few others in the bunker but he took alot of shrapnel to the back and side."

"Holy ****!"
 
First Medal of Honor of Iraq campaign awarded- found it on SFTT site.

Iraq hero joins hallowed group
President Bush will present America's top award for bravery to the family of the sergeant who died defending his soldiers.
By ALEX LEARY, Times Staff Writer
Published February 2, 2005

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[Times photo: Brendan Fitterer]
Birgit Smith sits with her children David, 10, and Jessica, 18, at her home in Holiday after learning her husband will receive the Medal of Honor.
THE LAST FULL
MEASURE OF DEVOTION
For a multimedia report on the story of Army Sgt. 1st Class Paul R. Smith, published as a special section in the Times last year, click here.


credit here]
Sgt. Paul Smith (right) is the first soldier from the Iraq war to get the medal, which hadn't been awarded since 1993.

Sgt. 1st Class Paul R. Smith, who spent his boyhood in Tampa, became a man in the Army and died outside Baghdad defending his outnumbered soldiers from an Iraqi attack, will receive America's highest award for bravery.

President Bush will present the Medal of Honor to Smith's wife, Birgit, and their children Jessica, 18, and David, 10, at a ceremony at the White House, possibly in March.

The official announcement will come soon, but the Pentagon called Mrs. Smith with the news Tuesday afternoon.

"We had faith he was going to get it," Mrs. Smith said from her home in Holiday, "but the phone call was shocking. It was overwhelming. My heart was racing, and I got sweaty hands. I yelled, "Oh, yes!' ... I'm still all shaky.

"People know what's he's done ... people know that to get a Medal of Honor you have to be a special person or do something really great."

What Paul Smith did on April 4, 2003, was climb aboard an armored vehicle and, manning a heavy machine gun, take it upon himself to cover the withdrawal of his men from a suddenly vulnerable position. Smith was fatally wounded by Iraqi fire, the only American to die in the engagement.

"I'm in bittersweet tears," said Smith's mother, Janice Pvirre. "The medal isn't going to bring him back. ... It makes me sad that all these other soldiers have died. They are all heroes."

With the medal, Smith joins a most hallowed society.

Since the Civil War, just 3,439 men (and one woman) have received the Medal of Honor. It recognizes only the most extreme examples of bravery - those "above and beyond the call of duty."

That oft-heard phrase has a specific meaning: The medal cannot be given to those who act under orders, no matter how heroic their actions. Indeed, according to Library of Congress defense expert David F. Burrelli, it must be "the type of deed which, if he had not done it, would not subject him to any justified criticism."

From World War II on, most of the men who received the medal died in the action that led to their nomination. There are but 129 living recipients.

Smith is the first soldier from the Iraq war to receive the medal, which had not previously been awarded since 1993. In that year, two Army Special Forces sergeants were killed in Somalia in an action described in the bestselling book Black Hawk Down.

The officer who called Birgit Smith on Tuesday nominated her husband for the medal.

Lt. Col. Thomas Smith (no relation) sent in his recommendation in May 2003, beginning a process that involved reviews at 12 levels of the military chain of command before reaching the White House. On Tuesday, Lt. Col. Smith expressed satisfaction that the wait was over, and great admiration for his former subordinate.

In the Army, he said, you hear about men who won the Medal of Honor. "You think they are myths when you read about them. It's almost movielike. You just don't think you'd ever meet someone like that."

Paul Smith, he said, was not a "soft soldier" who suddenly got tough under fire. "This was a guy whose whole life experience seemed building toward putting him in the position where he could do something like this. He was demanding on his soldiers all the time and was a stickler for all the things we try to enforce. It's just an amazing story."

Lt. Col. Smith commanded the 11th Engineer Battalion, 3rd Infantry Division, during the American attack on Iraq, which began March 20, 2003. On the morning of April 4, the engineers found themselves manning a roadblock not far from Baghdad International Airport.

A call went out for a place to put some Iraqi prisoners.

Sgt. Smith volunteered to create a holding pen inside a walled courtyard. Soon, Iraqi soldiers, numbering perhaps 100, opened fire on Smith's position. Smith was accompanied by 16 men.

Smith called for a Bradley, a tank-like vehicle with a rapid fire cannon. It arrived and opened up on the Iraqis. The enemy could not advance so long as the Bradley was in position. But then, in a move that baffled and angered Smith's men, the Bradley left.

Smith's men, some of whom were wounded, were suddenly vulnerable.

Smith could have justifiably ordered his men to withdraw. Lt. Col. Smith believes Sgt. Smith rejected that option, thinking that abandoning the courtyard would jeopardize about 100 GIs outside - including medics at an aid station.

Sgt. Smith manned a 50-caliber machine gun atop an abandoned armored personnel carrier and fought off the Iraqis, going through several boxes of ammunition fed to him by 21-year-old Pvt. Michael Seaman. As the battle wound down, Smith was hit in the head. He died before he could be evacuated from the scene. He was 33.

The Times published a lengthy account of the battle, and Smith's life in January 2004. It can be seen at www.sptimes.com/paulsmith

Sgt. Matthew Keller was one of the men who fought with Smith in the courtyard. "He put himself in front of his soldiers that day and we survived because of his actions," Keller said Tuesday from Fort Stewart in Georgia. "He was thinking my men are in trouble and I'm going to do what is necessary to help them. He didn't care about his own safety."

Some of the men who fought alongside Smith were sent back to Iraq last month. Keller, 26, is scheduled to return Feb. 15, but was scrambling Tuesday to delay his deployment to attend the medal ceremony in Washington.

"I want to be there to support the family and show thanks for what Sgt. Smith did," Keller said.

Mrs. Smith moved to Holiday after her husband's death, to be near his parents. Her daughter, Jessica, recently moved out on her own and is thinking about going to college. Son David is a fifth-grader at Sunray Elementary School in Holiday.

"From the beginning (David) didn't show much feelings, keeping to himself," Mrs. Smith said. "He thinks if he brings it up it will make me sad. He's trying to be the strong one. The day Paul left for Iraq he told David, "You're the man in the house now.'

"Paul is not forgotten," she said. "He's part of history now. It makes me feel proud, so honored that I was allowed to be part of Paul's life. Even today he's probably laughing at all of us, saying "You're making way too big a deal out of me.'

"He did what he had to do to protect his men, not to get a medal."
 
Damn. What a story.
 
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