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  • 11
    Apr
    2013
    11:26am, EDT

    As Pyongyang blusters, Korean War POW earns posthumous Medal of Honor

    Courtesy Catholic Diocese of Wichita

    Father Emil Kapaun, a pipe-smoking Army chaplain who later saved men in battle and in captivity.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    In a moment laced with modern irony and timeless glory, President Barack Obama awarded Thursday the Medal of Honor — the nation’s highest military decoration — to an Army chaplain and sainthood candidate who died 62 years ago in a North Korean prison camp.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Father Emil Kapaun, once a Kansas farm boy, has been hailed for decades by fellow POWs as a rousing, one-man resistance front, rallying starving inmates with clean water and stolen food while enraging his captors by openly mocking their pro-communist speeches. But days before the Catholic priest succumbed at age 35, ill with dysentery, pneumonia and a blood clot in his leg, he also raised his hand to bless and forgive the guards.

    At the White House, Obama posthumously offered the medal, encased in glass, to Kapaun's tearful nephew, Ray, in front of several former American prisoners who suffered with the chaplain. Meanwhile, in the Asian country where the honoree once flashed his quiet bravado, North Korean forces are reportedly readying a missile for launch.

    “Interesting timing, isn’t it?” said Amy Pavlacka, spokeswoman for the Catholic Diocese of Wichita where the chaplain served before the Korean War. “Father Kapaun took care of every person he could. He even sat with his enemy. If, globally, we all could just take a piece of that, if all of us had learned anything from him, I don’t know that we’d be in this current situation.”


    An Army Chaplain who carried wounded soldiers from battle and risked his life to feed fellow POWs was awarded a posthumous Medal of Honor Thursday, the highest military decoration in the U.S. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    His brazen battlefield reputation — a swift departure from his gentle Kansas demeanor — was cemented in the months before Chinese forces overran U.S. soldiers and snatched survivors during the November 1950 Battle of Unsan. The chaplain had repeatedly dashed through machine gun fire to pull wounded soldiers to safety, according to witness accounts compiled by Roy Wenzl, co-author of a new book on Kapaun.

    An Army captain in life, Kapaun is being touted for Catholic sainthood, an arduous process that typically takes years or even decades and ultimately requires the pope's approval. 

    “This is an amazing story,” Obama said. “Father Kapaun has been called a shepherd in combat boots. His fellow prisoners, who felt his grace and his mercy, called him a saint, a blessing from God.” 

    'The Good Thief'
    After he and other Americans were imprisoned at a camp near the Chinese border with sub-zero temperatures looming, U.S. troops died at a rate of 20 to 40 per night due to lack of food and clean water, Wenzl said. The chaplain remolded strips of roofing tin into pots so that dirty snow could be scraped from the soil then boiled for drinking. He was dubbed “The Good Thief” after successfully pilfering provisions from the Chinese soldiers.

    Courtesy Catholic Diocese of Wichita

    Father Kapaun, right, helps carry a wounded soldier to safety in Korea.

    Courtesy Catholic Diocese of Wichita

    Father Kapaun was known as a bike lover even in the Army.

    Food remained so scarce, however, some American prisoners began to swipe scraps from their fellow inmates. The priest offered a community solution through a subtle suggestion.

    “Father Kapaun put his own rations on the floor and said a prayer: ‘Lord, thank you for this food that we not only can eat but that we can share.’ In his own quiet way,” Wenzl said, “that was calculated for effect.”

    As were the chaplain’s antics when captors tried to use hunger, the frigid weather and torrents of spoken propaganda in an effort coerce U.S. prisoners to abandon their country and adopt communism.

    Assuming de facto leadership, Kapaun urged the men to “keep eating, don’t give up,” according to Wenzl. “He told them, ‘We’re going to get out of here. The Army won’t leave us.’” Publicy, he frequently embarrassed the Chinese speakers during their orchestrated talks on communism to the POWs, which the troops had dubbed “brainwashing.”

    “It wasn’t just that he was patriotic. It wasn’t that simple. He thought if the men gave up on their flag, their loyalty, their country, and to their oath as soldiers,” Wenzl said, “they would give up on life.”

    Slideshow: Medal of Honor recipients

    /

    A look at heroes from a post-9/11 era of war

    Launch slideshow

    More then two years after Kapaun died in an isolated shed that the guards called a “hospital,” the Korean War ended. Both sides exchanged prisoners of war. When some of the troops emerged from that camp near China, the first story they told other Americans was an account of their POW chaplain — and how he had kindled their spirits in the dead cold of a hopeless winter.

    “A group of our POWs emerged carrying a large, wooden crucifix, nearly four feet tall," Obama said. "They had spent months on it, secretly collecting firewood, carving it — the cross and the body — using radio wire for a crown of thorns. It was a tribute to their friend, their chaplain, their fellow prisoner, who had touched their souls and saved their lives.”

     

    In April, President Obama will award the Medal of Honor posthumously to an Army chaplain for his actions in the Korean War. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Related: Obama awards Medal of Honor to Afghan battle hero Clinton Romesha

    107 comments

    Thank you chaps for your devotion to duty and inspired leadership well deserved and long overdue.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: white-house, barack-obama, north-korea, army, south-korea, catholic, priest, pow, korean-war, wichita, medal-of-honor, chaplain
  • 11
    Feb
    2013
    10:25am, EST

    Obama awards Medal of Honor to Afghan battle hero Clinton Romesha

    Shot in the arm, his base overrun, comrades dead or wounded, Army Staff Sergeant Clint Romesha rallies the survivors to beat back the Taliban and today received the nation's highest military honor.

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    President Obama awarded the Medal of Honor to celebrated Army veteran Clinton Romesha on Monday afternoon, making the former active duty staff sergeant just the fourth living person to receive the military’s highest honor for service in Iraq or Afghanistan.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Romesha, 31, fought back tears as Obama presented him with the medal honoring his “conspicuous gallantry” during the Battle of Kamdesh, a day-long firefight at a remote Afghan outpost near the Pakistan border in 2009.

    “These men were outnumbered, outgunned, and almost overrun,” Obama said in his remarks in the White House East Room. 


    Romesha was recognized for leading the charge against hundreds of Taliban fighters during an Oct. 3, 2009, siege on U.S. troops at Combat Outpost Keating, a small compound military officials considered indefensible. 

    Eight American soldiers were killed and 20 were wounded in the surprise attack, making it the deadliest day for the U.S. in the war effort that year.

    Romesha headed up efforts to retake the camp, risking his own life as U.S. troops were besieged by rocket-propelled grenades, machine guns, mortars and rifles.

    Romesha, who served twice in Iraq, first took out a machine-gun team and then turned to a second, suffering shrapnel wounds when a grenade struck a generator he was using for cover.

    Former Staff Sgt. Clinton Romesha is presented with the Medal of Honor by President Barack Obama at the White House on Monday.

    An official citation read at the ceremony described Romesha’s subsequent acts of valor.

    "Undeterred by his injuries, Staff Sergeant Romesha continued to fight and upon the arrival of another soldier to aid him and the assistant gunner, he again rushed through the exposed avenue to assemble additional soldiers," the citation says.

    “With complete disregard for his own safety, (he) continually exposed himself to heavy enemy fire as he moved confidently about the battlefield engaging and destroying multiple enemy targets.”

    Previously reported: "He's always been a good kid." 

    All the while, Romesha devised a strategy to secure key points of the battlefield and directed air support to eliminate a band of thirty heavily armed enemy combatants.

    Slideshow: Medal of Honor recipients

    /

    A look at heroes from a post-9/11 era of war

    Launch slideshow

    Romesha and his team also provided cover so three injured soldiers could make their way to an aid station. They then “pushed forward 100 meters under withering fire to recover the bodies of their fallen comrades,” according to the citation.

    Romesha, a father of three and the son of a Vietnam veteran, reportedly never lost his composure during the chaotic attack, according to CNN journalist Jake Tapper, who chronicled the battle in the 2012 book "The Outpost."

    'Clint is a pretty humble guy'
    During his remarks, Obama recognized the lives of the eight soldiers who died at the Battle of Kamdesh, asking the parents of the fallen seated in the back of the room to stand for applause. 

    But the heart of Obama's speech centered on a visibly emotional Romesha, who appeared to be fighting back tears as he looked ahead at his wife, Tammy, and three young children.

    Colin Romesha, the young son of Medal of Honor recipient Clinton Romesha, finds time to explore the White house while attending a ceremony for his father on Monday.

    "Clint is a pretty humble guy," Obama said. "The thing he looks forward to the most is just being a husband and a father."

    Romesha is slated to be a guest of first lady Michelle Obama at the State of the Union address on Tuesday, CNN reported.

    At a January news conference shortly after Obama called to inform him that he would receive the Medal of Honor, Romesha put the attention squarely on wounded friends and fallen comrades.

    "I've had buddies that have lost eyesight and lost limbs," Romesha said. "I would rather give them all the credit they deserve for sacrificing so much. For me it was nothing, really. I got a little peppered, that was it."

    Romesha, whom Tapper describes in his book as "an intense guy, short and wiry," lives in Minot, N.D., and works at KS Industries, an oil field construction firm.

    A total of ten U.S. service members have been awarded the military's highest honor for actions in Afghanistan and Iraq, including six men who received the honor posthumously. 

    The Medal of Honor is bestowed on members of the U.S. Armed Forces who display what the Army calls "conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty."

    307 comments

    Congrats to SSG Clinton Romesha you are what makes America strong and proud! We as a Nation thank you for you devotion and dedication Cpl Runcik

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  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    4:02pm, EST

    Afghan battle hero Clinton Romesha to receive Medal of Honor

    Staff Sgt. Clinton Romesha, 31, helped rescue the injured and retrieve the dead during an ambush by hundreds of fighters in Afghanistan. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    An Army sergeant who ignored his battle wounds to take out the enemy, rescue the injured and retrieve the dead during an ambush by 300 fighters in Afghanistan will receive the Medal of Honor, the White House announced Friday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Staff Sgt. Clinton Romesha, 31, who has since left the military, will be only the fourth living service member awarded the nation's top honor for courage in Iraq or Afghanistan.

    His citation says he is being recognized for "acts of gallantry and intrepity" when fighters attacked Combat Outpost Keating from all sides with rocket-propelled grenades, machine guns, mortars and rifles on Oct. 3, 2009, igniting a daylong battle.

    Romesha, a father of three, rousted reinforcements and then engaged in battle with the help of an assistant gunner. After taking out one machine-gun team, he set his sights on a second and suffered shrapnel wounds when a grenade hit a generator he was using for cover.


    "Undeterred by his injuries, Staff Sergeant Romesha continued to fight and upon the arrival of another soldier to aid him and the assistant gunner, he again rushed through the exposed avenue to assemble additional soldiers," the citation says.

    "With complete disregard for his own safety, (he) continually exposed himself to heavy enemy fire as he moved confidently about the battlefield engaging and destroying multiple enemy targets."

    At the same time, Romesha was orchestrating a plan to secure key points of the battlefield — and directing air support to knock out a band of 30 heavily armed fighters who were attacking "with even greater ferocity."

    He and his team also provided cover so that three wounded soldiers could get to an aid station, then "pushed forward 100 meters under withering fire, to recover the bodies of their fallen comrades."

    Eight soldiers were killed in the battle, chronicled in the book "The Outpost," by journalist Jake Tapper, who described Romesha as "an intense guy, short and wiry," the son of a Mormon church leader who had attended seminary before joining the military.

    Romesha, according to the book, never lost his cool — playing "peekaboo" with a sniper so he could get a bead on him, smiling as bullets ricocheted around him.

    'He's always been a good kid'
    Romesha’s father, Gary, said his son called him with news of the medal on Friday.

    “I thought it was great. But I’m more thankful he is able to receive it on his own and it’s not given to us after he is dead,” he said.

    The father of five, a Vietnam veteran, said all three of his sons went into the military.

    “I tried to talk to my children. I told them, just don’t go into the infantry, do something where you get skilled. But they didn’t listen to me. They all went into the infantry,” he said in a phone interview from his home in small-town northern California.

    He said he wasn’t surprised to hear about his son’s battlefield heroics.

    “He’s always been a good kid,” he said. “But I think any of my children would have done the same thing.”

    Romesha enlisted in the Army in 1999 and completed two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan. He was a section leader with B Troop, 3rd Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division when the outpost came under fire.

    Though the U.S. soldiers were greatly outnumbered, they stopped the Taliban from overrunning the outpost after Afghan troops and guards reportedly fled.

    President Obama, who announced the award during a press conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, will present Romesha with the Medal of Honor at the White House on Feb. 11.

    NBC News' Courtney Kube contributed to this report.

    Related: Some wounded vets shine on 'Alive Day,' others wear black
    Related: One inch: Death in combat hinges on the tiniest margins

     

     

    83 comments

    Well done Sgt Romesha, well done. A hero in every sense of the word. The world could use many more people like you. Good luck in whatever endeavors you pursue in the future.

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  • 25
    Jul
    2012
    2:48pm, EDT

    Pentagon launches 'Stolen Valor' website for military medals


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    The Department of Defense unveiled a new website Wednesday listing recent recipients of the Medal of Honor, the military's highest award for valor.

    The site is aimed at verifying claims of meritorious service in the military, but reaches back only as far as awards earned on Sept. 11, 2001 and after. It will eventually include awards for service crosses and the Silver Star, also dating back to 2001.


    In June, the Supreme Court struck down the Stolen Valor Act, a federal law which prohibits a person from falsely claiming a military honor. Critics of the decision had called for a government-run database listing awards, and the Defense Department said earlier this month that it would establish a site.

    Related: Pentagon to set up database for military medals

    Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, who appeared before a joint Congressional hearing on Wednesday morning to discuss transition programs for service members and veterans, told legislators that the department would possibly expand the information over time.

    "This effort will raise public awareness about our nation's heroes and help deter those who might falsely claim military honors," Panetta said.

    Joe Davis, national spokesperson for the VFW, told NBC News that the site "is a starting point that we hope will expand to the other valor medals, as well as the Purple Heart and combat awards like the Combat Infantryman's Badge."

    Related: Lying about military service? Bloggers have you in their sights

    The site will not take the place of proposed federal legislation to amend the Stolen Valor Act, which the Supreme Court found in violation of the First Amendment right of free speech.

    Last year, after the law was first struck down as unconstitutional by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, Sen. Scott Brown, D-Mass., and Rep. Joe Heck, R-Nev., introduced new legislation making it illegal for individuals to benefit from lying about their military service or record. That bill has not yet passed Congress.

    Related: Marines mark Medal of Honor anniversary with stories of valor

    Douglas Sterner, who has posted honor awards as the curator of the Military Times Hall of Valor, told NBC News that the site is a "step in the right direction," though he hopes it will become comprehensive, not only in the scope of awards, but also in the details of meritorious service. 

    "What these men and women have done, the details of their actions contained within their citations, is first and foremost American history," Sterner said. "Further, such a database should be able to answer the question decades from now, 'What did grandpa do to get the Silver Star in Iraq?' Any such effort is less about the men and women who did receive the awards ... and more about preserving history for future generations."

     Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at NBC News. Follow her on Twitter here.

     

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    51 comments

    Violation of free speech? oh please. Our military heroes have earned the right to wear those medals. Any one else claiming to have earned them, they should be charged with a crime. They dishonor the men and women who've actually earned them with their valor. That said, this web site is at the very l …

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  • 16
    May
    2012
    3:43pm, EDT

    Heroic Vietnam War soldier awarded posthumous Medal of Honor

    Saul Loeb / AFP - Getty Images

    President Obama presents Rose Mary Sabo-Brown with a Medal of Honor for her late husband, Army Specialist Leslie H. Sabo, Jr., during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House.


    Follow @msnbc_us
    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    President Barack Obama presented the country’s highest military decoration to the family of Army Spc. Leslie H. Sabo Jr., who was killed protecting fellow soldiers from an ambush in Cambodia during the Vietnam War.

    The 22-year-old Army rifleman killed several North Vietnamese soldiers, shielded a comrade from a grenade blast and forced a retreat in a battle that took place on May 10, 1970.

    The Medal of Honor was awarded to Sabo’s widow, Rose Mary Sabo-Brown,  in the East Room of the White House.

    "He saved  his comrades who meant more to him than life," Obama said at the ceremony, while also saluting other Vietnam War veterans. Members of Sabo's unit, Bravo Company, were in attendance and received a standing ovation.


    "A piece of metal won't bring back my husband," Sabo-Brown told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review in an interview. "But my heart beams with pride for Leslie because he's finally getting what's due to him. I will show it proudly for him for the rest of my life."

    Spc. 4 Leslie H. Sabo Jr. is shown during his tour with Company B, 3rd Battalion, 506th Infantry, 101st Airborne Division. He will receive the Medal of Honor May 16 for his valor in Vietnam.

    The records of the Pennsylvania man's heroics were lost in military archives for decades before being re-discovered in 1999 by a magazine writer researching Vietnam era Medal of Honor recipients.

    Related: Soldier to receive posthumous Medal of Honor for heroic actions in 1970 Cambodia battle

    Sabo’s platoon was on patrol in the Se San River valley in Cambodia when they were ambushed by a larger North Vietnamese force.

    Sabo quickly charged and killed several enemy soldiers. Then, according to the White House, Sabo rushed at another oncoming flanking force and drew fire away from American troops, forcing the North Vietnamese to retreat.

    As Sabo was reloading his rifle, a grenade landed nearby. He picked it up, threw it and shielded a fellow soldier with his own body. Wounded from the blast and enemy fire, he continued to fight, storming an enemy emplacement and throwing another grenade. The grenade explosion silenced the enemy, but also killed Sabo, the White House said.

    Sabo’s remains were shipped home in a body bag marked “Remains Unfit for Viewing,” his hometown newspaper, the Ellwood City Ledger, reported. His father and namesake died in 1977 without knowing the full story of his son’s death.

    The U.S. Army Specialist will posthumously receive the award for his actions in the Vietnam War in 1970. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    A citation recommending Sabo for the Medal of Honor was lost after the war, but resurfaced in 1999 when Alton “Tony” Mabb, a writer for a military association magazine, was researching Vietnam-era Medal of Honor recipients at the National Archives.

    Mabb contacted Sabo's widow and met with her and other members of his platoon at the Vietnam Veteran's War Memorial in Washington, D.C., in 2002, according to an account in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Mabb also contacted U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown, who wrote the Defense Department requesting that Sabo's actions be recognized. In 2006, Sabo was recommended for the Medal of Honor by the Secretary of the Army.

    It took an act of Congress to extend the time limit for the medal, which was passed in the 2008 defense authorization act.

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    217 comments

    A little late in coming. But well deserved.

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  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    11:43am, EDT

    Soldier to receive posthumous Medal of Honor for heroic actions in 1970 Cambodia battle

    The U.S. Army Specialist will posthumously receive the award for his actions in the Vietnam War in 1970. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A soldier who repeatedly charged at North Vietnamese forces during an ambush in Cambodia, forcing a retreat, will be posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, the White House announced on Monday.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    It was May 10, Mothers Day in 1970, when Army Spc. Leslie Sabo Jr. was in a platoon pursuing North Vietnamese forces in the Se San River valley in Cambodia. When a larger force ambushed the platoon, Sabo immediately launched an attack at the enemy and killed several soldiers.


    Then, according to the White House, Sabo rushed at another oncoming flanking force and drew fire away from American troops. The North Vietnamese had to retreat.

    As he was re-supplying ammunition, a grenade landed nearby. Sabo picked it up, threw it and shielded a fellow soldier with his own body. Wounded from the blast and enemy fire, he continued to fight, storming an enemy emplacement and throwing another grenade. The grenade explosion silenced the enemy, but also ended Sabo’s life, the White House said.

    “His indomitable courage and complete disregard for his own safety saved the lives of many of his platoon members,” a news release from the White House said.

    According to his hometown newspaper, the Ellwood City Ledger in Pennsylvania, Sabo’s body was shipped home in a body bag marked “Remains Unfit for Viewing.” His father and namesake died seven years later without knowing the precise circumstances of his son’s death.

    President Obama will present the Medal of Honor, the military's highest award for combat valor, to Sabo's family on May 16 at the White House. Sabo’s widow, Rose Sabo-Brown, and his brother, George Sabo, will attend the ceremony.

    "It's a tremendous legacy to leave to our grandkids and let them know that sacrifices all these guys made," George Sabo told the Ledger.

    According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the records of Sabo's heroics, along with a citation recommending him for the Medal of Honor, were lost in military bureaucracy. The records re-emerged in 1999 when a writer for a military association magazine was researching Vietnam-era Medal of Honor winners at the National Archives.

    The writer, Alton "Tony" Mabb, contacted Sabo's widow and met with her and other members of his platoon at the Vietnam Veteran's War Memorial in Washington, D.C. in 2002, the Post-Gazette reported. Mabb also contacted U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown, who wrote the Defense Department requesting that Sabo's actions be recognized. In 2006, Sabo was recommended for the Medal of Honor by the secretary of the Army.

    Still, it took an act of Congress to extend the time limits for the medal. The extension was included in the 2008 defense authorization bill.

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    110 comments

    I'm assuming that the reason for the delay in awarding the MOH is the fact that the combat operation took place in Cambodia - where we weren't supposed have troops. I am glad that this young man's heroism is finally being acknowledged by the country he fought so courageously for. I hope this indicat …

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  • 15
    Dec
    2011
    4:32pm, EST

    White House defends Medal of Honor story despite skeptical report

    By msnbc.com staff

    Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

    U.S. President Barack Obama awards Marine Corps Sgt. Dakota Meyer the Medal of Honor at the White House on Sept 15, 2011.

    The White House on Thursday stood by the awarding of the Medal of Honor to Sgt. Dakota Meyer despite a published report accusing the Marine Corps of embellishing details of Meyer’s heroics in recommending him for the military’s highest honor.

    White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said the narrative President Barack Obama read into the public record while awarding the medal to Meyer on Sept. 15 was based on documents provided by the Marine Corps that received “quite extensive” review, The Washington Post reported.


    Meyer, the first living Marine since Vietnam to receive the Medal of Honor, declined to comment on the controversy, according to CBS TV station WLKY of Louisville, Ky. Meyer grew up in Adair County, Ky., and attended high school in Green County.

    Obama had praised Meyer for defying orders and rushing into the heart of an ambush to retrieve fallen comrades, save 13 fellow Americans, kill eight Taliban insurgents and leave his gun turret to rescue two dozen Afghans.

    Obama’s account of Meyer’s actions were based on “sworn testimony from Sgt. Meyer himself and eyewitness testimony from others present on the scene,” Carney told the Post.

    “White House staff also personally spoke to Sgt. Meyer,” Carney added. “Our primary source for the president’s remarks was the official documentation provided by the Marine Corps. The president remains very proud of Sgt. Meyer and the remarkable acts of bravery he displayed on that day.”

    The Marine Corps defended the account in a statement, saying: "We firmly stand behind the Medal of Honor (MOH) process and the conclusion that this Marine rightly deserved the nation's highest military honor."

    Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and a former Marine, told NBC News in a statement that he had "no doubt" Meyer was appropriately recognized “given the Marine Corps' long tradition of rigid standards and its thorough review process regarding recommendations for combat awards.”

    I have no doubt that Sergeant Meyer has been appropriately recognized for his actions on September 8, 2009 in Afghanistan.  Out of respect for the obvious heroism of Sergeant Meyer, it is important that any discussion of this matter begin with this recognition."

    McClatchy Newspapers alleged that key facts in the Marines’ account of Meyer's actions in battle were inaccurate, overstated or unsubstantiated.

    The McClatchy report was written by Jonathan Landay, a journalist who was accompanying Meyer's unit and witnessed the 2009 battle in the Ganjgal Valley.

    It was not possible for Meyer to have saved 13 US troops, the article said, because 12 Americans were ambushed in the battle, including the McClatchy reporter, and four troopers were killed, it said.

    And military documents indicated that the arrival of helicopters secured the survival of the remaining personnel, not Meyer's vehicle.

    There are no statements from fellow troops confirming that Meyer, who has since left the military, killed eight Taliban as claimed on the Marine Corps website, the article said.

    The driver of Meyer's vehicle, Staff Sgt. Juan Rodriguez-Chavez, reported seeing Meyer kill one insurgent.

    There were also no sworn statements that backed up the portrayal of Meyer leaping out of his gun turret and pulling the 24 wounded Afghans into his truck, according to the report.

    Meyer's driver described nine Afghan soldiers getting into the Humvee armored vehicle by themselves while Meyer remained in the turret, it said.

    The article also said there was no evidence that supported the White House and Marine Corps account that Meyer defied orders by heading toward gunfire to help his comrades.

    The Marine Corps acknowledged that eyewitness accounts might differ but said that was typical in the confusion of combat and a rigorous process had been followed before the Medal of Honor was approved.

    President Obama awards the Medal of Honor to Sgt. Dakota Meyer on Sept. 15.

     

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    456 comments

    I'll bet this all is a nasty form of revenge by Dakota Meyer's former employers at BAE Systems defense contractor for suing them.... he might have been difficult to work with (they accused him of being a crazy alcoholic I think) but to try and backhandedly destroy his deserved heroic reputation STIN …

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    Explore related topics: white-house, barack-obama, marines, medal-of-honor
  • 29
    Nov
    2011
    4:57pm, EST

    Medal of Honor Marine sues ex-employer for defamation

    President Obama delivered the nation's highest military honor to Dakota Meyer. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By msnbc.com staff

    A Marine sergeant who received the Medal of Honor from President Barack Obama last September for saving 36 comrades has sued  his previous employer, a major weapons manufacturer, for defamation, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

    Details weren't released at the time of the original lawsuit in June, the Journal added, but Dakota Meyer filed an amended complaint on Monday in which he accuses BAE Systems of retaliation after he criticized the company for selling sniper scopes to Pakistan that he said were better than what U.S. soldiers got.

    "We are taking the best gear, the best technology on the market to date and giving it to guys known to stab us in the back," Meyer wrote to his superviser, according to the lawsuit. "These are the same people killing our guys."


     Meyer says he later tried to return to a job with an earlier employer but was spurned when his BAE supervisor made false claims about a drinking problem and that he was "mentally unstable."

    BAE, for its part, stated: "Although we strongly disagree with his claims, which we will address through the appropriate legal process, we wish him success and good fortune in his endeavors."

    A colleague at his earlier employer, Ausgar Technologies, told ABC News that Meyer was "an outstanding employee."

    "He exhibited a maturity for his age and an insightful capability to get the job done and provide recommendations to improve on what we are doing," said Tom Grant, a retired naval officer and a senior program manager at Ausgar. "I was very impressed while he was working for us."

    151 comments

    If his past supervisor did indeed make those statements: 1) it was extremely unprofessional, 2) this supervisor needs some serious training, and 3) BAE better get out their checkbook and at least save themselves the attorney's fees.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, marine, medal-of-honor

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