Warning

 

Close

Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Confirm Cancel
BCM
User Panel

Posted: 9/17/2009 8:54:54 AM EDT
From the Wall Street Journal:

By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS
WASHINGTON –– President Barack Obama will award cavalryman Jared C. Monti a posthumous Medal of Honor on Thursday for repeatedly braving enemy fire to rescue a wounded comrade in the Afghan mountains, the first such decoration presented by this president.

During a Taliban attack, Sgt. First Class Monti twice ran into the open to try to retrieve the wounded man, only to be forced back by rocket-propelled-grenade and machine-gun fire. Sgt. Monti, 30 years old, of Raynham, Mass., was cut down on his third try and died at the scene.

"It was pure courage and love for his soldier," said Sgt. 1st Class Christopher Cunningham, 29, of Whitingham, Vt., a sniper who was in the firefight.

The president is scheduled to present the award to Sgt. Monti's parents, Paul and Janet Monti, in the East Room of the White House.

The Medal of Honor is the nation's highest award for military valor, reserved for those who risk their lives with gallantry beyond what duty requires. Sgt. Monti will be the 3,448th recipient since Congress established the medal during the Civil War. President George W. Bush awarded five such medals for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, all posthumously. He awarded others for prior conflicts.

Mr. Obama is deepening U.S. involvement in Afghanistan while winding it down in Iraq. He will soon face the decision of whether to deploy more troops to Afghanistan on top of 21,000 he has already approved. Public opinion toward the war, meanwhile, is souring.

Sgt. Monti enlisted in the Army at 17. Over the years, he accumulated a chestful of medals, but he rarely spoke of them. His father didn't know his son had received a bronze star until he found it in his son's drawer, according to report from ABC News.

The action that claimed Sgt. Monti's life came on June 21, 2006, in Nuristan Province along the volatile Pakistan border. Sgt. Monti, then a staff sergeant, was commanding a 16-man patrol from the 3rd Squadron of the 71st Cavalry Regiment of the 10th Mountain Division.

The squad was supposed to position itself on a mountaintop to call in artillery and air support for a larger offensive, but the big operation was delayed. A helicopter sent to resupply the men apparently drew the attention of a Taliban force that first numbered around 30 but steadily grew larger, according to Sgt. Cunningham.

"They just kept running down the mountain," Sgt. Cunningham said in an interview. "They swarmed into a position where they could shoot at us."

The Taliban split into two groups to flank the Americans troops and came within 50 yards.

Sgt. Monti called for mortar fire, artillery and air strikes, then realized that one of his men, Pvt. Brian Bradbury, was lying wounded and exposed to enemy fire. During a lull in the shooting, the soldiers could hear Pvt. Bradbury calling out that he was unable to move.

Sgt. Monti tightened the chin strap on his helmet and made three attempts to retrieve the private. The distance was short, perhaps 20 yards, but the grenades and gunfire were intense. "I'm going to get him," Sgt. Cunningham recalled Sgt. Monti saying.

On the third attempt, a rocket-propelled grenade hit Sgt. Monti in the legs. As he lay dying, he asked Sgt. Cunningham to tell his parents that he loved them. Soon after, U.S. artillery and bombs ended the fight.

"Going out there to get his soldier...instilled so much courage in me and all our guys to continue to fight," Sgt. Cunningham said.

Medics eventually reached Pvt. Bradbury alive. But he and one of his rescuers died when the hoist that held them to the helicopter gave way.

The Army promoted Sgt. Monti posthumously to sergeant first class.

Write to Michael M. Phillips at [email protected]

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



This is not a dupe! The other thread is not as respectful as it should be.

Playmoreminds please pass on my condolences to your friend.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 8:56:54 AM EDT
[#1]
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 8:59:00 AM EDT
[#2]
Garry Owen.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:01:29 AM EDT
[#3]
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:01:48 AM EDT
[#4]





Irony:

During a Taliban attack, Sgt. First Class Monti twice ran into the open to try to retrieve the wounded man, only to be forced back by rocket-propelled-grenade and machine-gun fire. Sgt. Monti, 30 years old, of Raynham, Mass., was cut down on his third try and died at the scene.


I wonder if this would have turned out differently had air support been available.

Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:02:04 AM EDT
[#5]
I hope the private is OK.



He was killed too.  




http://www.libertyunites.tv/tribute_v8035-us+army+brian+j+bradbury.html

Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:11:44 AM EDT
[#6]
Damn bad luck all around getting hit then dieing because of some damn hoist man that sucks,
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:15:35 AM EDT
[#7]
Quoted:
Damn bad luck all around getting hit then dieing because of some damn hoist man that sucks,


Holy crap, That last part really sucks.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:18:02 AM EDT
[#8]
10th Mountain Division. Hooah!



Other than that though, very sad news. We need more people like him.




RIP
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:18:07 AM EDT
[#9]
One hell of an NCO. Kept trying to get his troop.  I only could have hoped to have the courage he had to keep trying to get his troop.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:21:16 AM EDT
[#10]

Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:56:57 AM EDT
[#11]
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 9:59:18 AM EDT
[#12]
Quoted:


RIP, we thank you for your bravery and selfless service.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:01:12 AM EDT
[#13]
Watching now.


R.I.P.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:04:54 AM EDT
[#14]
As long as America can produce men like him, we will endure. God Bless him and those who willingly go into harms way.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:11:58 AM EDT
[#15]
R.I.P. Soldier
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:21:12 AM EDT
[#16]
RIP Warrior.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:23:39 AM EDT
[#17]




Quoted:

RIP Warrior.




This has to kill Obama to do.
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:26:00 AM EDT
[#18]



Quoted:




Irony:




During a Taliban attack, Sgt. First Class Monti twice ran into the open to try to retrieve the wounded man, only to be forced back by rocket-propelled-grenade and machine-gun fire. Sgt. Monti, 30 years old, of Raynham, Mass., was cut down on his third try and died at the scene.




I wonder if this would have turned out differently had air support been available.




Sounds like it was.


On the third attempt, a rocket-propelled grenade hit Sgt. Monti in the
legs. As he lay dying, he asked Sgt. Cunningham to tell his parents
that he loved them. Soon after, U.S. artillery and bombs ended the
fight
.


BTW:  This happened in 2006.
 
Link Posted: 9/17/2009 10:59:15 AM EDT
[#19]
Quoted:


+1
Close Join Our Mail List to Stay Up To Date! Win a FREE Membership!

Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!

You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.


By signing up you agree to our User Agreement. *Must have a registered ARFCOM account to win.
Top Top