Just one Medal of Honor given in OEF and OIF conflicts
Since 12-31-05
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Subject: Just one Medal of Honor given in OEF, OIF conflicts
http://www.navytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-1437423.php
Just one Medal of Honor given in OEF, OIF conflicts
By Tom Vanden Brook
USA Today
Deceember 29, 2005
American troops have been fighting and dying in Iraq and Afghanistan for more
than four years, but just one soldier from those wars has received the Medal of
Honor, the nation’s highest military honor for bravery. The lack of such medals
— by comparison, two were awarded for fighting in Somalia — reflects today’s
unconventional warfare and the superior weaponry of U.S. forces, military
experts say. It’s not that today’s troops lack valor, but they lack
opportunities to display it in the extraordinary way that would merit the Medal
of Honor.
“The situations today are less likely to warrant the Medal of Honor than in past
conflicts,” says Nicholas Kehoe, president of the Congressional Medal of Honor
Foundation. “That doesn’t mean our troops aren’t acting courageously or even
heroically.” Kehoe, a retired Air Force lieutenant general and not a recipient
of the medal, says the dominance of air power and the use of such tools as
night-vision goggles give U.S. forces huge advantages.
“We don’t charge up hills with machine gun nests anymore,” he says. The
insurgents’ tactics in Iraq — remotely detonated explosives and suicide bombers
— also mean U.S. troops often don’t have the opportunity to respond heroically.
“We don’t have full frontal battles, like the Battle of the Bulge,” says David
Burrelli, a specialist in national defense for the Congressional Research
Service.Charles Moskos, a military sociologist at Northwestern University,
points out that patrolling where insurgents plant bombs takes courage.
However, it doesn’t require the out-of-the-ordinary valor required for the Medal
of Honor, he says. “It reflects the nature of this war,” Moskos says. “Not the
lack of heroes.” The Medal of Honor, at the “tip of the pyramid” of honors
available to U.S. forces, is meant to be awarded infrequently, Burrelli says.
Troops receive the medal only for risking their lives in acts so courageous that
failing to perform them would not trigger any criticism, he says.
It is awarded by the president in the name of Congress and is often referred to
as the Congressional Medal of Honor. The Army’s second top honor, the
Distinguished Service Cross, has been awarded twice to soldiers fighting in
Iraq. Next is the Silver Star; 174 have been issued, according to the Army. In
Afghanistan, there has been one Distinguished Service Cross and 37 Silver Stars.
The Navy has awarded three Navy Crosses and 30 Silver Stars since Sept. 11,
2001. “The things you have to do to win (a Medal of Honor) are so rare, so
unusual,” Burrelli says. “Millions of people have served in the armed forces,
and only a couple thousand have received one. What they would have to do would
be so phenomenal, so over the top, that it just doesn’t happen very often.” It
has happened in recent conflicts. Master Sgt. Gary Gordon and Sgt. 1st Class
Randall Shughart received the award posthumously.
They protected critically wounded comrades whose helicopter had crashed in
hostile territory in Mogadishu, Somalia, on Oct. 3, 1993. Their heroism was
depicted in the movie “Black Hawk Down.” There were no Medals of Honor awarded
during the Gulf War. After weeks of bombing, allied ground forces whipped the
Iraqi army in a 100-hour campaign.
The most recent act to merit the Medal of Honor came on April 4, 2003. On that
day, Sgt. 1st Class Paul R. Smith, his position near the Baghdad airport nearly
overrun, hastily organized a defense. Under fire, Smith climbed onto a damaged
armored vehicle and attacked the enemy with a .50-caliber machine gun. He killed
as many as 50 enemy soldiers and helped save the lives of 100 Americans. On
April 4, 2005, President Bush presented the Medal of Honor to Smith’s widow,
Birgit. “It doesn’t surprise me that more people haven’t gotten it,” says Birgit
Smith, 39, of Holiday, Fla. “It’s so hard to do.”
There could be more troops from Iraq and Afghanistan who have been nominated for
the Medal of Honor. The Defense Department does not comment on nominations,
Burrelli says. It can take years to confirm that a Medal of Honor should be
awarded, Kehoe says. Moskos says the lack of them might be coloring perception
of the Iraq war.
Some names often associated with the war are infamous or tainted by controversy.
Moskos refers to Pfc. Lynndie England, who received a three-year sentence for
abusing Iraqi prisoners, and Jessica Lynch, who says the government exaggerated
aspects of her capture and release in Iraq to boost confidence in the war.
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)
Any man or woman who may be asked in this century what they did to make life
worthwhile in their lifetime....can respond with a great deal of pride and
satisfaction, "I served a career in the United States Navy."