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Paul Smith

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by basso, Mar 24, 2006.

  1. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    who? wonder why I have't seen his name before:

    http://libertyjustincase.com/2006/03/24/medals/

    --
    WASHINGTON (Army News Service, March 30, 2005) — The White House announced March 29 that President George W. Bush will honor Sgt. 1st Class Paul R. Smith by presenting his family the Medal of Honor on April 4, the second anniversary of his courageous actions during the Battle of Baghdad Airport.

    Smith is the first to receive the militarys highest award for actions in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

    In action near the Baghdad Airport on April 4, 2003, Smith, a Soldier in Company B, 11th Engineer Battalion, working with units of the 3rd Infantry Division, was tasked to build a compound to hold enemy prisoners, when his small force came under attack by more than 100 enemies.

    Smith threw two grenades and fired rocket launchers at the enemy before manning a .50-caliber machine gun on an M-113 Armored Personnel Carrier to protect his troops. While engaging an enemy attacking from three sides, Smith fired more than 300 rounds from the machinegun before being killed.

    He prevented the enemy from overtaking his units position, protected his Task Forces flank, and defended the lives of more than 100 Soldiers, according to his award citation.

    Smith was serving as a platoon sergeant in Bravo Company, 11th Engineer Battalion, Task Force 2-7, 3rd Infantry Division. He had been serving in the Army since October 1989.

    [​IMG]
     
  2. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    searching "paul smith meadl of honor" on the google news site returned 40 hits, or which only one on the first page had anything to do with him, and that was from a whitehouse press release. i supposed if he'd snapped some pics in abu graib he'd be a household name by now.
     
  3. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Contributing Member

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    Because the White House spin doctors missed their deadline.

    Next.
     
  4. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Contributing Member

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    I suppose if you had any power to think for yourself, you'd see what a waste of manpower and money Vietraq has become.
     
  5. SamFisher

    SamFisher Contributing Member

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    Note the date on your article.
     
  6. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    nice.
     
  7. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Contributing Member

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    Nice and true.

    Tell us, basso, what constitutes "victory" in Iraq?

    Inquiring minds want to know!

    Thanks.....:D
     
  8. vlaurelio

    vlaurelio Contributing Member

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    good luck!

    i asked a similar question in another thread but got no response til now
     
  9. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    kind of my point. a year later, and still no one knows the guy's name, yet eveyone knows lyndie england.
     
  10. Saint Louis

    Saint Louis Member

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    Damn you Fox News for only telling bad news!
     
  11. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    http://opinionjournal.com/federation/feature/?id=110008153

    --
    Common Name, Uncommon Valor
    The story of Paul Smith, the Iraq War's only Medal of Honor recipient so far.

    BY RALPH KINNEY BENNETT
    Wednesday, March 29, 2006 12:01 a.m.

    Since his days growing up in Tampa, Fla., the lanky kid with the slightly mischievous smile had wanted to be a soldier. By this bright morning, April 4, 2003, Sgt. First Class Paul Ray Smith had more than fulfilled his dream. He had served 15 of his 33 years in the U.S. Army, including three tours of duty in harm's way--in the Persian Gulf, Bosnia and Kosovo.

    Now all his training, all his experience, all the instincts that had made him a model soldier, were about to be put to the test. With 16 men from his First Platoon, B Company, 11th Engineer Battalion, Sgt. Smith was under attack by about 100 troops of the Iraqi Republican Guard.

    "We're in a world of hurt," he muttered.

    That "world" was a dusty, triangular walled compound about half the size of a football field, near the Saddam Hussein International Airport, 11 miles from Baghdad. Sgt. Smith's engineers, or "sappers," had broken through the 10-foot-high concrete-block southern wall with a military bulldozer and begun turning the compound into a temporary "pen" for Iraqi prisoners as U.S. forces pressed their attack on the airport.

    While they were working, guards posted at a small aluminum gate in the north corner of the triangle had spotted the large Iraqi force approaching the compound from the north and west. Sgt. Smith had just run up to join the guards when all hell broke loose. They came under furious fire from machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars.

    The lightly armed work detail needed fire support. Sgt. Smith called for a Bradley fighting vehicle. Within minutes the tank-like Bradley roared through the breached wall and broke through the aluminum gate, taking a position just beyond it and opening up on the attackers with its rapid-fire 25mm Bushmaster cannon.

    Sgt. Smith's men took positions around the Bradley. He could see Iraqi soldiers north, east and west of him, streaming out along his flanks. He called for a nearby M-133 armored personnel carrier, to give additional fire support with its M2 .50-caliber heavy machine gun.

    As the APC passed through the breached wall, its commander, Sgt. Louis Berwald, realized that flanking Iraqi troops had occupied a roofed guard tower to his left, just outside the southwest corner of the compound, and were firing from it. He raked the tower with his M2, then moved on through the compound to a point just outside the north gate behind the Bradley.

    By now the Iraqis were concentrating their fire against Sgt. Smith's small force by the gate. An RPG round hit the Bradley, and at almost the same moment a mortar round hit the APC, wounding its three occupants.

    Several additional RPG rounds hit the Bradley, which by now had run low on ammunition. The Bradley retreated through the compound, exiting south through the breached wall. With one armored vehicle gone and the other out of action, Sgt. Smith's men had lost any firepower advantage they might have had.

    Sgt. Smith could have withdrawn as well, back south through the compound. But beyond it was a lightly defended aid station crowded with 100 combat casualties and medical personnel. To protect it from being overrun, Sgt. Smith chose to fight no matter what the odds.

    Under intense fire, Sgt. Smith's men heroically extracted all three wounded crewmen from the APC. Sgt. Smith then entered the vehicle, ordering Spc. Michael Seaman to join him as driver and "keep me loaded" with ammo belts. Sgt. Smith popped up out of the turret hatch and grabbed the grips of the .50-caliber machine gun mounted on top.

    The Iraqis were practically on top of him. Coolly grasping the situation, Sgt. Smith ordered Spc. Seaman to back the APC south into the compound to a position half way down the eastern wall. There he could arc the big machine gun back and forth, from the gate entrance to the north, all along the western wall of the triangle, to the Iraqi occupied tower in the southwest corner to his left.

    To fire the machine gun, Sgt. Smith had to stand in the APC's main hatch, his body exposed from the waist up to a withering fire coming at him from three directions. On the ground through the blur of combat, Sgt. Matthew Keller saw Sgt. Smith grimly firing measured bursts from atop the APC even as a hail of bullets hit around him.

    Sgt. Keller yelled at him to get out. Sgt. Smith looked back at him and with a slight shake of his head, made a cutting motion across his throat with his right hand. Sgt. Keller would always remember the look in his eyes. "There was no fear in him whatsoever."

    As Spc. Seaman, crouching in the adjoining hatch, fed him ammunition belts, Sgt. Smith directed an expert and murderous fire with the long-barreled M2, hitting Iraqis who tried to enter the compound through the gate or over the wall. He tried also to suppress renewed fire coming from the Iraqis in the guard tower to his left.

    Finally, one of his fellow sappers, First Sgt. Timothy Campbell, led a small fire team which stole up to the tower and killed all Iraqis inside. But by this time, Sgt. Smith's machine gun had fallen silent. The attack had been broken. Nearly 50 Iraqi dead lay all over the area. Others were in retreat. But Sgt. Smith was now slumped in the turret hatch, blood soaking the front of his uniform.

    Spc. Seaman jumped out of the vehicle in tears. "I told him we should just leave," he said. Pvt. Gary Evans drove the APC out of the compound at high speed to the nearby aid station.

    But it was too late. When Medic Michelle Chavez tried to remove Sgt. Smith's helmet, she realized that it was holding his head together. A bullet--one of the last fired from the tower--had entered through Sgt. Smith's neck and traveled up into his brain, shattering his skull from the inside. There were 13 bullet holes peppered over his armored vest--the impact from any one of them enough to knock a man down. The vest's ceramic armor inserts, back and front, had been cracked in numerous places.

    "Sapper Seven," the wiry, hollow-cheeked guy who had been so hard on his men in training, so exacting, so insistent on "doing it right"; the guy who had led them into battle on the first day of the war with a rock-'n'-roll tape blaring from his Humvee; the guy who had personally got down on his knees in front of their convoy to patiently, carefully extract the deadly mines when they ran into a minefield near the Karbala Gap, was dead.

    A chaplain and a sergeant in dress uniforms came to Birgit Smith's home near Fort Stewart, Ga., late on the night of April 4 to break the terrible news. Mrs. Smith, the German girl Paul had met and married during his tour of duty in Western Europe in 1992, listened numbly to her visitors. She fought the growing dread and pain by grasping at a desperate hope:

    "Our name is so common," she said, tears welling up in her eyes. "Maybe it's a mistake."

    There was no mistake. Paul Ray Smith had given his life protecting his men and his position. He had almost single-handedly blunted an overwhelming attack which might well have overrun the nearby aid station.

    "There are two ways to come home, stepping off the plane and being carried off the plane," Sgt. Smith had written in an unsent email to his parents. "It doesn't matter how I come home, because I am prepared to give all that I am to insure that all my boys make it home." He had been the only American killed in the courtyard fight.

    On April 4, 2005, exactly two years after his selfless action, his wife and their children David and Jessica stood in the White House as President Bush presented them the nation's highest decoration for bravery, the Medal of Honor.

    It was the first awarded in the Iraq War. Paul Ray Smith had indelibly marked his "common name" on history's small bright roll of those forever remembered for their uncommon valor.

    Mr. Bennett writes the "American Heroes" series for the American Security Council.
     
  12. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Contributing Member

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    And, from the "American Security Council" website:

    ABOUT US - "The role of the American Security Council is to disseminate general information, in a non-partisan manner, in support of the United States of America's foreign policy, national security and international economic agenda"

    Pure, 100% drivel.

    It is completely impossible to achieve their role in this day and age, and that is why they "disseminate information" in a completely partisan manner. Check out their website and you will understand quite quickly.

    Basso, you are the funniest thing going in the D&D. Keep those fingers, toes, eyelashes and hair follicles in your crumbling dyke, Dutchboy. I need the laughs!
     
  13. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    interesting that your comment focused on the author and not on his subject. rather indicative of the liberal mindset i'd say, and why liberals have lost the last three elections.
     
  14. SamFisher

    SamFisher Contributing Member

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    My point was that google news doesn't go back further than a few months, generally. Of course she's going to get more google news hits recently since the other trial just wrapped up.

    Anyway, do you think a guy who has a 50 man body count from two years ago going to receive a big media blitz by the Pentagon and/or the Bush Administration? I doubt it - they know that it would end up on Al Jazeera. Brave or not,that's just not on their agenda.

    Also are you saying that there wasn't enough fawning media coverage in favor of the war in 2003 when this occurred, about how everything was a massive success, anybody who ever doubted the war was proven to be an idiot and a traitor forever, the president was on track to be the greatest ever, and assorted triumphalism, mission accomplished, etc? Because you're wrong, if that's what you're saying.

    There was plenty of premature media coverage and chicken-counting, which unfortunatley reinforced a lot of the mismanagment and ineptitude that ensued later and got thousands killed.....yet as you aptly point out - at least your chosen party has SCOREBOARD from 2004!
     
    #14 SamFisher, Mar 29, 2006
    Last edited: Mar 29, 2006
  15. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Contributing Member

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    I'm just following the rightwing nutjob mantra du jour of the past two decades:

    Don't trust the media. They lie.
     
  16. Bullard4Life

    Bullard4Life Member

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    or maybe if you spelled "medal" correctly when you did your google search...
     
  17. basso

    basso Contributing Member
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    are you saying the story is false? ie, paul smith didn't receive the medal of honor, or the story of his heroics is somehow bogus? i don't understand your point.
     
  18. SamFisher

    SamFisher Contributing Member

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    Well while we're on that, what the hell is your point? That we should be bombarded with 2 year old human interest pieces about a brave guy in order to soothe collective guilt about the f-k up that Iraq has become and boost the president's poll numbers, or that it's unfair that a guy who killed 50 iraqis is less publicized than the torture scandal. Christ basso, it's unfair that an ass like Bush who was born rich and has had things handed too him all his life gets more publicity than somebody who founded a homeless shelter or something. But that's life.
     
  19. rhadamanthus

    rhadamanthus Contributing Member

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    That was awesome.
     
  20. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Contributing Member

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    Actually I remember hearing about him back in 2003. There were a few stories about that battle on major media like ABC and NPR. I also heard a story about him a few weeks ago on NPR when consideration of the Medal of Honor was coming up.

    If anyone deserves the Medal of Honor Seargent Smith certainly does for his self sacrifice.
     

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