Obama on Medal of Honor Recipient:
I Like This Guy
A U.S. Army staff sergeant who stepped into
the line of fire to help a pair of comrades on the Afghan
battlefield embodies the principle of never leaving a fallen comrade
behind, President Obama said Tuesday while awarding the Medal of
Honor to Salvatore Giunta.
Obama called Giunta a solider who is "as humble
as he is heroic," and a low-key guy who demonstrated the courage
that made him an example of honor defined by his fellow comrades.
"Staff Sgt. Giunta,
repeatedly and without hesitation, you charged forward through
extreme enemy fire, and embodied the ethos that says 'I will never
leave a fallen comrade," Obama said. "You may believe that you don't
deserve this honor, but it was your fellow soldiers who recommended
you for it. In fact, your commander specifically said in his
recommendation that you lived up to the standards of the most
decorated American soldier of World War II, Audie Murphy, who
famously repelled an overwhelming enemy attack by himself for one
simple reason, 'they were killing my friends.'"
Plus, Obama said, he really enjoyed meeting
Giunta. Praising the
soldier's family, Obama also suggested Giunta was destined to be a
soldier. "It was his
mother, after all, who apparently taught him as a young boy in
small-town Iowa how to remove the screen from his bedroom window in
case of fire. What she didn't know was that by teaching Sal how to
jump from his bedroom and sneaking off in the dead of night, she was
unleashing a future paratrooper who would one day fight in the
rugged mountains of Afghanistan 7,000 miles away," Obama said.
Giunta is the first living service member from
the Iraq or Afghanistan wars to be so honored. Seven others have
received the award posthumously. It is the first time in 40 years a
recipient of the medal has come to the White House to accept the
award. The Army says
Giunta was a rifle team leader in eastern Afghanistan's Korengal
Valley when his squad was split in two after an ambush by
insurgents. While under fire, Giunta pulled a fellow soldier to
cover and rescued another who was being dragged away by the enemy.
Giunta was hit twice during the onslaught, with
one round hitting his body armor and another destroying his weapon.
-FoxNews.com
|
|