Special Forces Master Sgt Awarded DSC for low crawl to save fellow Soldiers
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Special Forces Master Sgt Awarded DSC for low crawl to save... Expand / Collapse
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Posted 5/1/2008 4:38 PM


Seasoned Vet

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Digg http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/05/ap_bragg_dsc_050108/

news/2008/05/ap_bragg_dsc_

Bragg E-8 gets DSC for crawl to save soldier


By Kevin Maurer - The Associated Press

Posted : Thursday May 1, 2008 8:11:56 EDT
  
FORT BRAGG, N.C. — A Special Forces soldier who crawled 200 feet while being fired upon to save a wounded colleague, then led a group of besieged soldiers to safety, received the Army’s second-highest award for valor Wednesday.

Master Sgt. Brendan O’Connor, assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group, received the Distinguished Service Cross in a ceremony Wednesday at Fort Bragg for his actions in Afghanistan.

“He made a conscious decision to do whatever it took to get to our wounded soldiers,” said Maj. Sheffield Ford, the team’s commander during the June 2006 battle in southern Afghanistan.

O’Connor, 47, said he doesn’t believe he is a hero. He said that police officers and firefighters are courageous every day and that he was only completing his mission.

“I am being recognized for a moment of courage,” said O’Connor, whose wife and four children attended the ceremony. “I firmly believe other soldiers in my place would have done the same thing.”

With his Special Forces team surrounded by Taliban fighters, O’Connor volunteered to lead a relief force to rescue two wounded colleagues. He got to the edge of a field, but intense Taliban machine-gun fire made him turn back. After shedding his body armor so he could press himself flat in a ditch, he crawled the last 200 feet to the wounded soldiers.

Taliban fire was so close that it sheared off the blades of tall grass around the ditch as he crawled.

Finally reaching the two wounded soldiers, he stabilized them and led the relief force back to safety.

Navy Adm. Eric T. Olson, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, and Army Lt. Gen. Robert W. Wagner, commanding general of the Army Special Operations Command, presented the award to O’Connor.

Olson, who recounted the battle in his speech, described O’Connor’s actions as legendary.

“Master Sgt. O’Connor exemplifies the spirit and ethos of these warriors,” Olson said. “We stand in quiet awe and in the deepest admiration.”

Wednesday’s ceremony marked only the second time the DSC has been presented to a soldier for actions in Afghanistan. The award is second in achievement only to the Medal of Honor.


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 Out of every 100 men, ten shouldn't even be there, Eighty are just targets, Nine are the real fighters, and we are lucky to have them, for they make the battle. Ah, but the one, one is a warrior, and he will bring the others back." - Hericletus, circa 500 BC

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Post #257806
Posted 5/1/2008 5:12 PM


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 7th SFG (A) Soldier named "USASOC Medic of the Year"

Dec 21, 2006

BY Staff Sgt. Cain S. Claxton, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne)
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Master Sgt. Brendan O'Connor, a medic assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), was recognized as the U.S. Army Special Operations Command Medic of the Year at the Special Operations Medical Conference in Tampa Bay, Fla., Dec. 1. Photo by Staff Sgt. Cain S. Claxton, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne)-
c Affairs

FORT BRAGG, N.C. (USASOC News Service, Dec. 18, 2006) - A Fort Bragg Special Forces Soldier was recognized as the U.S. Army Special Operations Command Medic of the Year at the Special Operations Medical Conference in Tampa Bay, Fla., Dec. 1.

Master Sgt. Brendan O'Connor, a medic assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), received the honor for his battlefield performance on June 24.

According to a memorandum recommending O'Connor for the award, the 7th Group medic was leading a Quick Reaction Force to link up with a pair of "wounded and isolated Soldiers ... pinned down by enemy fire."

O'Connor repeatedly exposed himself to heavy fire, even low-crawling 80 meters over an open field to reach the wounded Soldiers. He did it without body armor, a decision O'Connor made in order to keep as low to the ground as possible, carrying as many medical supplies as possible.

"You don't leave people out there, end of story," O'Connor said.

"With rounds coming within inches," O'Connor navigated the open field, climbed over a wall and picked his way through vineyard rows undetected by an enemy element moving ahead of him, according to the report.

O'Connor reached the hemmed-in Soldiers and began treating their wounds. Several times he alternated between using medical supplies to using his weapon, as Taliban fighters threatened to overrun their position.

"The Taliban ... had gotten close enough to verbally taunt them with threats of capture," stated the memorandum. "The Taliban fought relentlessly and continued to reinforce the element, attempting to kill or capture the small group of Coalition fighters."

The small group held off the Taliban advance long enough to evacuate the casualties to better cover, where O'Connor continued to treat them.

"That was a tough day," O'Connor said. "We were in a fight."

Cpt. Sheffield Ford, who was O'Connor's team leader in Afghanistan, wrote the memorandum detailing his senior medic's life-saving efforts during the 17½-hour gun battle.

"There are so many words to describe it," Ford said of O'Connor's behavior in the firefight. "He was going to do anything and everything he could do to save them. He's a true hero."

O'Connor, a 24-year veteran of Special Forces, said he was uneasy about receiving any individual honor for his actions that day, which ultimately saved the life of one of his team members.

"Anyone would have done the same thing in my position," O'Connor said. "It was a team effort."

That "team" included Master Sgt. Thomas Maholic, O'Connor's team sergeant, and Staff Sgt. Joseph F. Fuerst III, a Florida National Guard infantryman attached to the Special Forces Operational Detachment Alpha to train the Afghan army. Both were killed in the firefight.

As a tribute to Maholic, and on his behalf, O'Connor accepted the award. "Thom was a medic, too," he said about Maholic's occupational specialty before becoming team sergeant. "He held the back door open for all of us. He was killed holding the back door open."

The "door," a lane running between fields and mud compounds, was the team's only way back to their patrol base, and Maholic was killed defending it.

Retired Col. Al Moloff, SOMA president and Master Sgt. Samuel Rodriguez, Army Special Operations Command senior enlisted medic, presented the award to O'Connor who along with his wife, Margaret, escorted Maholic's widow, Wendy, to the SOMA conference.

"He wanted to do it to keep sergeant Maholic's memory alive. That's a credit to him, the type of person he is," Moloff and Rodriguez wrote.

The award and the manner in which he accepted it "speaks very well for his character," said Sergeant Maj. William Zaiser, a close friend of O'Connor and comrade in 7th Group.

"His views on military service are very heartfelt," Zaiser said. "He's probably the most patriotic man I've ever met. And he was the finest medic of any ODA that I had ever been on, and not just because of his medical skills."

"The little things he did had a huge impact (on the team). Almost every free minute he had, he would spend trying to improve the quality of life of the team members," Zaiser said. "(O'Connor) was absolutely tireless in his efforts to not only be the best medic, but ODA team member."

The award recognizes Army special operations medics "willing to do anything to save their comrades, their friends," Rodriguez said. "It doesn't have to be an act of heroism. Guys have also earned the award for cumulative service."

"The reason why we do this is to pay tribute to the dedication and sacrifices that our guys are making for each other. (O'Connor) is an example of that."

"I think given the same circumstance, we all would do what we had to do. I should say, I hope we all would."

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 Out of every 100 men, ten shouldn't even be there, Eighty are just targets, Nine are the real fighters, and we are lucky to have them, for they make the battle. Ah, but the one, one is a warrior, and he will bring the others back." - Hericletus, circa 500 BC

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Post #257807
Posted 5/1/2008 6:43 PM


Stare Master

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Topic opened yesterday.

http://www.paratrooper.net/commo/Topic257641-24-1.aspx

Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you, Jesus Christ and the American GI.  One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

"History teaches that when you become indifferent and lose the will to fight someone who has the will to fight will take over." COLONEL BULL SIMONS

Post #257815
Posted 5/2/2008 4:59 AM


Trooper

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Outstanding!!!!

"American Parachutists...devils in baggy pants...are less than 100 meters from my outpost line. I can't sleep at night; they pop up from nowhere and we never know when or how they will strike next. Seems like the black-hearted devils are everywhere..."
(An entry in a German officer's diary found after the Battle of Anzio)
Post #257830
Posted 5/2/2008 7:03 AM


Regular Joe

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Great to see an SF medic being recognized for doing his job well.  I gotta think that he must have been promoted since that action occured.  On a team the "Medical Supervisor" is and SFC.  There is only one slot for an E-8 medic in each Bn and that is a support function.  Or at least that is the way it was when I was in. 

De Oppresso Liber
Post #257846
Posted 5/5/2008 7:04 AM


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It doesn't seem like it was a "moment" of bravery, the battle lasted 17 hours! He took off his body armor and crawled through enemy fire to render aid. Gee if he'd only died he might have recieved the MOH. Seriously WTF does a "live" person have to do to be considered for the MOH? This is well within the realm of what others have been awarded the MOH for in the past! As usual the SF medics are conducting themselves like the Warriors they are and very humbly accepting the thanks of their fellow Soldiers and Country. There are many instances of the SF guys doing things that others consider acts of bravery to them it's just part of the job. Hooah!

Stand in the door! 

                                     

                                                                                          

Post #258005
Posted 5/7/2008 3:18 PM


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Care Under Fire!!!  Congrats!

Doc Hernandez
Post #258250
Posted 5/15/2008 9:17 PM


Regular Joe

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Everytime I read this story I'm struck by MSG O'Connor's selflessness. Thanks for posting.
Post #258694