Semper Fi: Fallen Marines to be awarded the Navy Cross; UPDATED

Semper Fi: Fallen Marines to be awarded the Navy Cross; UPDATED

Tearjerker warning for this story:

The sun had barely risen when the two sentries spotted a 20-foot-long truck headed toward the gate, weaving with increasing speed through the concrete barriers. Two Iraqi police officers assigned to the gate ran for their lives. So did several Iraqi police on the adjacent street.

Yale and Haerter tried to wave off the truck, but it kept coming. They opened fire, Yale with a machine gun, Haerter with an M-16. Their bullets peppered the radiator and windshield. The truck slowed but kept rolling.

A few dozen feet from the gate, the truck exploded. Investigators found that it was loaded with 2,000 pounds of explosives and that its driver, his hand on a “dead-man switch,” was determined to commit suicide and slaughter Marines and Iraqi police.

… Haerter was dead; Yale was dying.

Three Marines about 300 feet away were injured. So were eight Iraqi police and two dozen civilians.

But several dozen other nearby Marines and Iraqi police, while shaken, were unhurt. A Black Hawk helicopter was summoned in a futile attempt to get Yale to a field hospital in time. A sheet was placed over Haerter.

When it was considered safe to take Haerter’s body to a second helicopter, his section leader insisted he be covered by an American flag. “We did not want him carried out with just a sheet,” said Staff Sgt. Kenneth Grooms.

… When Marine technicians restored a damaged security camera, the images were undeniable.

While Iraqi police fled, Haerter and Yale had never flinched and never stopped firing as the Mercedes truck — the same model used in the Beirut bombing — sped directly toward them.

Without their steadfastness, the truck would probably have penetrated the compound before it exploded, and 50 or more Marines and Iraqis would have been killed. The incident happened in just six seconds.

“No time to talk it over; no time to call the lieutenant; no time to think about their own lives or even the American and Iraqi lives they were protecting,” Kelly said. “More than enough time, however, to do their duty. They never hesitated or tried to escape.”

Kelly nominated the two for the Navy Cross, the second-highest award for combat bravery for Marines and sailors. Even by the standards expected of Marine “grunts,” their bravery was exceptional, Kelly said.

The Haerter and Yale families will receive the medals early next year.

On the night after the bombing, Kelly wrote to each family that though he never knew its Marine, “I will remember him, and pray for him and for all those who mourn his loss, for the rest of my life.”

A motorcade escorted Haerter’s casket through Sag Harbor on Long Island, as residents lined the streets and wept and saluted.

Yale’s casket made the 83-mile trip from the airport at Richmond, Va., to Farmville with an honor guard provided by the Patriot Guard Riders, a motorcycle group of former service members.

… As both battalions train for possible deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan, the deaths of their comrades are still in their thoughts.

Yale was always trying to boost the morale of his buddies, said Lance Cpl. Brandon Creely, 21, of Boise, Idaho. “Whenever I was down, he’d tell a joke, tell me it’s not as bad as it seems.”

Staff Sgt. Grooms, 28, said he knows how Haerter should be remembered.

“He was a hero,” Grooms said, “and a damn fine person.”

Both of those men were heroes, and a reminder of the sacrifices those we serve are all to willing to make for us. My thoughts and prayers go out to their families.

There is no greater love than this.

Semper Fi, Marines.

Hat Tip: DrewM at Ace of Spades

UPDATE: America’s North Shore Journal has a list of the top ten men who inspired them this year, all brave servicemen who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. Make sure to check it out — some of them you’ve heard of, but I’d bet most of them you haven’t. Go read their stories.

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2 Comments
  • JW M says:

    What has this country done to deserve men such as these?
    These two Marines make me proud to be an American.

    “Do your duty, you can do no more, you should wish to do no less”
    Robert E. Lee in a letter to his son.

    They did their duty.

    “And Though you be done with to death, what then?
    If you battled the best you could;
    If you played your part in the world of men,
    Why, the Critic will call it good.
    Death comes with a crawl, or comes with a pounce,
    And whether he’s slow or spry,
    It isn’t the fact that you’re dead that counts,
    But only, how did you die?”

    Edmund Vance Cooke

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