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McClatchy Casts Doubt on Medal of Honor Winner Dakota Meyer

Whoa. Jonathan Landy of McClatchy reports:

WASHINGTON — With Dakota Meyer standing at attention in his dress uniform, sweat glistening on his forehead under the television lights, President Barack Obama extolled the former Marine corporal for the “extraordinary actions” that had earned him the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest award for valor.

Obama told the audience in the White House East Room on Sept. 15 that Meyer had driven into the heart of a savage ambush in eastern Afghanistan against orders. He’d killed insurgents at near-point-blank range, twice leapt from his gun turret to rescue two dozen Afghan soldiers and saved the lives of 13 U.S. service members as he fought to recover the bodies of four comrades, the president said.

But there’s a problem with this account: Crucial parts that the Marine Corps publicized and Obama described are untrue, unsubstantiated or exaggerated, according to dozens of military documents McClatchy examined.

Sworn statements by Meyer and others who participated in the battle indicate that he didn’t save the lives of 13 U.S. service members, leave his vehicle to scoop up 24 Afghans on his first two rescue runs or lead the final push to retrieve the four dead Americans. Moreover, it’s unclear from the documents whether Meyer disobeyed orders when he entered the Ganjgal Valley on Sept. 8, 2009.

The statements also offer no proof that the 23-year-old Kentucky native “personally killed at least eight Taliban insurgents,” as the account on the Marine Corps website says. The driver of Meyer’s vehicle attested to seeing “a single enemy go down.”

What’s most striking is that all this probably was unnecessary. Meyer, the 296th Marine to earn the medal, by all accounts deserved his nomination. At least seven witnesses attested to him performing heroic deeds “in the face of almost certain death.”

Braving withering fire, he repeatedly returned to the ambush site with Army Capt. William Swenson and others to retrieve Afghan casualties and the dead Americans. He suffered a shrapnel wound in one arm and was sent home after the battle with combat-related stress. Meyer’s commander, Lt. Col. Kevin Williams, commended him for acts of “conspicuous gallantry at the risk of his life … above and beyond the call of duty.”

But an exhaustive assessment by a McClatchy correspondent who was embedded with the unit and survived the ambush found that the Marines’ official accounts of Meyer’s deeds — retold in a book, countless news reports and on U.S. military websites — were embellished. They’re marred by errors and inconsistencies, ascribe actions to Meyer that are unverified or didn’t happen and create precise, almost novelistic detail out of the jumbled and contradictory recollections of the Marines, soldiers and pilots engaged in battle.

The approval of Meyer’s medal — in an unusually short time — came as lawmakers and serving and former officers pressed the military services and the Pentagon to award more Medals of Honor because of the relatively few conferred in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Only 10 of the decorations have been awarded since 2001, seven of them posthumously.

Meyer is the first living Marine since the Vietnam War to be awarded the honor. It was first bestowed in 1863.

The rest here.

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COMMENTS   6

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   12/14/11 23:36

I seriously don't know how anyone can write up an "accurate" account of a Medal of Honor incident. By definition, nearly everyone is pinned down, wounded or dead, the chain of command isn't functioning, and anything else that comes to mind when using the word "chaos" applies.
I expect all you know is you're sure you're going to die, then something unexpectedly saves you and you're extremely happy. As an officer you do the write-up as best you can in the middle of piecing together your unit, visiting the wounded, writing letters to the next of kin and trying to explain to your superiors that you weren't at fault for the tactical situation.
I've seen what Meyer has said -- at least what the Press printed. Did not look like showboating to me at all, in fact exemplary humility. Like all survivors, he expressed guilt that the dead weren't receiving the MOH.
Overall, this is why one must typically lose some body parts to receive the MOH. Any suspicions regarding the actual "courage" or craziness of the recipient are overcome by not wanting to have suffered as much bodily damage, and the appropriate instinct to rely on the word of the man's comrades. This is not a John Kerry situation of writing up one's own Purple Hearts.
This young man is a true American, thrust into difficult circumstances in combat and now facing the nastiness of America itself. It's no accident that in the Marine Corps we used the phrase "slimy civilians" on a routine basis, at least in the bad ol' days when I served. The kid's stuck with the burden of the MOH. Leave him alone. I pray that he will look to Our Lord because honestly that burden is otherwise suffocating and crushing. His life was changed forever and all he was doing was his duty.

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 RTP
   12/15/11 08:33

Isn't this the same guy who sued a former employer for defaming his character and spreadhing malicious rumors?

Makes me wonder who/what inspired McClatchy to write this story.

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   12/15/11 10:10

I wonder if McClatchy ever heard the term "fog of war."

Did McClatchy ever do such an analysis of John Kerry's medals?

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Former SSG
   12/15/11 10:34

This may be a case of "whistle-blower retaliation." He exposed BAE' s business, they fired him, he sued...

I hope it works out well for him; to me, he is a hero.

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MarkT
   12/15/11 11:13

Amen, Evanston2, amen.

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   12/15/11 23:11

MarkT, Thanks. I was a career USMC officer but just a paper pusher. That said, I've always wondered how anyone could possibly write up a medal for combat heroism. As another commenter said on this "thread" -- fog of war.
Today on Yahoo! there was an update on Jessica Lynch. She was the victim of hype. Some of it by well-meaning Public Affairs types who wanted to say she was captured while firing without any real evidence to back it up. Now she claims her weapon "jammed" (if the Yahoo! article is accurate) which means she (a) didn't clean it properly, (b) didn't lock & load properly, or (c) accidentally kept it on "safe." Again, we'll never know and to some extent I doubt she can remember clearly. Yet, do any of us question whether she did her duty? Not I. The Army puts motor t personnel in harm's way much too often, in fact later on in the war the IED threat was obviously greatest for them. These units are supposedly "non-combat" and have many women. While I do not believe that women should be in a combat theater due to the lack of clear, linear warfare in the modern age, I nonetheless wish Ms. Lynch were treated with decency and respect by all of us.
Overall, it's sad that cheap accusations are given such currency in 21st Century America. Yet, what are we to expect from The People We've Been Waiting For, the 99%, the Yes We Can types who evidently can't do anything but complain and blame others?
There were occasions during my brief stint in Iraq when I had to explain to enlisted personnel why the Press was treating the operation with such disdain. Explaining such was like telling kids that "No, there is no such thing as Santa. Sorry."
Having joined during the Cold War, I had no such illusions. It really is obscene how Dakota Meyer and Ms. Lynch have been treated. Political pawns who were just trying to deal with stuff that I do not know if I could handle...(LtCol, USMC (Ret.))

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