Posted on 07/02/2004 3:10:07 PM PDT by swilhelm73
You have never heard of Brian Chontosh. That's a shame. Not for Brian Chontosh, who I suspect couldn't care less. But for you.
In March of last year, Chontosh was a 29-year-old Marine lieutenant. He was leading his platoon on Highway 1, just outside Baghdad, when his troops came under heavy fire. He ordered his vehicle to head directly for the enemy trench, jumped out and began firing with his rifle and pistol, before running out of ammunition. The citation for Chontosh's Navy Cross picks up the narrative: "With complete disregard for his safety, he twice picked up discarded enemy rifles and continued his ferocious attack.... When his audacious attack ended, he had cleared over 200 meters of the enemy trench, killing more than 20 enemy soldiers and wounding several others."
This is a battlefield exploit worthy of someone you have heard of, Sgt. Alvin York. He almost single-handedly killed 25 Germans and captured 132 "enemy combatants" yes, they existed before the Bush administration in 1918. You might know of York because he was played by Gary Cooper in the eponymous movie about him. Or maybe because of the half-dozen books that are still in print about him. Or maybe just because you know some history and he used to be a household name.
We have collectively lost our ability to make popular battlefield heroes like York. With a few exceptions say, the extraordinary Pat Tillman, who left the NFL to join the Army Rangers people become famous in our wars by being victims or villains. Jessica Lynch was captured by Iraqis and rescued, an ordeal to be sure, but not the kind of fearsome courage that has been celebrated by warring nations at least since Homer sang of Hector. Charles Graner has been pictured multiple times in most major papers in the country, appearing next to his inspiration the stack of naked Iraqi prisoners. Lynch and Graner are each, in their very different ways, anti-heroes, but they are more well-known than troops who have done much more notable things.
They are better known than Lance Cpl. Joseph Perez, who led his men to victory in a firefight in Iraq despite serious gunshot wounds. They are more famous than Marco Martinez, then a corporal, who launched a captured rocket-propelled grenade into a building full of Iraqis ambushing his platoon and then single-handedly captured the building. We know more about them than the more than 125 Americans who have been decorated with Silver Stars or other high honors for bravery in Afghanistan and Iraq.
One would think a media so desperate to find heroes and celebrities that it makes every truck driver who passed through Normandy a subject of adulation and even tries to make Nicole Richie interesting would take advantage of the potential celebrity-heroes who are engaged in fantastic deeds every day. This is not to take away anything from those truck drivers, who did their part in a great world-changing crusade, or from Richie, who, after all, knows Paris Hilton. But there is no reason for us to stretch so hard when there are giants of bravery among us, engaged in unbelievably dramatic acts. "There is a movie script happening out there every week," says military expert John Hillen, "that would make Black Hawk Down look like Gosford Park."
In a brilliant piece in the United States Naval Institute's journal Proceedings, Roger Lee Crossland identifies Vietnam as marking the break with traditional notions of battlefield heroism. Besides the prisoners of war, there were no heroes from that war. Today our culture tends to look for "heroes" who can be portrayed, not as warriors, but as ordinary people who overcame a struggle, just like the daytime TV guest who managed to beat anorexia as a teenager.
Around July 4, we cherish our freedom and remember those extraordinary people who risk so much to defend it. Men like Brian Chontosh if we only knew his name.
Why not have a "Profile in Courage" spot that you can drop in from time to time, which find and highlights these men and their deeds?
We all can honor our heroes in a small way:
http://www.soldiersangels.com
They are true heroes, not athletes playing games for big bucks, victims whiming for more money, and the rich and famous mocking our values.
These stories need mass communication.
The "rich and famous" are actually rich and INfamous, but sadly, most folks in the country can't tell the difference.
True.
"3 posted on 07/02/2004 3:22:59 PM PDT by So Cal Rocket (Fabrizio Quattrocchi: "Adesso vi faccio vedere come muore
un italiano") "
Hey, not enough people know who Brian Chontosh is.
I suspect even fewer know who Fabrizio Quattrocchi was.
In the interest of not being a snobby cognesceti of freerepublic, here's some help:
http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200406010827.asp
Exactly. And since we ARE show prep for a lot of folks, they need to see the value of getting the untold story out.
"In the interest of not being a snobby cognesceti of freerepublic, here's some help: "
So Cal Rocket,
I realized that might be "open to varying interpretations"
I was just poking fun at myself and simply saying I was giving some help to other
lurkers/posters to learn about the brave son of Italy.
I agree with ya there. I have read about Brian soon after his heroic deed outlined here, Thanks to FR.
For the media, and liberals in general, victims are the only heros worth celebrating. Victimhood is the secular version of sainthood.
Since the media is not going to cover it, might as well put it out there for the rest of us.
So you want to make a million dollars?
Write the stories of American heroes of the War on Terror with pictures as a table top book.
Guaranteed million. You just gotta do the work.
"I seen my duty, and I done it."
Sergeant Alvin York
A happy 4th to those who also see there duty and do it. And why not say a prayer or two for those who didn't come back.
Tell him to BE CAREFUL. If he gets himself hurt...I will NOT be happy.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.