Posted on 12/01/2008 3:30:25 PM PST by SandRat
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1, 2008 If Army Staff Sgt. Matthew Sims was a cat, hed have only six lives left after his yearlong deployment to Iraq with the 1st Armored Divisions Company B, 270th Armor Battalion, out of Fort Riley, Kan.
Sims, a medic, was riding in a tracked ambulance between two M1-A1 Abrams tanks when a roadside bomb detonated. Shrapnel pierced the vehicle and penetrated his flak vest, puncturing his left lung. He was evacuated to the hospital in Balad. He spent about three weeks recovering before returning to his unit, but it was only the first of three stays at the hospital. They know me there, he said with a chuckle. Three months after hed returned to duty, his unit was on a foot patrol when it started taking enemy mortar fire. One mortar landed near Sims. Shrapnel hit near my lower left leg, penetrating through the front lower part and coming out the back, he said. [I] almost, almost lost that limb in that incident, but everythings fine now. Again, Sims was transported to Balad, where he spent another four weeks recovering from his injuries before rejoining his unit to finish his tour. Unfortunately, he would endure one more interruption before rotating back home. It was about 4 a.m., and Company B was patrolling Main Supply Route Tampa, one of the main roads in Iraq, when Sims, who was riding in an Abrams tank, started seeing flashes in the distance. He doesnt remember anything after calling in the attack, however. I took a sniper bullet 7.62 mm to the front of the helmet -- straight in front, almost right between the eyes, Sims said. The bullet fractured his neck and skull and knocked him unconscious. I fell into the turret of the tank, he said, and when [it] turned to fire at the enemy, it broke my right femur. That earned him a two-month stay in the Balad hospital. He said the care he received there was excellent, and he gave the men in his unit kudos for their part in his survival and recovery. I attribute a lot of my speedy recovery [to] the care that I received actually on site at the point of injury -- quick response from all the people that were there, he said, referring to the soldiers hed trained in the new Combat Life Saver program. The people that were actually treating me were people that I had trained. By the time I got to Balad, I was pretty much good to go. They just had to kind of patch me up. Sims last tour in Iraq may have resulted in three Purple Hearts, but he said hes not hesitant about returning. No, not at all, he said. I think that its a lot safer than when I was there. I think the time that I was there, it was right around the national election time, [and] it was really the peak of all the main [bomb] attacks. I think now, its almost 100 percent turnaround, he added. Its good hes not timid about returning. His current unit, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 15th Engineer Battalion based out of Schweinfurt, Germany, is certain to deploy at some time. Were trying to get all the equipment in and get this unit stood up, because its the only construction battalion in Europe right now, Sims said. So, we dont know exactly where were going yet, but we know were going to go somewhere. Sims, who has served 10 years since enlisting right out of high school, recently re-enlisted indefinitely. He hopes to become a doctor or a physician assistant, he said, but he has his sights on one of the Armys top spots if he remains in the Army as an enlisted soldier. He said hed like to be the first medic to serve as sergeant major of the Army. As a medic, you get a broad spectrum of everything thats in the Army, he added. You can go to any type of unit, so youre more well-rounded, I think. Sims and his wife call St. Charles, Mo., home. |
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Under the Kerry rules, Plaxico Dumba$$ would get one...
/poor sarc
Where do we find these fine young men?
We are truly blessed as a country.
May God Bless him and keep him!!!
Pretty Tough!!
..and he aint even “Cav”.
My nephew, a top sgt in the reserves, was in a humvee in Afghanistan when they came under attack by six enemy combatants. The humvee was hit by an rpg and my nephew was severely injured. Before the missile hit, a young private, never before having been in combat, took out 5 of the 6. The sixth one fired the rpg. The missile knocked the young private off the turret and he fell on my nephew. My nephew was about to rendered aid to the private when the private said, “You’re a lot worse off than I am, Tops.” Shrapnel had penetrated my nephew’s head at the temple. He’s okay now, thank God.
I’m really impressed with that young private. He got, and deserved, the Bronze Star w/V.
Damn, glad he’s on our side!
GO ARMY !!!
BEAT MOHAMMED !!!
If you spend weeks in a hospital recovering you most definitely earned a purple heart. Kerry spent a total of zero days in a hospital.
Damned proud of you Sgt. Sims. Damned proud.
LIKE A STOLEN MULE!!!!
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