Posted on 02/28/2016 8:27:48 PM PST by huldah1776
The Navy SEAL who will become on Monday the sixth member of that elite force to receive the Medal of Honor proved his mettle in hand-to-hand combat in Afghanistan or more accurately, hand-to-throat.
During a daring nighttime raid in 2012 to rescue an American citizen from Taliban clutches, Edward Byers Jr. leaped across the room to shield the hostage from oncoming fire while simultaneously engaging a Taliban guard.
While covering the hostage with his body, Chief Byers was able to pin the enemy combatant to the wall with his hand around the enemys throat, according to a Navy news release.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
From Navy.mil:
Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator (SEAL) Edward C. Byers Jr.: For actions during Operation Enduring Freedom on Dec. 8, 2012
Chief Special Warfare Operator (SEAL) Edward C. Byers Jr., United States Navy, distinguished himself by heroic gallantry as an Assault Team Member attached to a Joint Task Force in support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM on 8 December 2012. Specific accomplishment:
Dr. Dilip Joseph is an American citizen, who was abducted with his driver and Afghan interpreter on 5 December 2012. Intelligence reports indicated that Dr. Joseph might be transported to another location as early as 9 December 2012. Dr. Joseph was being held in a small, single-room building.
The target compound was located in a remote area beside a mountain in the Qarghahi District of Laghman Province, Afghanistan. Chief Byers was part of the rescue team that planned to make entry into the room of guards where the hostage was believed to be located. Success of the rescue operation relied upon surprise, speed, and aggressive action. Trading personal security for speed of action was inherent to the success of this rescue mission. Each assaulter in the rescue force volunteered for this operation with full appreciation for the risks they were to undertake.
With the approval of the Commander of all International Security Assistance Forces in Afghanistan, the rescue force launched from its forward operating base. The infiltration was an exhaustive patrol across unimproved trails and mountainous terrain. After nearly four hours of patrolling, the rescue force was positioned to make its assault on the target compound.
As the patrol closed to within 25 meters of the target building, a guard became aware of the rescue force. The forward-most assaulter shot at the guard and ran towards the door to make entry as the guard disappeared inside. Chief Byers was the second assaulter in a sprint towards the door. Six layers of blankets securely fastened to the ceiling and walls served as the Afghan door. While Chief Byers tried to rip down the blankets, the first assaulter pushed his way through the doorway and was immediately shot by enemy AK-47 fire. Chief Byers, fully aware of the hostile threat inside the room, boldly entered and immediately engaged a guard pointing an AK-47 towards him. As he was engaging that guard, another adult male darted towards the corner of the room. Chief Byers could not distinguish if the person may have been the hostage scrambling away or a guard attempting to arm himself with an AK-47 that lay in the corner. Chief Byers tackled the unknown male and seized control of him. While in hand-to-hand combat, Chief Byers maintained control of the unknown male with one hand, while adjusting the focus of his night vision goggles (NVGs) with his other. Once his NVGs were focused, he recognized that the male was not the hostage and engaged the struggling armed guard.
By now other team members had entered the room and were calling to Dr. Joseph to identify himself. Chief Byers heard an unknown voice speak English from his right side. He immediately leaped across the room and selflessly flung his body on top of the American hostage, shielding him from the continued rounds being fired across the room. Almost simultaneously, Chief Byers identified an additional enemy fighter directly behind Dr. Joseph. While covering the hostage with his body, Chief Byers was able to pin the enemy combatant to the wall with his hand around the enemys throat. Unable to fire any effective rounds into the enemy, Chief Byers was able to restrain the combatant enough to enable his teammate to fire precision shots, eliminating the final threat within the room.
Chief Byers quickly talked to Dr. Joseph, confirming that he was able to move. He and his Team Leader stood Dr. Joseph up, calmed him, and let him know he was safe with American Forces. Once Dr. Joseph was moved to the helicopter-landing zone, Chief Byers, a certified paramedic and 18D medic, assisted with the rendering of medical aid to the urgent surgical assaulter. Chief Byers and others performed CPR during the 40-minute flight to Bagram Airfield where his teammate was declared deceased.
Chief Petty Officer Byers displayed superior gallantry, extraordinary heroism at grave personal risk, dedication to his teammates, and calm tactical leadership while liberating Dr. Dilip Joseph from captivity. He is unquestionably deserving of the Medal of Honor.
[his bio is at link]
http://www.navy.mil/ah_online/moh/byers.html
Max Dude!
He has to receive the award from hands of an enemy islamist, stained with his fellows blood. How dignified must that be?
It disgusts us all but each one honored is so deserving that when I watch I turn the sound off when it speaks and block it out of my mind.
These Medal of Honor winners are awe-inspiring.
My thoughts too.
....for Odungo,its a opportunity to stand amongst Men
An honor that endured the travails of Islam up until the moment it was finally in the company of Byers’ person.
I honestly wish I could buy him a beer. Hell, I would buy the whole bar a beer in his honor as long as he was OK with it. American badass indeed. I hope he runs for something. We need men like this.
“These Medal of Honor winners are awe-inspiring”
If you read the reports on MoH winners, they’re more unbelievable than movies or video games.
But they’re all true.
And they make me feel small. God bless them all.
What a vivid story. Every guy dreams of being this heroically capable, this physically and mentally decisive under incredibly chaotic circumstances. These men are so deserving of our appreciation!
I haven’t had the honor of serving, but you don’t “win” a Medal of Honor.
Great guy and great patriot; let’s just hope that when obama drops the medal on the floor, the Chief remembers NOT to bend over and pick it up.
Respect the Medal. Not the prick putting it around the SEAL's neck. But be cautious that the only thing in Obama's hands is the Medal and ribbon...
Yes. He generally prefers a different position.
Ooooops! Now you’ve spilled the beans! BO’B will NOT be impressed by the Chief’s derring-do. That was one of Obama’s kinfolk he pinned to the wall by the throat while sheilding the rescue-ee from harm. I cannot imagine the loathing that will be churning and roiling in Obama’s corrup heart when is forced by tradition, to place that MOH around Chief Byers’ neck.
???...Oh I see what you did there...now I have to scratch out my eyes
Their lives always make my monitor blurry.
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