Posted on 03/29/2003 7:01:33 PM PST by Ymani Cricket
Luckiest man in Iraq
By Matt Sun
March 28, 2003
THIS is the luckiest man in Iraq - a Royal Marine who cheated death despite being shot four times in the head during a raging battle.
(Soldier Eric Walderman wearing the hat that saved his life. Picture: AFP)
Marine Eric Walderman was hit by a volley of bullets while fighting Iraqi soldiers at Umm Qasr in southern Iraq.
The bullets hit his Kevlar helmet just above his eye, tearing the camouflage lining and ricocheting away.
If a round had struck a 1cm lower, he would have been killed.
Marine Walderman was shaken but otherwise unscathed when he returned to base with Alpha Company, 40 Commando afterwards.
Because the troops are not allowed direct contact with their families, Walderman asked a wounded colleague being evacuated back to the UK to phone his girlfriend Lindsey Robinson in Lancashire.
She was shocked to hear he had been hit but pleased he was alive.
Lindsey told London's The Sun Marine Walderman was lucky.
"I can't believe it. I want to hug him. He always seems to come out on top -- but I don't want to think about what could have happened," the 25-year-old said.
"He is so lucky to be alive, he's the luckiest man out there."
The couple have been together for eight years and are parents to two-year-old son Danny.
Marine Walderman's 47-year-old mum, Brenda, was also relieved. "I am shocked, but at the same time feel lucky," she said.
Marine Walderman, a welder, joined the Royal Marines three years ago. He completed the intense 30-week training course in March 2000
with flying colours, receiving the commando medal for being "an outstanding new recruit".
The 690-strong 40 Commando left England for the Gulf in January to conduct training exercises and has been fighting since the first shots of the war were fired last week.
The helmet worn by Marine Walderman is similar to the helmet used by US soldiers.
The Kevlar-lined helmets are up to 40 per cent more resistant to fragments than the old style "steel pot" protective head gear.
Costing about $500 each, tests show 50 per cent of projectiles are stopped while the other half penetrate the kevlar.
While the helmets do increase the chances of surviving a bullet, their primary purpose is to protect the head against blunt trauma.
Discovered by scientist Stephanie Kwolek in 1965, Kevlar is a super-strong man-made fibre.
Type II helmets are lined with 24 layers of Kevlar and can stop a 9mm round travelling at 358 m/ps.
The Daily Telegraph
Not sure- is that a Swedish cricket, or a Yemanyi one? *grin*
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