A year ago, many
people fretted that
Iraq's Anbar
province was lost.
Yet since then
progress has come at
an almost
unthinkable pace,
the results of
principled and
dangerous work by
Marines working with
locals. As the top
enlisted Marine in
his company, 1st
Sgt. Archie provided
consistent
leadership in battle
from August 2006
through February
2007, a key period
of the turnaround in
Anbar.
In October of last
year, insurgents
launched a brazen
attack on his
company's base:
mortars, rockets,
AK-47's, and a
suicide bomber
driving a truck.
Archie coordinated
the defense of the
base by setting up
fortifications on
six rooftops and
sending out Humvees
to block roads from
incoming insurgents.
Under constant and
heavy fire, he moved
throughout the
battlefield, making
sure his Marines had
everything they
needed. He also
successfully oversaw
the evacuation of
two wounded Marines
from the fight.
Archie is largely
credited for the
defense of the base
during the intense
hour-long fight.
That was not 1st
Sgt. Archie's only
encounter with
insurgents: His
company saw combat
all over Anbar
during the
seven-month
deployment. In all,
Archie undertook
more than 200 combat
missions and guided
his company through
more than 100
engagements with the
enemy. Archie
estimated that in
many areas, there
was a 50 percent
chance his unit
would face an
Improvised Explosive
Device attack.
For his leadership,
dedication, and
courage, 1st Sgt.
Archie received the
Bronze Star with the
Combat
Distinguishing
Device at Camp
Lejeune on July 30,
2007. |