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BAGRAM AIR BASE,
Afghanistan, March 24, 2008
– Heroes are made, not born.
And a hero like Army Spc.
Monica Brown, 19, is no
different.
Brown, recognized for her
gallant actions during
combat in Afghanistan in
2007, is the second woman
soldier since World War II
to receive a Silver Star,
the third highest award
given for valor in enemy
action. She received the
medal from Vice President
Richard B. Cheney during a
ceremony here March 20.
It was dusk on April 25,
2007, when Brown, a medic
from the 82nd Airborne
Division's 782nd Brigade
Support Battalion, 4th
Brigade Combat Team, was on
a routine security patrol
along the rolling, rocky
plains of the isolated Jani
Khail district in
Afghanistan's Paktika
province when insurgents
attacked her convoy.
“We'd been out on the
mission for a couple of
days,” said Brown, who at
the time was attached to the
brigade's 4th Squadron, 73rd
Cavalry Regiment's Troop C.
“We had just turned into a
wadi (empty river bed) when
our gunner yelled at us that
the vehicle behind us had
hit an (improvised explosive
device).”
The
soldiers looked out of their
windows in time to see one
of the struck vehicle's
tires flying through the
field next to them. Brown
had just opened her door to
see what was going on when
the attack began. |
“I only saw the smoke from
the vehicle when suddenly we
started taking small-arms
fire from all around us,”
she said. “Our gunner
starting firing back, and my
platoon sergeant yelled,
Doc! Let's go."
Brown and her platoon
sergeant, Staff Sgt. Jose
Santos, exited their
vehicle, and while under
fire, ran the few hundred
meters to the site of the
downed Humvee.
“Everyone was already out of
the burning vehicle,” she
said. “But even before I got
there, I could tell that two
of them were injured very
seriously.”
In fact, all five of the
passengers who had stumbled
out were burned and cut. Two
soldiers, Spcs. Stanson
Smith and Larry Spray,
suffered life-threatening
injuries.
With help from two
less-injured vehicle
crewmen, Sgt. Zachary
Tellier and Spc. Jack Bodani,
Brown moved the immobile
soldiers to a relatively
safe distance from the
burning Humvee.
“There was pretty heavy
incoming fire at this
point,” she said.
“Rounds were literally
missing her by inches,” said
Bodani, who provided
suppressive fire as Brown
aided the casualties while
injured. “We needed to get
away from there.”
Attempting to provide proper
medical care under the heavy
fire became impossible,
especially when the
attackers stepped up efforts
to kill the soldiers.
“Another vehicle had just
maneuvered to our position
to shield us from the rounds
now exploding in the fire
from the Humvee behind us,”
Brown said. “Somewhere in
the mix, we started taking
mortar rounds. It became a
huge commotion, but all I
could let myself think about
were my patients.”
With the other vehicles
spread out in a crescent
formation, Brown and her
casualties were stuck with
nowhere to go. Suddenly,
Santos arrived with one of
the unit's vehicles and
backed it up to their
position, and Brown began
loading the wounded soldiers
inside.
“We took off to a more
secure location several
hundred meters away, where
we were able to call in the
(medical evacuation
mission),” Brown said.
She then directed other
combat-life-saver-qualified
soldiers to help by holding
intravenous bags and
assisting her in preparing
the casualties for
evacuation.
After what seemed like an
eternity, Brown said, the
attackers finally began
retreating, and she was able
to perform more thorough aid
procedures before the
helicopter finally arrived
to transport the casualties
to safety.
Two hours after the initial
attack, everything was over.
In the darkness, Brown
recalled standing in a
field, knee-deep in grass,
her only source of light
coming from her red
head-light, trying to piece
together the events that had
just taken place.
“Looking back, it was just a
blur of noise and movement,”
the Lake Jackson, Texas,
native said. “What just
happened? Did I do
everything right? It was a
hard thing to think about.”
Before joining the Army at
the age of 17, the
bright-eyed young woman said
she never pictured herself
being in a situation like
this. Originally wanting to
be an X-ray technician, she
changed her mind when she
realized that by becoming a
medic, she'd be in the best
place to help people.
“At first, I didn't think I
could do it,” she said. “I
was actually afraid of
blood. When I saw my first
airway-opening operation, I
threw up.”
She quickly adjusted to her
job and received additional
training both before and
during her deployment to
Afghanistan.
“I realized that everything
I had done during the attack
was just rote memory,” she
said. “Kudos to my chain of
command for that. I know
with training, like I was
given, any medic would have
done the same in my
position.”
“To say she handled herself
well would be an
understatement,” said Bodani,
who quickly recovered from
his injuries and immediately
returned to work. “It was
amazing to see her keep
completely calm and take
care of our guys with all
that going on around her. Of
all the medics we've had
with us throughout the year,
she was the one I trusted
the most.”
Earning trust with a combat
unit is not something easily
earned, said Army Capt. Todd
Book, Troop C's commander at
the time of the attack, but
it was something Brown had
taken upon herself to prove
long before the Jani Khail
ambush.
“Our regular medic was on
leave at the time,” Book
said. “We had other medics
to choose from, but Brown
had shown us that she was
more technically proficient
than any of her peers.”
Having people call her “Doc”
means a lot to Brown because
of the trust it engenders.
“When people I've treated
come back to me later and
tell me the difference I was
able to make in their life
is the best part of this
job,” she said.
During her rest and
recuperation leave in May,
Brown visited Spray in the
hospital and met his mother.
“I almost cried,” Brown
said. “Spray's mother was so
thankful, and she hugged me.
That was the moment that
made me feel the best about
what I did.”
Even though she felt proud
when she was informed that
she was going to receive a
Silver Star, she considers
her actions to be the result
of effort put into her by
everyone she's worked for.
“While I'm not scared to get
my hands dirty, I have to
say that I never fully
became a medic until I came
over here and did it
first-hand,” she said. “I
just reacted when the time
came.”
Due to her quick and
selfless actions, both Smith
and Spray survived their
injuries.
By Spc. Micah
E. Clare, USA
Special to American Forces
Press Service
(Army Spc. Micah E. Clare
serves with the 82nd
Airborne Division's 4th
Brigade Combat Team Public
Affairs Office) |