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April 2016 MAINE COASTAL NEWS Page 7. U. S. N N


President Obama Presents Medal of Honor to Navy SEAL for Rescuing Taliban Hostage


By April Grant, Navy Offi ce of Information WASHINGTON (NNS) -- On Feb. 29, Senior Chief Special Warfare Operator (SEAL) Edward C. Byers Jr. became the sixth Navy SEAL in U.S. history to receive the Medal of Honor. President Barack Obama presented


Byers with the medal during a White House ceremony for his heroic gallantry as an as- sault team member attached to a Joint Task Force in support of Operation Enduring Freedom Dec. 8, 2012. During the ceremony, Obama praised


Byers’ dedication to duty. “Like so many of our special operators,


Ed is defi ned by a deep sense of humility. He doesn’t seek the spotlight. In fact, he shuns it. He’s the consummate quiet professional,” said Obama. The president welcomed members of


Byers’ family, including wife Madison, daughter Hannah, and mother Peggy. The crowd laughed as Obama recounted Peggy’s question upon hearing the news of her son’s award, “Do you think I can come?” Obama called Byers “a special breed of


warrior,” part of a select few who serve the American people in the shadows with honor and sacrifi ce. “Our special operations forces are a


strategic national asset. They teach us that humans are more important than hardware,” said Obama. “Today is a reminder that our nation has to keep investing in this irreplace- able asset; deploying our special operators wisely, preserving force and family, making sure these incredible Americans stay strong in body, mind and spirit. The American people may not always


see them. We may not always hear of their success. But they’re there-in the thick of the fi ght, in the dark of the night, achieving the mission. And we thank God they’re there,” added Obama. Byers spoke at a press conference fol-


lowing the ceremony. “The important thing I want to say here is that everything we do is as a team; if it wasn’t for that team I wouldn’t be standing here today. Specifi cal- ly for me, my teammate, friend and brother Nick Checque,” he said, referring to fallen team member Petty Offi cer 1st Class Nicolas Checque. “The award is truly his. He was an American hero and he was the hero of that operation. “Today has been a very memorable


day in my life surrounded by friends and family and it is truly something I’ll never forget. We’re gonna celebrate Nick’s life and celebrate the lives of the brothers that have fallen protecting our freedoms so that we can sleep peacefully in our beds at night,” added Byers. In December 2012, Byers, along with


other members of his team, was tasked with a mission to rescue Dr. Dilip Joseph, an American citizen being detained by the Taliban in a mountainous region in the Qar- ghah’i District of Laghman Province. Byers was the second assaulter on the approach toward the building identifi ed as containing the hostage. While Byers tried to rip down blankets


that served as the door to the building, the fi rst assaulter pushed his way through the doorway and was immediately shot by enemy AK-47 fi re. 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


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darted towards the corner of the room. 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, so he tackled the unknown male and seized control of him. While in hand-to-hand combat, Byers main- tained 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 en-


tered the room and were calling to Joseph to identify himself. Byers heard an unknown voice speak English from his right side. He immediately leaped across the room and selfl essly fl ung his body on top of the American hostage, shielding him from the continued rounds being fi red across the room. Almost simultaneously, Byers iden- tifi ed an additional enemy fi ghter directly behind Joseph. While covering the hostage with his body, Byers was able to pin the enemy combatant to the wall with his hand around the enemy’s throat. Unable to fi re any eff ective rounds into the enemy, Byers was able to restrain the combatant enough to enable his teammate to fi re precision shots, eliminating the fi nal threat within the room. Byers quickly talked to Joseph and, af-


ter confi rming that he was able to move, ex- tracted him to the helicopter-landing zone. Byers, a certifi ed paramedic and 18D medic, subsequently assisted with the rendering of medical aid to the fi rst assaulter. Byers and others performed CPR during the fl ight to Bagram Airfi eld where his teammate was declared deceased. In a U.S. Navy video, Byers recalled the moment the president called to say he would


Navy SEAL Edward Byers Honoured


receive the Medal of Honor. “I felt very honored and very humbled because now I’m gonna be a representative for the Navy and the Navy Special Warfare community and there’s a weight that that carries with it,” he said. “And that weight is the sacrifi ce that everybody has made within this communi- ty...it’s an affi rmation of the job that we do and an appreciation for the job that we do.” The Medal of Honor is the nation’s


highest award given to members of the Armed Forces for gallantry in action. Byers is the fi rst living active duty member of the U.S. Navy to receive the Medal of Honor since Apr. 6, 1976. He is the fi rst living active duty enlisted member of the U.S. Navy to receive the Medal of Honor since Petty Of- fi cer Michael Thornton (also a SEAL) was awarded the Medal of Honor by President Richard Nixon Oct., 15 1973. A husband and father to one daughter,


Byers was born in Toledo, Ohio, and began his naval career in 1998 as a hospital corps- man. The following year, he was assigned to Great Lakes Naval Hospital and later


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