Woodville
SEAL wins Silver Star for bravery
By ERIC ROSENBERG
WASHINGTON — Lt. Leif Babin, was one of 11 Navy SEALs to receive medals for bravery at a special Pentagon ceremony Wednesday
U.S. Navy SEAL Lt. Leif Babin, a Woodville native and 1994 graduate of Monsignor Kelly Catholic High School in Beaumont, who was awarded the Silver Star and Bronze Star medals for valor while serving in Iraq. He is also a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy.
At the ceremony in the Pentagon's central
courtyard, the medals were presented to members of Navy SEAL Team 3, based in
Babin received the Silver Star, the
third-highest military award for valor, for his actions on Aug. 2, 2006, when
his unit fought militants in the Iraqi city of
Babin received the medal "'for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action against the enemy" while leading "a combined clearance operation in an enemy-controlled area of Ramadi," according to the citation.
When he and his fellow SEALs came under fire while on a building roof, "Babin dashed across the roof to reach a wounded comrade and immediately called for casualty evacuation and fire support," the citation said.
As three other SEALs provided covering fire, Babin moved directly into the enemy's line of fire and carried the wounded SEAL to safety.
In another clearance operation the same day, a fellow SEAL was killed and Babin was wounded.
The citation said Babin "continued to direct clearance of the target building, securing it and ensuring that his mortally wounded man and the rest of his unit were safely extracted."
The 11 SEALs lined up onstage under a large white awning as a Navy official read the medal citations.
Babin — a
"It's an honor working with these guys," he said in an interview. "My award is simply recognition of the effort of my platoon that I had the honor of leading."
Bush Gives Medal of Honor to Navy
SEAL
By JENNIFER LOVEN – 4 days
ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — Navy SEAL Michael A. Monsoor had fast thinking to do when a live grenade came out of nowhere to bounce off his chest: Take the clear path to safety that he had but his comrades didn't, try to toss it safely away, or throw himself on top of it.
With barely an instant's hesitation on that Iraqi rooftop, Monsoor took the last course, sacrificing his life to save the men around him. For that, President Bush on Tuesday awarded him the Medal of Honor.
In an East Room ceremony, Bush presented the nation's highest military honor to Monsoor's still-grieving parents, Sally and George Monsoor. About 250 guests, including his sister and two brothers, fellow SEALS, other Medal winners, many friends and GOP Sen. John McCain and other members of Congress, looked on quietly.
"The Medal of Honor is awarded for an act of such courage that no one could rightly be expected to undertake it," Bush said. "Yet those who knew Michael Monsoor were not surprised when he did."
Bush has awarded the medals to 10 people during his
presidency. Monsoor is only the third from the
The emotional proceedings at the White House came as the
top
Gen. David Petraeus said security in
In brief remarks, Bush told the story of Monsoor's service-oriented upbringing and determined youth.
Monsoor became a Navy SEAL, the military's most elite fighting force, in 2004.
"His teammates liked to laugh about the way his shiny Corvette would leave everybody in the dust," Bush said. "But deep down, they always knew Mike would never leave anybody behind when it counted."
By spring 2006, Monsoor was deployed to Ramadi in
It was only four months later, on Sept. 29, 2006, that Monsoor and his two American teammates, plus members of the Iraqi Army, were on a rooftop in a Ramadi residential area known as a stronghold for the Sunni insurgency. They were providing early warning and sniper cover for a mission aimed at trying to clear the neighborhood.
After a long day of back-and-forth engagement and evidence that the enemy was closing them off, Monsoor and the two other SEALS moved to a confined outcropping of the roof for a better lookout position. An unseen insurgent lobbed a grenade, which hit Monsoor in the chest and landed on the floor in front of him. He yelled a warning, but quickly saw that his fellow SEALS, not positioned near the exit like he was, wouldn't be able to get clear in time. Monsoor fell onto the grenade just as it exploded, absorbing the blast with his body and dying from the injuries about 30 minutes later. Others suffered shrapnel wounds, but no one else was killed.
The
"Mr. and Mrs. Monsoor:
Woodville
SEAL wins Silver Star for bravery
By ERIC ROSENBERG
WASHINGTON — Lt. Leif Babin, a Woodville native and 1994 graduate of Monsignor Kelly High School in Beaumont, was one of 11 Navy SEALs to receive medals for bravery at a special Pentagon ceremony Wednesday.
Babin received the Silver Star, the third-highest military
award for valor, for his actions on Aug. 2, 2006, when his unit fought militants
in the Iraqi city of
Babin received the medal "'for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action against the enemy" while leading "a combined clearance operation in an enemy-controlled area of Ramadi," according to the citation.
When he and his fellow SEALs came under fire while on a building roof, "Babin dashed across the roof to reach a wounded comrade and immediately called for casualty evacuation and fire support," the citation said.
As three other SEALs provided covering fire, Babin moved directly into the enemy's line of fire and carried the wounded SEAL to safety.
In another clearance operation the same day, a fellow SEAL was killed and Babin was wounded.
The citation said Babin "continued to direct clearance of the target building, securing it and ensuring that his mortally wounded man and the rest of his unit were safely extracted."
The 11 SEALs lined up onstage under a large white awning as a Navy official read the medal citations.
Babin — a
"It's an honor working with these guys," he said in an interview. "My award is simply recognition of the effort of my platoon that I had the honor of leading."