<p><a href="http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2007/04/15/2007-04-15_an_american_hero.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2007/04/15/2007-04-15_an_american_hero.html</a>
<a href="http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2007/04/16/2007-04-16_an_american_hero.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2007/04/16/2007-04-16_an_american_hero.html</a></p>
<p>articles about the life of SEAL Lt. Michael Murphy and what happened on dat fateful day June 28. 2005. He's a true hero</p>
<p>In the mountains of eastern Afghanistan, 4 SEALs made a tough choice. Only one lived to tell</p>
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With the midday sun beating down on them near the top of a mountain in eastern Afghanistan, four Navy SEALs faced an agonizing decision.</p>
<p>Their mission, to reconnoiter a village where a Taliban leader was thought to be holed up, had just been compromised by three goatherds who had almost tripped over the commandos. Now the SEALs were holding the goatherds one a young teenager at gunpoint and deciding whether to kill them or let them go....
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<p>The only guy to survive that ambush just wrote a book called "Lone Survivor". It is supposed to be really good, and part of the proceeds will go to the Naval Special Warfare foundation.</p>
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Two years after his death in a harrowing firefight on an Afghanistan mountaintop, Lt. Michael Murphy, a SEAL from Long Island, N.Y., will receive the nations highest combat honor, the Medal of Honor, Navy officials have confirmed.</p>
<p>Lt. Ligia Cohen, a spokeswoman at the Pentagon, confirmed the award.</p>
<p>The announcement of the Medal of Honor the first awarded to a Navy officer or sailor for combat actions in Iraq or Afghanistan was made Thursday during a White House briefing....
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<p>Excellent testament to courage.</p>
<p>Yeah I read "Lone Survivor." The author is from my area of Texas.</p>
<p>It's a great book, and an even better display of bravery and leadership.</p>
<p>A command decision</p>
<p>SEAL author speaks of regret, rescue, and the choice that cost 19 lives
By Sean Naylor - Staff writer</p>
<p>Read edited excerpts of Sean Naylor's exclusive June 14 interview with Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Marcus Luttrell, the sole survivor of a SEAL mission gone terribly wrong.</p>
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<p>Q. Had you guys war-gamed or discussed during the planning phase of Operation Redwing what to do if you got compromised?</p>
<p>A. Uh-huh.</p>
<p>Q. And what did you decide?</p>
<p>A. It had to be an on-scene call, due to the severity of the compromise, the location of the compromise, how many people had walked on us. We were in the hornets nest. ... This was uncharted territory. American soldiers didnt go in here very often. Its surrounded by the Taliban. They were living in caves and adobe huts and houses everywhere in that valley. And when we dropped in in the middle of the night, we walked through right to the middle of them.</p>
<p>Q. During BUD/S and your follow-on training, had you received much instruction on how to handle the situation if you were compromised?</p>
<p>A. Yeah.</p>
<p>Q. What was the bottom line of that training?</p>
<p>A. Like I said, that all depends on the compromise. How far out we are. In Afghanistan, its inevitable youre going to get walked on. We had never been compromised before, to tell you the truth. That was a reputation that we were proud of, that we had never been walked on. But we got walked on this time. We sat there and talked about it. They were no threat to us, they werent brandishing any firearms. They were goat herders, obviously they had like a hundred goats with them. So we turned em loose, and they got out of there.</p>
<p>Q. Why do you think Lt. Mikey Murphy decided to put it to a vote, rather than soliciting his subordinates input then making a decision?</p>
<p>A. Well, Mikey was the officer in charge. Hes overall responsible for the team. I was the team leader. See, most people dont understand how the SEAL teams are made up. Its not straight-up You will do this my way. I guess it could be if you had some guy like that. But the teams are designed differently. Thats why the officers go through the same training as we do, and were together the whole time. Two heads are better than one, three are better than two. So if youre stuck in a situation like that, would you want to make the decision that killed all of us? Thats why we talked about it. ... Whatever he wanted to do would have been done. He asked for my opinion because I wasnt the most senior guy rankwise, but overall [I had the most] experience. ... So we just kind of talked about it, and when he said, What are we going to do? he and I both kind of came to the same conclusion. When he said [it was] my decision, I passed it to the guys Heres what were going to do, were going to cut em loose. Roger that.</p>
<p>A good officer listens to his men.</p>
<p>Q. But dont you think theres a difference between an officer listening to his men, and leaving it up to his men to make the decision?</p>
<p>A. Well, thats up for interpretation. Thats not how I stated it in the book.</p>
<p>Q. Well, in the book you said he turned to you and said it was your call.</p>
<p>A. Well, as being the senior man after wed all talked about it. I was just like, OK, turn them loose.</p>
<p>Q. So at no point during or after the incident, did you consider that an abdication of his command responsibility to make the decisions?</p>
<p>A. Not at all. He had total control. He was in total command out there the whole time. He was a consummate professional. Thats my job out there as the fire team leader I consult with him, he consults with me, and we made the best decision for the team, which inevitably got us all killed.</p>
<p>Q. Do you regret making that decision?</p>
<p>A. What do you think? What kind of question is that?</p>
<p>Q. Well, there are some folks whod say, Yeah, I do regret it, and there are others whod say, No, I made the moral, legal choice and if I was in the same situation again Id make the same decision again.</p>
<p>A. I was a soldier following the rules of engagement. We made the judgment call to turn them loose because they werent armed combatants. And because of that, 19 of my comrades are dead.</p>
<p>If you put me back in the same situation, Id probably do the same thing again, if I didnt know the outcome. Knowing what I know now, knowing what we went through and what I go through every day, hell yeah, I would have killed them.</p>
<p>Q. At the time, if somebody had assured you, Hey, if you kill these guys, nobodys going to find out, or youre not going to get in any trouble, would you have killed them?</p>
<p>A. Yeah.</p>
<p>Q. You make a lot of references in the book, particularly with regard to the rules of engagement that you were following during the incident, to liberal media, American liberals, etc. Its easy for the reader to come away with the impression that you hold liberals responsible for the deaths of your colleagues. Would that be an accurate summation of your view?</p>
<p>A. Thats their own opinion of what they draw from the book. What I said in the book was its kind of hard for me to understand how someone can implement rules of engagement when theyre thousands of miles away sitting behind a desk, not out there on the battlefield, not watching the enemy. How are you going to put a rule of engagement on me, when my enemys not even following the same rule? So basically you tie one hand behind my back, and Im sitting there trying to use the other hand to untie it.</p>
<p>And they know that. The enemy knows our ROEs. They laugh at us. Were a mockery to them. The United States is a joke [to them]. Theyre not scared of us. They know that we cant touch em and even if we did touch em, all theyd have to do is complain and say we did, and we would come under investigation by our own JAGs, and they will shut us down. And guess what happens when we get shut down the enemy starts moving. So everything which we worked for and tried to accomplish is for nothing.</p>
<p>Q. In the book, you write about ROE being set by congressmen in Washington, but arent ROE set by the uniformed chain of command?</p>
<p>A. Well, theres somebody above them.</p>
<p>Q. What was your reaction to the comments by Murphys father this week, accusing you of dishonoring his sons memory?</p>
<p>A. I cant pretend to understand what Mr. Murphys going through with the loss of his son. Im sorry for his death. Mikey was my best friend and Im sorry that he feels that Ive dishonored him in some way. If he thinks that I did, then I apologize for whatever I said. Thats not my intention. My intention is to honor his son in every way I can and Im not going to stop doing that.</p>
<p>Q. Who were the Army guys who rescued you?</p>
<p>A. There were 20 to 21 total, split between the Rangers and an ODA [Special Forces Operational Detachment Alpha] team. I just remember thinking when I saw them, they were beat down. ... It was kind of a running joke, I was like, Hey guys, I know that youve been cussing my name, because it was raining on them, freezing on them. I know if that was me on that patrol, Id be like, this m_<strong><em>f</em></strong>. Im out here sucking it up trying to find this guy. I said, I just want to apologize to you guys, and he was like, Well, now that we found you, its OK. Now I just got to live with the fact that I got rescued by some Army guys instead of some [SEAL] team guys.</p>
<p>Q. In much of the rest of the military, and even the other elements of U.S. special operations forces, the SEALs have something of a reputation of believing a little too much in their own hype. Throughout the book, you refer to the SEALs using terms like the gods of the U.S. military. Are you at all concerned that by doing so, you might be adding to that negative reputation?</p>
<p>A. Its not that were the best, its just that everybody else sucks. I mean, come on, youre asking a frogman that question.</p>
<p>Q. You got permission from the SEAL hierarchy to write the book. Were any conditions attached to that?</p>
<p>A. Yes not to divulge any classified information obviously I wouldnt do that and just to tell the story.</p>
<p>I wasnt even out of the hospital when the story started flying out, the wrong stories hey, this is how this happened, this that and the other, and thats not how it happened. And the more the stories came out, I mean Im the only one that made it out, so obviously most people in the American public, where do they think theyre getting their information from from me, [they think] Im the one telling these reporters this. And Im not. I wasnt telling anybody. I was still an active-duty frogman, you wouldnt see my face in the papers, I didnt talk to reporters or anything like that. ...</p>
<p>I just wanted the truth to get out there, so that there wasnt any question of how hard these guys fought and what they did for their country. It was unbelievable. Even the guys who came in after the helicopter had got shot down, the Army Rangers, the Green Berets. There were out there for days with minimal food. Hell, the ODA team and the Ranger team that found me were out of food and water for a day and a half. There were guys collapsing out there. These guys were run ragged. Some guys couldnt even walk, their feet were so torn up, and no one would leave. They were like, Were not leaving til we find him, period. Guys were losing 20 and 30 pounds. It was like, These guys are out here winging it, were not frickin leaving. Thats a true testament to the brotherhood of a warrior. [In] this war on terrorism, theres no Army, Marine, Navy we cant be like that. Its one force. Its the United States military against terrorists. I cant tell you how many times in Iraq the Army saved my butt. We wouldnt be alive without them, thats just the bottom line. Theres a camaraderie on the battlefield. And of course, when we come back home, when were in the States, then its back to our old ways ... but out there in the trenches, yeah.
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<p>Nice post, thanks.</p>
<p>You're welcome. I happened to come upon this and thought it was interesting. The last paragraph really got me. I hope those guys got medals too.</p>
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The first Medal of Honor awarded for combat in Afghanistan will be presented Monday to the family of a Navy SEAL who gave his life to make a radio call for help for his team.</p>
<p>President Bush is set to present the nations highest military honor for valor to the family of Lt. Michael Murphy of Patchogue, N.Y.</p>
<p>Theres a lot of awards in the military, but when you see a Medal of Honor, you know whatever they went through is pretty horrible. You dont congratulate anyone when you see it, said Marcus Luttrell, the lone member of Murphys team to survive the firefight with the Taliban....
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<p>A great example of a man and a good lesson for all of those who are contemplating about attending a service academy. The academies are each unique places, but in the end, all serve a common purpose. A band of brothers to be sure. I recently learned that LT Murphy after graduating from Penn State took some of his SEAL training at the Merchant Marine academy. I had no idea. They are all interconnected, aren't they?</p>
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His mother describes Lt. Michael Murphy as "someone who always stuck up for the underdog." His father says he was "honest, kind, caring -- probably the antithesis of what you would call a warrior."</p>
<p>Two years after he was killed in a firefight in Afghanistan, Dan and Maureen Murphy and their son John on Monday received Lt. Murphy's Medal of Honor for heroism on the battlefield from President Bush....
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<p>Bush: Countrys debt to Murphy can never be repaid</p>
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President Bush on Monday presented the Medal of Honor to the parents of Lt. Michael P. Murphy, a Navy SEAL who was killed after he walked into enemy fire in Afghanistan when he made a desperate call for help to save his embattled teammates.</p>
<p>The teams survivor painted Murphy as a hero, and Bush reiterated that praise in a White House ceremony packed with top naval officers, family members and even a contingent from the New York City Fire Department....
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<p>The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pride in presenting the Medal of Honor to Lieutenant Michael P. Murphy, United States Navy, for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life, above and beyond the call of duty, as the leader of a special reconnaissance element with Naval Special Warfare Task Unit Afghanistan on 27 and 28 June 2005.</p>
<p>While leading a mission to locate a high-level anti-coalition militia leader, Lieutenant Murphy demonstrated extraordinary heroism in the face of grave danger in the vicinity of Asadabad, Konar Province, Afghanistan. On 28 June 2005, operating in an extremely rugged, enemy-controlled area, Lieutenant Murphys team was discovered by anti-coalition militia sympathizers who revealed their position to Taliban fighters. As a result, between 30 and 40 enemy fighters besieged his four-member team.</p>
<p>Demonstrating exceptional resolve, Lieutenant Murphy valiantly led his men in engaging the large enemy force. The ensuing fierce firefight resulted in numerous enemy casualties, as well as the wounding of all four members of his team. Ignoring his own wounds and demonstrating exceptional composure, Lieutenant Murphy continued to lead and encourage his men. When the primary communicator fell mortally wounded, Lieutenant Murphy repeatedly attempted to call for assistance for his beleaguered teammates. Realizing the impossibility of communicating in the extreme terrain and in the face of almost certain death, he fought his way into an open terrain to gain a better position to transmit a call. This deliberate heroic act deprived him of cover, exposing him to direct enemy fire. Finally achieving contact with his headquarters, Lieutenant Murphy maintained his exposed position while he provided his location and requested immediate support for his team.</p>
<p>In his final act of bravery, he continued to engage the enemy until he was mortally wounded, gallantly giving his life for his country and for the cause of freedom. By his selfless leadership, courageous actions, and extraordinary devotion to duty, Lieutenant Murphy reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.</p>
<p>Highest Award Given for Heroism in Afghanistan</p>
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Navy Seal Lt. Michael P. Murphy, nicknamed "Murph" and known as an intense and empathetic young man, was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor yesterday "for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life" while outnumbered by Taliban fighters in a June 2005 battle high in the mountains of Afghanistan. </p>
<p>The 29-year-old Seal team leader and former lifeguard from Patchogue, N.Y., is the first service member to receive the Medal of Honor for heroism in the war in Afghanistan and the first sailor since Vietnam to be awarded the medal, the nation's highest military decoration....
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A day after he was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, the parents of Lt. Michael Murphy said they always worried that he might someday get hurt helping other people, because he showed concern for others so often.</p>
<p>In an interview Tuesday at the Pentagon, Murphys mother Maureen told several stories about her sons lifelong altruism, starting from when he was a child. At age 3 he cut his head in an accident, she said, and as many mothers might, she became almost frantic as he bled profusely....
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