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Tuesday, April 5, 2005

Iraq war hero earns first Medal of Honor

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President Bush yesterday awarded Army Sgt. 1st Class Paul Ray Smith the Medal of Honor, exactly two years after the soldier single-handedly killed as many as 50 Iraqi insurgents as he saved the lives of more than 100 Americans.

It was the 615th time in history that the medal was awarded posthumously.

Sgt. Smith's 11-year-old son accepted the medal in a White House ceremony. It was the first time the nation's highest award for valor has been bestowed on a soldier from the Iraq war, and only the third time it has been awarded since the Vietnam War.

"On this day two years ago, Sergeant Smith gave his all for his men," the president said. "Five days later, Baghdad fell and the Iraqi people were liberated. And today, we bestow upon Sergeant Smith the first Medal of Honor in the war on terror. ...

"We count ourselves blessed to have soldiers like Sergeant Smith, who put their lives on the line to advance the cause of freedom and protect the American people," Mr. Bush said in the East Room ceremony.

In the last 30 years, only two U.S. soldiers, both killed during the Somalia intervention in 1993, have received the Medal of Honor, which has been bestowed upon 3,441 men and women since the Civil War. Sgt. Smith's widow, Birgit, decided that the couple's son, David, would accept the medal on his father's behalf.

"It was a very easy decision for me because, after all, he's the man of the house now," she said.

The event was attended by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld; Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and dozens of military men and women from all branches of the armed services.

The story of Sgt. Smith's actions on April 4, 2003, is the stuff of Hollywood, although it started off as a routine, even mundane, mission.

The 33-year-old sergeant, who was born in El Paso, Texas, but moved to Tampa, Fla., as a boy, was the senior noncommissioned officer in a platoon of engineers during the 3rd Infantry Division's northward push toward Baghdad.

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