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Editor's Note
As I grow this web site, I strive to record and publish stories that relate to important events in history that have had a special impact upon my generation of American citizens, especially our military service veterans. It was inevitable that the section entitled “Current Commentary” would become a part of our web site because it gives voice to more current events in our lives as our Nation continues to deal with changing conditions and threats nationally and around the world. In this process, I have tried to be a nonpolitical, constructive voice, promoting awareness relating to our collective emotional climate, ideas and efforts relating to the preservation of our dreams, our efforts, past and present, to not only preserve and protect our own freedoms, but, where possible, promote these gifts for others less fortunate around the world.
In recent decades, we have moved into this new era where others, not of our persuasion, have financed and trained a vast number of the disenfranchised of our world in the art of what we identify as Terrorism. Their goal is to convert or destroy every person, every culture, and every society that stands in the way of their perverted sense of justice and their attainment of personal and collective power. As is true for most of our web site viewers, we receive a variety of messages passed on through the e-mail system. Some is garbage, some is kind of interesting or meaningful, and, on occasion, a message strikes you as saying “Gosh, this information should be shared with the wider world”. The message I publish below is one of the latter. In the chain of e-communications, the specific sources get lost in the shuffle, but I do believe these words will speak for many of us.
They read as follows:
Sgt. Rafael Peralta, American Hero
Rich Lowry
January 11, 2005
You probably don't know Rafael Peralta's name. If we lived in a country that more fully celebrated the heroics of its men in uniform, you would. He was a sergeant in Company A, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment for Operation Dawn, the November offensive to retake the Iraqi city of Fallujah, which had become a haven for terrorists. What he did on the day of Nov. 15 was an awe-inspiring act of selfless sacrifice and faithfulness to his fellow Marines.
The only way we can honor Sgt. Peralta's heroism is to tell his story and remember his name. What follows is mostly drawn from the reporting of Marine combat correspondent Lance Cpl. T.J. Kaemmerer, who witnessed the events on that day.
Sgt. Peralta, 25, was a Mexican-American. He joined the Marines the day after he got his green card and earned his citizenship while in uniform. He was fiercely loyal to the ethos of the Corps. While in Kuwait, waiting to go into Iraq, he had his camouflage uniform sent out to be pressed. He constantly looked for opportunities to help his Marine brothers, which is why he ended up where he was on Nov. 15. A week into the battle for Fallujah, the Marines were still doing the deadly work of clearing the city, house by house. As a platoon scout, Peralta didn't have to go out with the assault team that day. He volunteered to go.
According to Kaemmerer, the Marines entered a house and kicked in the doors of two rooms that proved empty. But there was another closed door to an adjoining room. It was unlocked, and Peralta, in the lead, opened it. He was immediately hit with AK-47 fire in his face and upper torso by three insurgents. He fell out of the way into one of the cleared rooms to give his fellow Marines a clear shot at the enemy. During the firefight, a yellow fragmentation grenade flew out of the room, landing near Peralta and several fellow Marines. The uninjured Marines tried to scatter out of the way, two of them trying to escape the room, but were blocked by a locked door. At that point, barely alive, Peralta grabbed the grenade and cradled it to his body.
His body took most of the blast. One Marine was seriously injured, but the rest sustained only minor shrapnel wounds. Cpl. Brannon Dyer told a reporter from the Army Times, "He saved half my fire team."
Kaemmerer compares Peralta's sacrifice to that of past Marine Medal of Honor winners Pfc. James LaBelle and Lance Cpl. Richard Anderson. LaBelle dove on a Japanese grenade to save two fellow Marines during the battle of Iwo Jima. Although he had just been wounded twice, Anderson rolled over an enemy grenade to save a fellow Marine during a 1969 battle in Vietnam.
Peralta's sacrifice should be a legend in the making. But somehow heroism doesn't get the same traction in our media environment as being a victim or villain, categories that encompass the truly famous Jessica Lynch and Lynndie England respectively. Peralta's story has been covered in military publications, a smattering of papers including The Seattle Times and The San Diego Union-Tribune, ABC News and some military blogs. But The Washington Post and The New York Times only mentioned Peralta's name in their lists of the dead. Scandalously, the "heroism" of Spc. Thomas Wilson -- the national guardsman who asked a tough question of Secretary of Defense Don Rumsfeld that had been planted with him by a reporter -- has been more celebrated in the press than that of Peralta.
Kaemmerer recounts how later on the night of Nov. 15, a friend approached him and said: "You're still here; don't forget that. Tell your kids, your grandkids, what Sgt. Peralta did for you and the other Marines today." Don't forget. Good advice for all of us.
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