Tag Archives: Purple Heart

Photo of the Day – The Unwanted Medal

Back in 2003, I was wounded during an artillery strike in which I landed in a ravine with my full combat gear on. I was lucky. Some Soldiers near me lost arms, legs, and their lives. How I managed to avoid even a small piece of shrapnel from the attack is a miracle I’ll never forget. The impact of the landing combined with the sheer weight of my gear compressed my spine and pinched a nerve. Once we had finally repositioned and taken account of the situation, I was asked for my 1156, which is a casualty feeder card. We keep them in our kevlars in case of injury or death to document the circumstances of the injury. Out of a feeling of a lack of entitlement, I refused to turn mine in. While the pain was excruciating, I was just happy to be alive. So many others were much more deserving of a Purple Heart than I was.

I didn’t realize that this injury would be something that I would live with for the rest of my life. At the time, I thought the pain would go away and felt awkward getting a medal for an injury that didn’t bleed and that I walked away from. In the years since, a few people have talked me into submitting the paperwork to get the medal. I still have the witness statements and medical records to back it up, but the Army isn’t good at processing medals like this years later. Each time, the process became so bogged down that I withdrew my request. I felt like I was shopping for medals and it just seemed wrong.

The Purple Heart is perhaps the only medal that is not awarded, but entitled. It still needs to be officially presented, but once a military member meets the criteria for the award, he/she is entitled to it. There is no recommendation process. Even still, it’s the one medal most troops I’ve ever worked with claim they never want to earn. It’s the one medal they can do without, myself included.

However, it’s still good to see Soldiers get the medal they are entitled to. In some states, there are special privileges that come with being presented the Purple Heart.


Army Pfc. Edward Barut from Waipahu, Hawaii, was one of 12 service members recognized for actions taken Oct. 26 when their convoy was ambushed twice while traveling through Afghanistan’s Tangi Valley. The team successfully overcame a 45-minute complex attack in which insurgents used rocket propelled grenades, small arms fire and improvised explosive devices.

Photo by Senior Airman Katie Justen.

Photo of the Day – The Purple Heart

U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus, commander of International Security Assistance Force and U.S. Forces Afghanistan, awards the Purple Heart to U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Anthony Michael Roszko, platoon sergeant for 2nd Platoon, Company A, 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Task Force Duke, during a ceremony at Forward Operating Base Salerno, Khowst province, Afghanistan, June 2. Roszko, an infantryman and native of Bronx, N.Y., was one of 16 TF Duke soldiers awarded the Purple Heart from Petraeus at the ceremony. Petraeus also met later in the day with Khowst Provincial Governor Abdul Jabaar Naeemi for a luncheon and conversations about events and challenges facing the Afghan and coalition partnership.

Soldier of the Week – CPT Juan Guerrero


After competing at the inaugural Warrior Games last year, Capt. Juan Guerrero took home the gold medal in the 10-meter air rifle shooting event. This week, the Soldier will return to the competition with even higher goals – he hopes to be named the Ultimate Warrior by accruing the most points in a pentathlon-style event.

Eight months ago Guerrero’s right leg was amputated, but recently he was fitted with a prosthetic leg that allows him to walk and even run. Determined to be in prime condition for the event, Guerrero has dedicated himself to a rigorous training program over the last several months.

“Since I still have some residual pain from my amputation surgery, I think that the 100-meter run will probably be the toughest event for me,” he said. “But the Warrior Games have been a great motivator for me to keep training no matter what.”

That same sense of determination sustained Guerrero through three deployments to Iraq. During his most recent deployment, he served with the Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division (Airborne), and was in charge of leading a team of nearly two dozen Soldiers.

In June 2007, Guerrero was out on a mission with his team when an improvised explosive device (IED) detonated under their Humvee. True to his role as a leader, Guerrero thought of the safety of the other Soldiers in his vehicle, despite his own injuries.

“My main concern was for my driver and my gunner. There was a lot of smoke in the vehicle, but once I determined that they were okay, I realized that I was wounded,” he said. “My legs felt like they were on fire and once my Soldiers were able to get me out of the vehicle, I saw my right leg and realized it was bad.”

Shrapnel from the IED blast shattered the bones in Guerrero’s right tibia, and much of his right calf and left heel were damaged in the explosion. He was immediately evacuated to Baghdad, Iraq, for emergency surgery on his leg, and later moved to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington D.C., where he spent more than four months recovering and undergoing multiple skin grafts to help repair his right leg.

Yet, the pain in his leg was so persistent and severe that Guerrero made the decision to have his right leg amputated below the knee last September. As he enters a new phase in his recovery process, Guerrero is grateful to have the added goal of competing in the second annual Warrior Games – and winning the Ultimate Champion title.

“From seeing the competition that was there last year, I know it’s going to be a tough crowd, but I’m focused on my own goals,” he said. “I want to defend my shooting title, but I intend to do well in the other events, too.”

Currently, the Soldier lives with his wife and three children in the San Antonio, Texas area, and he is continuing to recover at Brooke Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston, Texas.

To learn more about the Warrior Games, please visit http://www.usparalympics.org/pages/8330 and http://www.wtc.army.mil/about_us/warriorgames.html. Additionally, to learn more about the Warrior Transition Command and its commitment to adaptive sports, please visit http://wtc.armylive.dodlive.mil/.

Soldier of the Week – CPL David Bixler

The motto of the 101st Airborne Division “Everyone fights, nobody quits,” represented more than a catch phrase to Cpl. David Bixler. The words embodied the spirit of bravery and perseverance he displayed last fall when he and his comrades came under enemy fire in Afghanistan. Currently recovering from combat injuries at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., the motto continues to inspire Bixler throughout his rehabilitation.

While deployed to Afghanistan with the 101st Airborne Division’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team, Bixler was on a routine mission that was suddenly derailed by an enemy attack.

“The entire horizon in front of us seemed to explode into a frenzy of machine gun fire,” he said. “We were pinned down into a ditch just on the other side of the dirt mound we had climbed up after crossing that canal. We could only manage to get a handful of Soldiers in decent fighting positions.”

As a team leader, Bixler was responsible for five of his comrades, including three Afghan National Army (ANA) Soldiers. When he realized that one of the ANA Soldiers had separated from the team, he tried to warn him of the danger. Bixler feared that a hidden improvised explosive device (IED) would detonate, injuring the group. When the Soldier did not respond, Bixler took swift action.

“I hauled up the dirt mound to pull him back to safety,” he said. “At that moment, I stepped backwards and wide in order to regain my balance, and that’s when I stepped on the pressure plate.”

The ANA Soldier sustained only minor wounds, but the explosion left Bixler with severe injuries, resulting in the loss of both legs.

Despite the extent of his injuries, Bixler is thankful to be alive crediting his fellow Soldiers with saving his life.

“The training that we had gone through really paid off that day,” he said. “My guys’ responses saved my life. We practiced how to get out of a combat zone after an attack. They knew that you need to finish the firefight first and then you could provide aid to wounded Soldiers.”

In addition to the actions of his team, Bixler also knows that his personal protective equipment shielded him from further injury.

“My personal protective equipment saved my life,” he said. “The IED shredded the gloves off my hands, but had I not worn them, I would have lost my fingers. My glasses and helmet blocked shrapnel from going into my eyes. And I wore ear protection, which saved most of my hearing.”

Bixler uses his story to encourage other Soldiers to take their safety seriously – even if the gear seems cumbersome.

“You need to keep wearing the gear, even if it is annoying,” he said. “It can save your livelihood and, in some cases, your life.”

Bixler’s valorous actions on the battlefield drew the attention senior leadership. Maj. Gen. John Campbell, the commander of the 101st Airborne Division and Fort Campbell, Ky., personally presented Bixler with the Silver Star Medal and Purple Heart in a bedside ceremony at Walter Reed.

Having recently been fitted for prosthetic legs, Bixler is learning to walk again. But for now, the Soldier has a more immediate goal – being there when the rest of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team returns home.

“The rest of my unit will return from Afghanistan in a few weeks, and I want to walk to meet them when they get off the plane,” he said. “I want to be able to greet them on my feet, to show them that I am alive. And most importantly, tell them that I have no regrets.”

Living without regrets is something that has characterized Bixler’s military service from the start. As a high-school student, he watched the events of Sept. 11, 2001 unfold, and was moved to join the Army and defend his country.

“I didn’t want to be a citizen in a country I wasn’t willing to fight for,” he said. “Had I not enlisted, I would have regretted it.”

Warrior of the Week – CPT Darby Boudreaux

CPT Darby Boudreaux
Everyday Soldiers of the U.S. Army fight to protect our country, our families and our lives. Many have given the ultimate sacrifice. Many, even after suffering traumatic injuries of war, continue to serve.

Captain Darby Boudreaux, 225th Engineer Brigade, was severely injured by an improvised explosive device on May 25, 2005 in a route clearance mission near Ghazaliya in western Baghdad. A minor artery was severed in his right leg and he lost a significant amount of blood.

Boudreaux spent the next three months recovering and going through painful rehabilitation.

Even with life threatening injuries, Bourdreauz says that the most traumatic part of the whole ordeal was not the impact of the blast or how close he came to death, but the fact he had to leave his Soldiers behind.

So four years later, he convinced his command to allow him to return to Iraq.

Currently, Boudreaux is the officer in charge and an instructor at the 225th Engineer Brigade Task Force Iron Claw Academy. He uses his near death experience to give Soldiers a chance at success and a better chance to stay alive by teaching Improvised Explosive Device identification.

Even with pieces of metal still lodged inside his body, Cpt. Boudreaux is satisfied that he was able to finally complete his mission on the battlefield.

For his heroism on the battlefield and his commitment to his Soldiers, Cpt. Darby Boudreaux is this week’s Warrior-Soldier of the Week.

Photo by Lt. Col. Pat Simon

Soldier of the Week – MSG Chris Catalano

chris catalano
Growing up, Master Sgt. Chris Catalano always knew he wanted to be a Soldier. His parents, who served a combined thirty years, and his grandfather, a World War II veteran, were all NCOs in the Army. His family’s legacy of service has not only inspired Catalano’s decision to serve in the Army Reserve, but also defined the type of Soldier he has become over the last 25 years. His grandfather, who was a very influential figure in his life, passed away a few weeks after Catalano arrived in Iraq in 2004. Faced with the tough decision of remaining with his men or returning home for the funeral service, he ultimately decided to remain in theater. He knew his grandfather would not want him to leave his mission, and staying would be the best way to honor his legacy.

Catalano’s focus on mission first has driven many important and selfless decisions in his Army career. On February 22, 2005, Catalano was on a dismounted foot patrol in a dangerous area of Mosul. The group had planned to stay and speak with the local residents for only a few minutes. They came under direct enemy fire and Catalano was shot in the neck, only inches away from his spinal cord. Even though he was severely injured from the shot, he returned to duty the next day. For his injury and meritorious service while under fire, Catalano received the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star Medal.

His time in Iraq greatly influenced Catalano, and the relationships he developed have lasted well beyond the battlefield. Responsible for working with and training local Iraqi forces, Catalano befriended several of the interpreters, including one in particular whose nickname was “The Professor” because of his multiple degrees and ability to speak several languages. Over the years, Catalano has kept in touch with his friend who now lives in West Virginia, talking to him regularly on the phone and helping him get acclimated to the United States.

As a civilian, Catalano currently works as a military technician and is responsible for repairing military equipment. He lives in Edison, N.J., with his wife, Cheryl, and children, Chris (17) and Alysa (13). Only time will tell if either of his children will follow in his footsteps, but regardless his family’s legacy of service is one they will all continue to honor.