Posts Tagged ‘hero in Iraq’

O’Reilly Interviews Dunham’s Parents

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

Bill O’Reilly interviewed Jason Dunham’s parents on Monday.

Fox

Ms. Dunham, we’ll begin with you. Why did Jason sign up?

DEBRA DUNHAM, MOTHER OF CPL. JASON DUNHAM: We have four children. And I teach school. Dan works at a factory. And having four children, we couldn’t afford to pay for all four kids to go to college full shot.

Jason knew that the G.I. Bill would be beneficial. And we had talk about several different things. And he chose to join the Marines, knowing he’d get a good education…

O’REILLY: Sure.

DEBRA DUNHAM: …knowing he would get good training. And he would be able to use the G.I. Bill.

O’REILLY: When he got through basic training, never an easy thing, down in Quantico, Virginia.

DEBRA DUNHAM: Yes.

O’REILLY: Very difficult. You must have been proud of him. How did he see his service? Was he happy with it?

DEBRA DUNHAM: Yes, very. He was very proud to wear the uniform of a Marine. The Marines he served with and the Marines that worked with are — were something he was very, very, very proud of.

O’REILLY: And when he was deployed to Iraq, was he happy to go?

DEBRA DUNHAM: I think he was nervous, but Jason felt that there was a job to be done. And that if it wasn’t taken care of there, that we would be fighting it here. And it was his job. And he looked at this as a job.

Jason Dunham – Medal of Honor

Friday, November 10th, 2006

Jason DunhamA young man from Scio New York is about to be honored with America’s highest military honor. I have written about this brave Marine many times. When I read this, I cried.

Marine Cpl. Jason Dunham will be awarded the Medal of Honor. My posts about this extraordinary young man are here.

CNN

President Bush announced on Friday that the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest military decoration, will be awarded posthumously to Marine Cpl. Jason Dunham.

In April 2004, Dunham was leading a patrol in an Iraqi town near the Syrian border when the patrol stopped a convoy of cars leaving the scene of an attack on a Marine convoy, according to military and media accounts of the action.

An occupant of one of the cars attacked Dunham and the two fought hand to hand. As they fought, Dunham yelled to fellow Marines, “No, no watch his hand.” The attacker then dropped a grenade and Dunham hurled himself on top of it, using his helmet to try to blunt the force of the blast.

Still, Dunham was critically wounded in the explosion and died eight days later at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland.

“As long as we have Marines like Corporal Dunham, America will never fear for her liberty,” Bush said Friday as he announced that Dunham would receive the award. Bush spoke at the dedication of the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Virginia.

“His was a selfless act of courage to save his fellow Marines,” Sgt. Maj. Daniel A. Huff of the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, was quoted as saying in Marine Corps News that April.

“He knew what he was doing,” Lance Cpl. Jason A. Sanders, 21, of McAllester, Oklahoma, who was in Dunham’s company, was quoted as saying by Marine Corps News. “He wanted to save Marines’ lives from that grenade.”

In various media accounts, fellow Marines told how Dunham had extended his enlistment shortly before he died so he could help his comrades. “We told him he was crazy for coming out here,” Lance Cpl. Mark E. Dean, 22, from Owasso, Oklahoma, said in Marine Corps News. “He decided to come out here and fight with us. All he wanted was to make sure his boys made it back home.”

“He loved his country, believed in his mission, and wanted to stay with his fellow Marines and see the job through,” Vice President Dick Cheney said when speaking of Dunham’s heroism at a Disabled American Veterans conference in July 2004.

The Scio, New York, native would have been 25 years old on Friday.

In a letter urging Bush to honor Dunham with the Medal of Honor, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-New York, called the Marine’s actions “an act of unbelievable bravery and selflessness.”

Dunham’s story was told in the book “The Gift of Valor,” written by Wall Street Journal reporter Michael Phillips.

Dunham will be the second American to receive the Medal of Honor from service in Iraq. Army Sgt. 1st Class Paul Ray Smith was the other, honored for action near Baghdad International Airport in April 2003, in which he killed as many as 50 enemy combatants while helping wounded comrades to safety. Smith was the only U.S. soldier killed in the battle.


White House

Today, At The Dedication Of The National Museum Of The Marine Corps, President Bush Announced He Will Award The Medal Of Honor (Posthumous) To Corporal Jason Dunham.

  • On April 14, 2004, Corporal Dunham Heroically Saved The Lives Of Two Of His Fellow Marines By Jumping On A Grenade During An Ambush In The Town Of Karabilah. When a nearby Marine convoy was ambushed, Corporal Dunham led his squad to the site of the attack, where he and his men stopped a convoy of cars trying to make an escape. As he moved to search one of the vehicles, an insurgent jumped out and grabbed the corporal by the throat. The corporal engaged the enemy in hand-to-hand combat. At one point, he shouted to his fellow Marines, "No. No. No. Watch his hand." Moments later, an enemy grenade rolled out and Corporal Dunham jumped on the grenade to protect his fellow Marines, using his helmet and body to absorb the blast. Corporal Dunham succumbed to his wounds on April 22, 2004.
  • Today Would Have Been Corporal Dunham’s 25th Birthday. Corporal Dunham was a native of Scio, New York.

The Medal Of Honor Is America’s Highest Decoration For Valor. The Medal of Honor, established by Joint Resolution of Congress, is awarded in the name of Congress to a person who, while a member of the Armed Forces, distinguishes himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while engaged in an action against any enemy of the United States, while engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing foreign force, or while serving with friendly foreign forces engaged in an armed conflict against an opposing armed force in which the United States is not a belligerent party. Corporal Dunham’s family will be presented the medal at an upcoming ceremony at the White House.

Scio post office renaming

Friday, June 2nd, 2006

Honoring Cpl. Jason L. Dunham

Wellsville Daily Reporter

SCIO – On a sandy street in the heart of the war in Iraq, a young man from Scio committed an act of valor which cost him his life.

Friday, a ceremony at his hometown post office will commemorate his sacrifice for evermore.

The gift of life Cpl. Jason L. Dunham gave to his fellow soldiers in April 2004 will be recognized when a plaque is unveiled Friday which officially changes the name of the Scio post office to the Cpl. Jason L. Dunham Memorial Post Office. The public is invited to attend the 10 a.m. ceremony on Friday at the post office located at 4422 West Sciota Street. [snip]

A lot has happened in the 25 months since Jason’s parents Deb and Dan Dunham, his siblings Justin, Kyle and Katelyn, his school mates and teachers first heard the well-liked athlete with the mischievous grin had been wounded in action. It started with an eight-day vigil which ended with the Dunhams at their son’s bed side at the Bethesda Naval Hospital near Washington when he died on April 22, 2004.

His funeral service in the Scio gymnasium where Jason was best-known for sinking baskets for the Tigers, was crowded like no game has ever been. A solemn ceremony followed at the Fairlawn cemetery which was attended by hundreds of people.

At Bethesda Dunham was awarded the Purple Heart. He has also been recommended to receive the Medal of Honor.

Over the last two years, Cpl. Dunham was recognized in a nationwide e-poll as the “Most Popular” in the beliefnet.com “Most Inspirational Poll.”

A memorial has been placed in the Scio school in memory of Dunham and honoring all the school’s graduates who are serving in the military.

In the winter following Dunham’s death the book, “The Gift of Valor,” by war correspondent Michael M. Phillips was published. In May 2005 Phillips gave a talk and a slideshow at Scio Central School detailing Dunham’s sacrifice for the students and teachers who knew the young man.

In December 2005 Congressman John R. “Randy” Kuhl, after reading the Philips’ book, and with the blessings of the town board and the Dunham family, introduced a bill into the House of Representatives to rename the Scio post office in honor of the Corporal. It passed the House immediately with the support of all members of the New York delegation. In the early spring at the urging of both New York Senators Charles E. Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton the bill passed the Senate.

On March 14, in a VIP room at the Rochester Airport, President George W. Bush met with the Dunham family and Kuhl and signed the bill into law. At the time the President said, “Jason’s death was not for naught,” and vowed to see the Iraqi war through.

On April 29, the history room at the new Scio Memorial Library was named in honor of Dunham and dedicated to him and three other Scio soldiers who lost their lives during military action.

Two other Marines survived the attack for which Cpl. Dunham has been recognized.

According to the official military report, “Cpl. Dunham (Jason) was conducting a hasty vehicle check point near the city of Karbala on April 14, (2004) in response to a recent attack on a convoy, when an Iraqi hostile got out of the car, started to run, turned, and pulled the pin on a grenade. Cpl. Dunham put himself between the grenade and his fellow Marines.”

Some Give All

Sunday, May 28th, 2006

Reprinted from May 26, 2004. NY Daily News

A New Yorker who died saving two other Marines by covering an Iraqi grenade with his helmet and blunting the blast with his body has been nominated for a Congressional Medal of Honor.

Cpl. Jason Dunham was commanding a checkpoint near Karbala on April 14 when a black-clad Iraqi leaped out of a car and grabbed him around the neck, according to the Marines. A strapping 6-foot-1 ex-jock, Dunham kneed the Iraqi in the chest and then both fell to the ground. It was then that he spotted the grenade in his attacker’s hand and called out a warning to the Marines rushing to his aid. His cry was cut short by the blast.

When the smoke cleared, Dunham was laying facedown in his own blood and his Kevlar helmet was shattered. The Marines who tried to help him also were wounded, but they were alive. “He is a genuine American hero,” said a Marine officer at Camp Pendleton in Twentynine Palms, Calif., where Dunham’s unit, the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, is based. Dunham is the first U.S. soldier to be nominated for the nation’s highest honor for valor in the Iraq war.

If President Bush approves the award, Dunham’s heroism would be the first act of bravery recognized with the medal since Gary Gordon and Randy Shugart, two Army Delta Force soldiers, died fighting in Somalia. They were posthumously honored with the award 11 years ago.

Mortally wounded when grenade fragments pierced his skull, Dunham lingered for six more days before he died at a military hospital in Bethesda, Md. His parents, Deb and Dan Dunham of Scio, N.Y., were at his side. He was just 22.

Since then, Dunham’s legend has grown and the drive to award him the medal is being spearheaded by his battalion commander, Lt. Col. Matthew Lopez.

Deb Dunham said she did not want to jinx her slain son’s chances by talking about the medal. “I’m aware of the nomination, and if Jason gets this honor, please call me back,” she said. “But right now we’d like to close the door a bit and have a little privacy. We’re still mourning.”

Among those who have testified about Dunham’s bravery are the soldiers he helped save.

More than 1,000 people packed Scio’s high school gym for Dunham’s funeral. “I hope one day I could be half the hero he is,” childhood friend Dean Phillips wrote in an online tribute. “I hear there is a special place for heroes in heaven.”

Cpl. Jason Dunham

Thursday, March 16th, 2006

Hornell Evening Tribune

Jason DunhamROCHESTER – History was changed Tuesday in a quiet VIP room at the Rochester International Airport when President George W. Bush signed a bill to rename the Scio post office in honor of Marine Cpl. Jason Dunham.

It was a “secret, secret,” to everyone involved, but the likelihood the event would take place in New York state with Dunham’s family present was high, after the bill was passed by the U.S. Senate less than two weeks ago.

The resident met privately with the Dunham family, talking with each member and expressing his feelings with a quiet “Oh my,” after learning that Kyle Dunham plans to follow in his brother’s footsteps and become a Marine after graduation from Scio Central School. “He related to us, as a parent who understands what it means to lose a child. He was warm and funny, comfortable to be with, and easy to talk to,” said Deb Dunham.

After speaking to the Dunhams for several minutes, the president brought the group back to task. “He was moving chairs and getting everything ready, saying we have a bill we need to sign,” she said.

Previous post titled Another American Hero

Cpl. Jason Dunham was commanding a checkpoint near Karbala on April 14 when a black-clad Iraqi leaped out of a car and grabbed him around the neck, according to the Marines. A strapping 6-foot-1 ex-jock, Dunham kneed the Iraqi in the chest and then both fell to the ground. It was then that he spotted the grenade in his attacker’s hand and called out a warning to the Marines rushing to his aid. His cry was cut short by the blast.

When the smoke cleared, Dunham was laying facedown in his own blood and his Kevlar helmet was shattered. The Marines who tried to help him also were wounded, but they were alive. “He is a genuine American hero,” said a Marine officer at Camp Pendleton in Twentynine Palms, Calif., where Dunham’s unit, the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, is based.