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Rafael Peralta
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Thu Dec 09 2004 at 5:40:29
Imagine
you are on the front lines in
Fallujah, Iraq
. You don't have to be. Hell, if you wanted you could be somewhere other than outside this house you and a company of
marines
are about to enter. You enlisted in the
United States Marine Corps
back in 2000. Recently you re-enlisted. What you bring in as a marine doesn't make you rich, but you send it back home to your family and they're getting by, and the corps takes care of your own immediate needs. You're a
platoon scout
, which means you coulda stayed back. However, you're the kinda guy who offers to help out. You fill a hole where it's needed. You know why you're here. You wanna do your part. You're not just trying to get through the day; you wanna make each day count.
Besides, this has become kinda
routine
. You've been trained for this. You and your buddies make up what's called a
stack
. You and five other marines file into a house, standard procedure, check all the rooms one door at a time and make sure all is clear; that there's no insurgents hiding out to stir up trouble later. You've been doing this all over Fallujah. It's no big deal. Well.. it is a deal. I mean, they don't give you the
gun
you're carrying to do some gardening.
There's a level of risk here
, but you've been trained. Your buddies have been trained. You
trust
them, they trust you, and besides you got two stacks per house. That many eyes; how can anything possibly
go wrong
? So you and your buddies
kick down
the
front door
and go into
this house
. Your stack goes into one main room and the other stack goes into the other main room. There's no
confrontation
so your group shouts "clear!" Then you hear the other stack shout, "clear!" You don't let your guard down though cuz there's another door, and everybody gets in their places, scattered throughout the room so you all have a clear shot. You're closest to the door, so you check the
handle
, it opens with ease. You swing the door open with
rifle
in hand and then you hear popping sounds and you're going down to the floor. There were three
insurgent
s on the other side. Your buddies are retaliating, but you're suddenly
discovering
gravity and the cold floor and you smell and taste
blood
. It's yours.
So you're on the floor. You haven't had enough time to take stock of what body parts are working and what's not. Maybe you're not even feeling pain. You think perhaps you're going into
shock
. You've heard sometimes that's what happens to people who get multiple gunshot wounds from
AK-47
s at
point blank
range. You're pretty sure though that you'll never be the same again. In fact there's a very good chance you're done for. Before you can really access the ramifications of your
mortality
though, you hear the sound of something metallic bouncing across the cold floor. It's yellow and round and it stops moving within arm's reach of you. Your eyesight is kinda blurry and it's getting hard to think, but you think maybe it's a
grenade
.
All your buddies are still in the room. You can't see if they've left, but you can hear the gunfire and you're assuming they're in the process of making short work outta the guys that just shot you. You don't want anything to happen to your friends. They've been
through thick and thin
with you. They trust you, you trust them and they're counting on you. You figure you're done for anyway, and if you grab the grenade maybe your body will take the brunt of the blast, thus sparing their lives. So you reach out with the arm that's still responding to your brain's commands, and you grab the grenade. You pull it in close to you, like you used to draw close your little sister to give her a hug. You embrace death, knowing in your last breath you're saving your friends.
Imagine all that. Now realize that however
grievous
or
painful
or
remarkable
or
strange
or
horrifying
or
confusing
or
proud
or
sad
or
patriotic
or
angry
or whatever you feel imagining all that? Multiply that by about twenty. That's how you
should
feel.
My words just don't
do this man's
sacrifice
justice. I never knew the man.
I wish I could have shaken his hand
.
Sgt. Rafael Peralta was twenty-five years old. Of
mexican-american
ancestry, Peralta called
San Diego, California
home. He was known among other marines for taking risks, and going above and beyond the
call of duty
for the sake of his junior marines. His
unit
was Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division. He was the oldest son of his family, and since his father passed away a few years ago, he was also for all intents and purposes the head of the family.
He loved the corps
. He loved his family. He loved his country. He would fill a hole in the front lines
because he knew it mattered
. He would do what needed to be done. His life should be commemorated. His sacrifice should never be forgotten. His effort should not be seen in vain.
Earlier this year
, Sgt. Peralta spent his life to spare others. His sacrifice is one of a precious and courageous few marines in the history of America who have literally used their own body to minimize the blast from a grenade. This is a very rare occurrence, that I for one wish was even more rare. Every time this has happened in the past, the man
posthumously
received a
Congressional Medal of Honor
. There is every reason to believe the same will happen here.
http://ktla.trb.com/news/ktla-me-marine6dec06-lat,0,555267.story?coll=ktla-news-1
http://www.theunionleader.com/articles_showa.html?article=48001
http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/lookupstoryref/2004123102943
http://www.portlavacawave.com/articles/2004/12/03/news/news02.txt
http://sleazereport.com/wp/index.php?p=646
printable version
chaos
Medal of Honor
grenade
There but for the grace of God go I
November 24, 2004
Posthumously
War in Iraq, pacifism, and the real world
Through thick and thin
M67 Fragmentation Grenade
United States Marine Corps
Go wrong
Support the Troops
San Diego, California
Hand grenade
imagine
sacrifice
Risk perception
Insurgent
Kofi Annan's statement regarding the war in Iraq - March 20, 2003
The United States should go to war with Iraq
Article 26 and the war against Iraq
Uncovered: The Whole Truth About The Iraq War
The war on Iraq as a moral panic
The United States is already at war with Iraq
The United States should not go to war with Iraq
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