Posted by satchmo on Sat Jul 23rd at 2:36am 2005
Times Staff Writer
July 22, 2005
On the last night of his life, Lance Cpl. Aaron Austin joined a prayer session with other Marines hunkered down in a bullet-riddled neighborhood in Fallouja, Iraq.
Austin, a 21-year-old machine-gunner, asked God for protection not for himself but for his fellow Marines of Echo Company of the 2nd Battalion, 1st Regiment, 1st Marine Division, based at Camp Pendleton.
The next morning, insurgents attacked from three directions, firing thousands of rounds from AK-47s and other firearms and hurling dozens of grenades.
With the Marines in danger of being overrun, Austin exposed himself to enemy fire in order to throw a grenade at their position 20 meters away. The grenade helped repel the attack, but Austin was mortally wounded.
For those who knew Austin, his action was no surprise. Today, in a simple ceremony at the Texas Panhandle War Memorial in Amarillo, Austin's parents will receive the Silver Star, awarded posthumously to their son.
Sgt. Maj. William Skiles, who was with Austin that brutal morning in Fallouja, will present the award ? the nation's third-highest medal for bravery in combat.
"All the Marines stepped up, and Aaron led the way," Skiles said.
Austin's mother, De'on Miller, said she understood her son's actions during the firefight on April 26, 2004. Loyalty, she said, was at the core of her son's personality.
"He loved the people he was with," Miller said from her home in Lovington, N.M. "That was Aaron: When he was loyal, he put his entire heart into it. He wouldn't quit fighting."
Austin's Silver Star is the third for a Marine from the "Two-One," one of the units that led last year's assault on the insurgent stronghold.
Lt. Ben Wagner remembered the prayer session the night before Austin was killed. "Aaron was praying for the safety of the other Marines," he said. "That was his personality, concerned with others, not himself."
The Marines were searching buildings in the war-torn Jolan neighborhood when they came under attack in one of the bloodiest clashes between the U.S. military and insurgents that spring.
Austin helped evacuate the wounded and led other Marines onto a roof to operate a machine gun. When the insurgents kept advancing, he took a grenade from his vest and moved into the open for a better throwing position.
"Several enemy bullets struck Lance Cpl. Austin in the chest," said the official Marine Corps account. "Undaunted by his injury and with heroic effort, he threw his hand grenade at the enemy on the adjacent rooftop."
The grenade hit the bull's-eye and forced the insurgents to halt their attack.
When the battle was over, Marines erected a makeshift memorial to Austin in one of the buildings they had fought to defend.
Austin joined the Marines after graduating from high school, which had been marked by his love of parties and football (although he quit the team in solidarity when his cousin had a run-in with the coach).
His parents supported the decision, deciding the Marines would give him discipline and direction.
When he would call home from Iraq ? where he was also part of the 2003 assault that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime ? Austin avoided talking about combat and the chances of death. But his voice had a tone of foreboding, his parents said.
"All I ever wanted was for Aaron to come back. That's all I wanted," said his father, Doug, who owns a small grocery store.
Aaron Austin was buried near his father's Amarillo home.
Among fellow Marines, Austin was known for his laugh and his confidence.
"There's no place I'd rather be than here with my Marines," Austin told the Los Angeles Times two days before the firefight. "I'll always remember this time."
Lt. Gen. James Mattis, who commanded the 1st Marine Division during the spring 2004 offensive, said this week that Austin "represented the very best of us."
"They don't write the foreign policy," Mattis said of Austin and other Marines, "but they faithfully serve our country, even at their peril."
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Posted by French Toast on Sat Jul 23rd at 2:46am 2005
It got kinda sappy at the end though...
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Posted by Dark Tree on Sat Jul 23rd at 10:19am 2005
So basically instead of ducking while the "insurgents" were firing, he stood up and got shot while throwing a grenade...to kill people. Man...what a hero.
I will never understand war.
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Posted by Andrei on Sat Jul 23rd at 10:30am 2005
I feel more sorry for his parents.
Posted by Dark_Kilauea on Sat Jul 23rd at 7:46pm 2005
I think this guy was brave.
Until Later...
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Posted by Underdog on Sat Jul 23rd at 8:40pm 2005
Hi, new here. I was in the military for a short while so I wanted to say a bit on the topic.
Tossing a grenade has nothing to do with standing up if thats what you chose not to do. The weight of a grenade is so much that the tossing technique is unique in itself. You cannot throw it say, like a baseball. You could toss it underhanded like a softball, but thats just to inaccurate. Unless you have actually taken a course in properly tossing a grenade, I could not possibly explain it graphic enough to be envisioned, but when done properly, you can hit marks the size of a loaf of bread from 50 or 75 feet.
It might help if someone looked up the weights of the type grenade used. Each has its own poundage.
What I am trying in my weak way to say is, you can toss a grenade without exposing your body to incoming rounds.
Nice site by the way.
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Posted by satchmo on Sat Jul 23rd at 8:48pm 2005
From my understanding of the story, he had to get out of cover to throw the grenade because the adjacent rooftop was too far away from where they were located.
I am sure he's smart enough to toss it in a safe way if it's possible.
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Posted by Underdog on Sat Jul 23rd at 8:59pm 2005
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Posted by Andrei on Sat Jul 23rd at 9:28pm 2005
I agree it was a brave thing to do. He was somewhat lucky he had time to arm the grenade and to throw it before being hit.
Posted by Leperous on Sat Jul 23rd at 9:38pm 2005
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Posted by Andrei on Sat Jul 23rd at 10:01pm 2005
Posted by Cassius on Sat Jul 23rd at 11:16pm 2005
I do so to let you know that you are the hugest dick in the universe. Let me break it down for you.
In fact, wait a second -
Insulting a man who just died is a terrible thing to do. Insulting a 21 year old boy who just died is worse. Insulting a 21 year old boy who just died trying to save other people is worse. Insulting a 21 year old boy who just died trying to save other people who were attacked by, rather than attacking, an enemy, is worse. Insulting him for his "technique" is worse. Insulting him, once a real, breathing, flesh-and-blood human being who I sincerely doubt you could ever so much as mumble your insults to face to face, because of the war he was in, is worse.
Add these things together, and what do you get? - a trophy, awarded unanimously by the Cassius Asshole Evaluation Board to Dark Tree, for Huge Dick of the Century. I hope and pray that I will never have to meet anyone as wilfully insensitive as you for as long as I live.
Posted by Underdog on Sat Jul 23rd at 11:35pm 2005
God, this is some heavy reading for a gaming board.. I was going to post a question on how best to proceed in starting a first map but, now I am not sure I am even in a mapping site anymore.
Maybe I will come back later.
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Posted by Dark_Kilauea on Sun Jul 24th at 12:31am 2005
Until Later...
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