

By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
May 25, 2004
AL QA'IM, Iraq -- Early this spring, Cpl. Jason Dunham and two other Marines sat in an outpost in Iraq and traded theories on surviving a hand-grenade attack. Second Lt. Brian "Bull" Robinson suggested that if a Marine lay face down on the grenade and held it between his forearms, the ceramic bulletproof plate in his flak vest might be strong enough to protect his vital organs. His arms would shatter, but he might live.
Cpl.
Dunham had another idea: A Marine's Kevlar helmet held over the grenade might contain the
blast. "I'll bet a Kevlar would stop it," he said, according to Second Lt.
Robinson. "No, it'll still mess you
up," Staff Sgt. John Ferguson recalls saying.
It was a conversation the men would remember vividly a few weeks later, when they saw the
shredded remains of Cpl. Dunham's helmet, apparently blown apart from the inside by a
grenade. Fellow Marines believe Cpl. Dunham's actions saved the lives of two men and have
recommended him for the Medal of Honor, an award that no act of heroism since 1993 has
garnered.
A
6-foot-1 star high-school athlete from Scio, N.Y., Cpl. Dunham was chosen to become a
squad leader shortly after he was assigned to Kilo Company, Third Battalion, Seventh
Marine Regiment in September 2003. Just 22 years old, he showed "the kind of
leadership where you're confident in your abilities and don't have to yell about it,"
says Staff Sgt. Ferguson, 30, of Aurora, Colo. Cpl. Dunham's reputation grew when he
extended his enlistment, due to end in July, so he could stay with his squad throughout
its tour in the war zone.
During
the invasion of Iraq last year, the Third Battalion didn't suffer any combat casualties.
But since March, 10 of its 900 Marines have died from hostile fire, and 89 have been
wounded.
April
14 was an especially bad day. Cpl. Dunham was in the town of Karabilah, leading a 14-man
foot patrol to scout sites for a new base, when radio reports came pouring in about a
roadside bomb hitting another group of Marines not far away.
Insurgents,
the reports said, had ambushed a convoy that included the battalion commander, 40-year-old
Lt. Col. Matthew Lopez, of Chicago. One rifle shot penetrated the rear of the commander's
Humvee, hitting him in the back, Lt. Col. Lopez says. His translator and bodyguard, Lance
Cpl. Akram Falah, 23, of Anaheim, Calif., had taken a bullet to the bicep, severing an
artery, according to medical reports filed later.
Cpl.
Dunham's patrol jumped aboard some Humvees and raced toward the convoy. Near the
double-arched gateway of the town of Husaybah, they heard the distinctive whizzing sound
of a rocket-propelled grenade overhead. They left their vehicles and split into two teams
to hunt for the shooters, according to interviews with two men who were there and written
reports from two others.
Around
12:15 p.m., Cpl. Dunham's team came to an intersection and saw a line of seven Iraqi
vehicles along a dirt alleyway, according to Staff Sgt. Ferguson and others there. At
Staff Sgt. Ferguson's instruction, they started checking the vehicles for weapons.
Cpl.
Dunham approached a run-down white Toyota Land Cruiser. The driver, an Iraqi in a black
track suit and loafers, immediately lunged out and grabbed the corporal by the throat,
according to men at the scene. Cpl. Dunham kneed the man in the chest, and the two tumbled
to the ground. Two other Marines rushed to
the scene. Private First Class Kelly Miller, 21, of Eureka, Calif., ran from the passenger
side of the vehicle and put a choke hold around the man's neck. But the Iraqi continued to
struggle, according to a military report Pfc. Miller gave later. Lance Cpl. William B.
Hampton, 22, of Woodinville, Wash., also ran to help.
A
few yards away, Lance Cpl. Jason Sanders, 21, a radio operator from McAlester, Okla., says
he heard Cpl. Dunham yell a warning: "No, no, no -- watch his hand!" What was in the Iraqi's hand appears to have been
a British-made "Mills Bomb" hand grenade. The Marines later found an unexploded
Mills Bomb in the Toyota, along with AK-47 assault rifles and rocket-propelled-grenade
launchers.
A Mills Bomb user pulls a ring pin out and squeezes the external lever -- called the spoon
-- until he's ready to throw it. Then he releases the spoon, leaving the bomb armed.
Typically, three to five seconds elapse between the time the spoon detaches and the
grenade explodes. The Marines later found what they believe to have been the grenade's pin
on the floor of the Toyota, suggesting that the Iraqi had the grenade in his hand -- on a
hair trigger -- even as he wrestled with Cpl. Dunham.
None
of the other Marines saw exactly what Cpl. Dunham did, or even saw the grenade. But they
believe Cpl. Dunham spotted the grenade -- prompting his warning cry -- and, when it
rolled loose, placed his helmet and body on top of it to protect his squadmates.
The
scraps of Kevlar found later, scattered across the street, supported their conclusion. The
grenade, they think, must have been inside the helmet when it exploded. His fellow Marines
believe that Cpl. Dunham made an instantaneous decision to try out his theory that a
helmet might blunt the grenade blast.
"I
deeply believe that given the facts and evidence presented he clearly understood the
situation and attempted to block the blast of the grenade from his squad members,"
Lt. Col. Lopez wrote in a May 13 letter recommending Cpl. Dunham for the Medal of Honor,
the nation's highest award for military valor. "His personal action was far beyond
the call of duty and saved the lives of his fellow Marines."
Recommendations
for the Medal of Honor are rare. The Marines say they have no other candidates awaiting
approval. Unlike other awards, the Medal of Honor must be approved by the president. The
most recent act of heroism to earn the medal came 11 years ago, when two Army Delta Force
soldiers gave their lives protecting a downed Blackhawk helicopter pilot in Somalia.
Staff
Sgt. Ferguson was crossing the street to help when the grenade exploded. He recalls
feeling a hollow punch in his chest that reminded him of being close to the starting line
when dragsters gun their engines. Lance Cpl. Sanders, approaching the scene, was
temporarily deafened, he says. He assumed all three Marines and the Iraqi must surely be
dead.
In
fact, the explosion left Cpl. Dunham unconscious and face down in his own blood, according
to Lance Cpl. Sanders. He says the Iraqi lay on his back, bleeding from his midsection. The fight wasn't over, however. To Lance Cpl.
Sanders's surprise, the Iraqi got up and ran. Lance Cpl. Sanders says he raised his rifle
and fired 25 shots at the man's back, killing him.
The
other two Marines were injured, but alive. Lance Cpl. Hampton was spitting up blood and
had shrapnel embedded in his left leg, knee, arm and face, according to a military
transcript. Pfc. Miller's arms had been perforated by shrapnel. Yet both Marines struggled
to their feet and staggered back toward the corner.
"Cpl.
Dunham was in the middle of the explosion," Pfc. Miller told a Marine officer weeks
later, after he and Lance Cpl. Hampton were evacuated to the U.S. to convalesce. "If
it was not for him, none of us would be here. He took the impact of the explosion."
At
first, Lance Cpl. Mark Edward Dean, a 22-year-old mortarman, didn't recognize the wounded
Marine being loaded into the back of his Humvee. Blood from shrapnel wounds in the
Marine's head and neck had covered his face. Then Lance Cpl. Dean spotted the tattoo on
his chest -- an Ace of Spades and a skull -- and realized he was looking at one of his
closest friends, Cpl. Dunham. A volunteer firefighter back home in Owasso, Okla., Lance
Cpl. Dean says he knew from his experience with car wrecks that his friend had a better
chance of surviving if he stayed calm. "You're
going to be all right," Lance Cpl. Dean remembers saying as the Humvee sped back to
camp. "We're going to get you home."
When
the battalion was at its base in Twentynine Palms, Calif., the two Marines had played pool
and hung out with Lance Cpl. Dean's wife, Becky Jo, at the couple's nearby home. Once in a
while, Lance Cpl. Dean says they'd round up friends, drive to Las Vegas and lose some
money at the roulette tables. Shortly before the battalion left Kuwait for Iraq, Lance
Cpl. Dean ran short of cash. He says Cpl. Dunham bought him a 550-minute phone card so he
could call Becky Jo. He used every minute.
At
battalion headquarters in al Qa'im, Chaplain David Slater was in his makeshift chapel --
in a stripped-down Iraqi train car with red plastic chairs as pews -- when he heard an
Army Blackhawk helicopter take off. The 46-year-old Navy chaplain from Lincoln, Neb. knew
that meant the shock-trauma platoon would soon receive fresh casualties.
Shortly
afterward, the helicopter arrived. Navy corpsmen and Marines carried Cpl. Dunham's
stretcher 200 feet to the medical tent, its green floor and white walls emitting a rubbery
scent, clumps of stethoscopes hanging like bananas over olive-drab trunks of chest tubes,
bandages and emergency airway tubes. The
bearers rested the corporal's stretcher on a pair of black metal sawhorses. A wounded
Iraqi fighter was stripped naked on the next stretcher -- standard practice for all
patients, according to the medical staff, to ensure no injury goes unnoticed. The Iraqi
had plastic cuffs on his ankles and was on morphine to quiet him, according to medical
personnel who were there.
When
a wounded Marine is conscious, Chaplain Slater makes small talk -- asks his name and
hometown -- to help keep the patient calm and alert even in the face of often-horrific
wounds. Chaplain Slater says he talked to Cpl. Dunham, held his hand and prayed. But he
saw no sign that the corporal heard a word. After five minutes or so, he says, he moved on
to another Marine.
At
the same time, the medical team worked to stabilize Cpl. Dunham. One grenade fragment had
penetrated the left side of his skull not far behind his eye, says Navy Cmdr. Ed Hessel,
who treated him. A second entered the brain slightly higher and further toward the back of
his head. A third punctured his neck. Cmdr.
Hessel, a 44-year-old emergency-room doctor from Eugene, Ore., quickly concluded that the
corporal was "unarousable." A calm, bespectacled man, he says he wanted to
relieve the corporal's brain and body of the effort required to breathe. And he wanted to
be sure the corporal had no violent physical reactions that might add to the pressure on
his already swollen brain.
Navy
Lt. Ted Hering, a 27-year-old critical-care nurse from San Diego, inserted an intravenous
drip and fed in drugs to sedate the corporal, paralyze his muscles and blunt the gag
response in his throat while a breathing tube was inserted and manual ventilator attached.
The Marine's heart rate and blood pressure stabilized, according to Cmdr. Hessel. But a
field hospital in the desert didn't have the resources to help him any further.
So
Cpl. Dunham was put on another Blackhawk to take him to the Seventh Marines' base at Al
Asad, a transfer point for casualties heading on to the military surgical hospital in
Baghdad. During the flight, the corporal lay on the top stretcher. Beneath him was the
Iraqi, with two tubes protruding from his chest to keep his lungs from collapsing. Lt.
Hering stood next to the stretchers, squeezing a plastic bag every four to five seconds to
press air into Cpl. Dunham's lungs.
The
Iraqi, identified in battalion medical records only as POW#1, repeatedly asked for water
until six or seven minutes before landing, when Cpl. Dunham's blood-drenched head bandage
burst, sending a red cascade through the mesh stretcher and onto the Iraqi's face below.
After that, the man remained quiet, and kept his eyes and mouth clenched shut, says the
nurse, Lt. Hering.
The
Army air crew made the trip in 25 minutes, their fastest run ever, according to the pilot,
and skimmed no higher than 50 feet off the ground to avoid changes in air pressure that
might put additional strain on Cpl. Dunham's brain.
When
the Blackhawk touched down at Al Asad, Cpl. Dunham was turned over to new caretakers. The
Blackhawk promptly headed back to al Qa'im. More patients were waiting; 10 Marines from
the Third Battalion were wounded on April 14, along with a translator.
At
11:45 p.m. that day, Deb and Dan Dunham were at home in Scio, N.Y., a town of 1,900, when
they got the phone call all military parents dread. It was a Marine lieutenant telling
them their son had sustained shrapnel wounds to the head, was unconscious and in critical
condition.
Mr.
Dunham, 43, an Air Force veteran, works in the shipping department of a company that makes
industrial heaters, and Mrs. Dunham, 44, teaches home economics. She remembers helping her
athletic son, the oldest of four, learn to spell as a young boy by playing "PIG"
and "HORSE" -- traditional basketball shooting games -- and expanding the games
to include other words. He never left home or hung up the phone without telling his
mother, "I love you," she says.
The
days that followed were filled with uncertainty, fear and hope. The Dunhams knew their son
was in a hospital in Baghdad, then in Germany, where surgeons removed part of his skull to
relieve the swelling inside. At one point doctors upgraded his condition from critical to
serious.
On
April 21, the Marines gave the Dunhams plane tickets from Rochester to Washington, and put
them up at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., where their son was going
to be transferred. Mrs. Dunham brought along the first Harry Potter novel, so she and her
husband could take turns reading to their son, just to let him know they were there.
When
Cpl. Dunham arrived that night, the doctors told the couple he had taken a turn for the
worse, picking up a fever on the flight from Germany. After an hour by their son's side,
Mr. Dunham says he had a "gut feeling" that the outlook was bleak. Mrs. Dunham
searched for signs of hope, planning to ask relatives to bring two more Harry Potter
books, in case they finished the first one. Doctors urged the Dunhams to get some rest.
They
were getting dressed the next morning when the intensive-care unit called to say the
hospital was sending a car for them. "Jason's condition is very, very grim,"
Mrs. Dunham remembers a doctor saying. "I have to tell you the outlook isn't very
promising."
A Marine kisses a helmet standing in honor of Cpl. Jason L. Dunham during a service at
Camp Al Qaim, Iraq.
She says doctors told her the shrapnel had traveled down the side of his brain, and the
damage was irreversible. He would always be on a respirator. He would never hear his
parents or know they were by his side. Another operation to relieve pressure on his brain
had little chance of succeeding and a significant chance of killing him.
Once
he joined the Marines, Cpl. Dunham put his father in charge of medical decisions and asked
that he not be kept on life support if there was no hope of recovery, says Mr. Dunham. He
says his son told him, "Please don't leave me like that."
The
Dunhams went for a walk on the hospital grounds. When they returned to the room, Cpl.
Dunham's condition had deteriorated, his mother says. Blood in his urine signaled failing
kidneys, and one lung had collapsed as the other was filling with fluid. Mrs. Dunham says
they took the worsening symptoms as their son's way of telling them they should follow
through on his wishes,.
At
the base in al Qa'im, Second Lt. Robinson, 24, of Kenosha, Wis., gathered the men of Cpl.
Dunham's platoon in the sleeping area, a spread of cots, backpacks, CD players and rifles,
its plywood walls papered with magazine shots of scantily clad women. The lieutenant says
he told the Marines of the Dunhams' decision to remove their son's life support in two
hours' time.
Lance
Cpl. Dean wasn't the only Marine who cried. He says he prayed that some miracle would
happen in the next 120 minutes. He prayed that God would touch his friend and wake him up
so he could live the life he had wanted to lead.
In
Bethesda, the Dunhams spent a couple more hours with their son. Marine Corps Commandant
Michael Hagee arrived and pinned the Purple Heart, awarded to those wounded in battle, on
his pillow. Mrs. Dunham cried on Gen. Hagee's shoulder. The Dunhams stepped out of the
room while the doctors removed the ventilator.
At 4:43 p.m. on April 22, 2004, Marine Cpl. Jason L.
Dunham died.
Six
days later, Third Battalion gathered in the parking lot outside the al Qa'im command post
for psalms and ceremony. In a traditional combat memorial, one Marine plunged a rifle,
bayonet-first, into a sandbag. Another placed a pair of tan combat boots in front, and a
third perched a helmet on the rifle's stock. Lance Cpl. Dean told those assembled about a
trip to Las Vegas the two men and Becky Jo Dean had taken in January, not long before the
battalion left for the Persian Gulf. Chatting in a hotel room, the corporal told his
friends he was planning to extend his enlistment and stay in Iraq for the battalion's
entire tour. "You're crazy for extending," Lance Cpl. Dean recalls saying.
"Why?"
He
says Cpl. Dunham responded: "I want to make sure everyone makes it home alive. I want
to be sure you go home to your wife alive."
Note from Ted. My heart screams and my brain flies over many things to say but only one thought filters to the top Cpl Jason L. Dunhan took SEMPER FI to its highest level.
ONLY TWO DEFINING FORCES
HAVE EVER OFFERED TO DIE FOR YOU!
Jesus Christ and the American G.I.
One died for your soul;
The other died
for your freedom.
Facts
& Commentary by & about MARINES
"Always Faithful" is not just a motto we learn in boot camp,
It's our way of life.
Dignataries quotes for the MARINES 231 Year LEGACY Click here
For a very special Letter Home Click Here
TEN HUT ....
PRESENT .... ARMS ...
A MARINE IS PASSING ON!

Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
Tick ... tick ... tick tick tick tick
...........
SEMPER FI

Almighty Father, whose command is over all and whose love never fails; let me be aware of Thy presence and obedient to Thy will. Keep me true to my best self, guarding me against dishonesty in purpose and deed, and helping me so to live that I can stand unashamed and unafraid before my fellow Marines, my loved ones, and Thee. Protect those in whose love I live, give me the will to do the work of a Marine and to accept my share of responsibilities with vigor and enthusiasm. Grant me fortitude that I may be proficient in my daily performance. Keep me loyal and faithful to my superior officers; make me considerate of those entrusted to my leadership and faithful to the duties my country and the Marine Corps has entrusted to me. Help me always to wear my uniform with dignity, and let it remind me daily of the traditions of the service of which I am part. If I am inclined to doubt, steady my faith; if I am tempted, make me strong to resist; If I should miss the mark, give me courage to try again. Guide me with the light of truth and grant me wisdom by which I may understand the answer to my prayer.
AMEN.
SAEPE EXPEATU - OFTEN TESTED
Cpl (E4) Luedke, Ted W
USMC1857316 1958 -
1962 1st MAW
Act 1st St USAR39036xxxx 1978
- 1988 84th Div
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