By Lisa Ferdinando, DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON -- Three retired soldiers were honored at the
Pentagon yesterday for exceptional gallantry in action against an armed enemy
while serving in Afghanistan as civilian contractors.
Retired Army Master Sgt. William Timothy Nix, retired Army
Chief Warrant Officer Michael Anthony Dunne and retired Army Chief Warrant
Officer Brandon Ray Seabolt received the Medal of Valor, the Defense
Department’s highest civilian award for valor.
Nix was working as a civilian contractor at a coalition base
in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 7, 2015, when he heard the massive boom of a
vehicle-borne improvised explosive device.
"I just grabbed a weapon and ran out," Nix said.
Insurgents had breached the entrance at Camp Integrity,
launching the deadly attack with a vehicle-borne IED and then using direct
fire, hand grenades and suicide vests.
Nix and Dunne, a fellow contractor, rushed to the fight,
teaming up with military personnel to defend the camp, suppress the enemy and
evacuate the wounded.
“[The insurgents] blew the whole front of the camp. The gate
came off. It collapsed the guard tower out there,” Dunne said, recalling that a
suicide vest exploded 30 feet away from him. He thought he would die, he said,
but he kept fighting.
Nix was serving as an irregular warfare analyst for the NATO
Special Operations Component Command Afghanistan in support of the Resolute
Support mission. Dunne was an operations intelligence integrator there.
Fighting was intense and the situation was chaotic, they
recalled. Army 1st Sgt. Peter "Drew" McKenna Jr., who was leading the
charge against the terrorists, was killed, as were eight Afghan contractors.
Their citations laud their heroism for exposing themselves
to direct enemy fire, hand grenades, suicide vests, and other explosives to
suppress insurgents who had breached the camp. Their actions undoubtedly saved
countless lives at great risk to their own lives, their citations read.
Bravery During Attack in Helmand
Seabolt received the Medal of Valor for his actions in
response to an attack near Helmand on Dec. 17, 2015. He had spent 22 years in
the Army and was serving as a civilian contractor and counter-IED expert with
the Joint Improvised Threat Defeat Agency.
On a mission with U.S. Special Forces and Afghan commandos,
something didn’t add up for Seabolt, he recalled. He knew very well that could
be an ominous sign. "We walked inside this compound,” he said. “There was
an open door, and I said, ‘That’s not normal.’”
Then, the withering, close range, semi-automatic and
automatic fire from the enemy began. "We entered the compound with about
10 people, and there were two of us left in the fight," he recalled. Two
Afghan commandos were killed; the others were wounded.
Seabolt’s citation lauds his exceptional actions in exposing
himself to enemy fire and suppressing the insurgents so Afghan commandos and
U.S. Special Forces could move forward. He single-handedly fended off the
insurgent onslaught until the return of other team members, it reads.
“Mr. Seabolt’s bravery and confidence instilled courage
among the entire force, resulting in effective fires on the target, softening
the objective and allowing the recovery force to approach with little
resistance,” according to the citation.
Honoring Citizen-Warriors
Army Lt. Gen. Darsie Rogers, the Defense Threat Reduction
Agency‘s deputy director for combat support, said he is honored and humbled to
call the men Americans heroes and partners and colleagues in service to the
nation.
“We honor these three men for the remarkable valor they
exhibited on the battlefield, for reminding us of the awesome power of the
human spirit and for symbolizing the fearless determination of great
warfighters,” he said.
The men, who are all former special operators, exhibited the
very best of what it means to be a servant and a citizen-warfighter, he said.
“Each of these award citations serves as a moving testament
– and a fitting reminder -- that the work being done by those who fight on the
front lines and protect us all is exceptional, essential and extraordinary,”
Rogers said.
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