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American Forces Press Service
based on a
release from the Fort Campbell, Ky., Public
Affairs Office
A
101st Airborne Division soldier who,
despite being critically wounded himself,
repeatedly exposed himself to enemy fire to
treat wounded comrades in Iraq received the
Silver Star on February 5th.
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Original photo courtesy of AFPS |
Pvt. Dwayne
Turner, a combat medic assigned to
Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd
Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, provided
life-saving medical care to 16 fellow soldiers
April 13 when his unit came under a grenade and
small-arms attack 30 miles south of Baghdad.
Turner and two
other medics from Company A of that battalion
were part of a work detail that came under
attack as they unloaded supplies in a makeshift
operations center.
"I moved to (my
vehicle) just before the first grenade came over
the wall," Turner said. "The blast threw me even
further into the vehicle, and I took on some
shrapnel."
Ignoring his own
injuries, Turner ran to the front of his vehicle
and saw a soldier with eye injuries.
"I checked him
out, and tried to get him into a building,"
Turner said. The other two medics established a
triage system under the cover of a building
while Turner ran back outside to bring more
soldiers into the makeshift clinic.
"I just started
assessing the situation, seeing who was hurt,
giving them first aid and pulling them into
safety," he said, downplaying his actions on
that day.
Turner, his legs
wounded by shrapnel in the initial attack, was
shot at least twice while giving first aid to
the soldiers.
"I didn't realize
I was shot," he said. "A couple of times, I
heard bullets going by, but I thought they were
just kicking up rocks on me."
At one point
during the attack, one of Turner's fellow medics
told him he was bleeding. "Someone told me, 'Doc
Turner, Doc Turner, you're bleeding.'" he said.
"I looked down at my leg and saw I was bleeding,
and kind of said, 'Oh hell, if I'm not dead yet,
I guess I'm not dying.'"
"I don't think he
realized how much blood he lost," said Sgt.
Neil Mulvaney, from the same unit as Turner.
"After I got the
first patient inside the building, I sort of
slumped down in the corner," Turner said. "I
didn't think there was any way we were going to
get out of there, and it would have been really
easy to just stay in that corner.
"Then I heard (the
wounded) calling for medics," he continued, "and
I realized I could let them continue to get hurt
-- and possibly die -- and not come home to
their families, or I could do something about
it."
Turner chose to do
something about it. He continued to give first
aid and to bring soldiers in from the barrage of
gunfire outside the compound until he finally
collapsed against a wall from loss of blood. A
bullet had broken his right arm. He had been
shot in the left leg. Shrapnel had torn into
both of his legs.
The Silver Star is
awarded for gallantry in combat, but Turner does
not see himself as a hero.
"Nobody gets left
behind," he said emphatically. "We were the
medical personnel on hand. You're not relieved
from your duty until someone comes. No one else
was going to get the job done, so we did."
Although Turner
downplays his heroism, the Army believes that at
least two of the 16 soldiers he treated would
have died had he not been there.
"He risked his
life for 16 other men without noticing his own
injuries - that's heroism in my book," Mulvaney
said.
"I was just doing
my job," Turner insisted. "As far as the values
of the Army, it's not to 'earn' a Silver Star;
it's to uphold what you signed on for. Other
people may see me as a hero; I see myself as
doing my job. No one is going to die on my
watch."
Turner's Silver
Star is the highest award given to any 101st
soldier during Operation Iraqi Freedom thus far.
He received the Purple Heart in July.
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The
101st Airborne Division is in the midst of returning to Fort
Campbell, Kentucky, after a year's
deployment to Iraq. The last
division convoy rolled across the
border into Kuwait Feb. 10th. A
10-soldier contingent assigned to Mosul Airfield is all that remains
of the 101st in Iraq; they are
slated to leave Iraq late February. |
THE END
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