10 Most Decorated War Heroes of the 21st Century

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Michael Monsoor
> Rank: Master-at-Arms Second Class (SEAL)
> Military branch: Navy
> Served in: Iraq
> Medals of valor: Medal of Honor, Silver Star

Michael Monsoor of the Navy SEALs earned his medals posthumously for his actions in Iraq on Sept. 29, 2006. Monsoor was deployed with a Navy spec-ops task force as part of a sniper team on a rooftop in Ramadi, which was one of the most dangerous cities in Iraq at that time. Insurgents surrounded the sniper team shortly after dawn and attacked with rocket-propelled grenades and small-arms fire. A grenade hit Monsoor in the chest and landed in front of him and two other Navy SEALs. Monsoor threw himself onto the grenade to absorb the force of the explosion. He saved the two SEALs but not himself. He died from his wounds a half-hour later.

Source: dvids / Flickr

David Cooper
> Rank: Chief Warrant Officer
> Military branch: Army
> Served in: Iraq
> Medals of valor: Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star

Army Chief Warrant Officer David Cooper was flying a helicopter on Nov. 27, 2006, in central Iraq, leading a group of aviators in support of a ground-deployed spec-ops team as it moved toward a staging site in the open desert. When his wingman’s helicopter was disabled by a rocket-propelled grenade, Cooper stayed on to support the team protecting the crash area. Shortly after the helicopter was downed, enemy fighters swarmed the area and attacked the ground forces, who had no cover. To deflect attention from the ground troops, Cooper flew into enemy fire and attacked the fighters. When his ammunition was spent, Cooper landed near the crash site, and the ground troops helped him reload with the rounds from the downed helicopter. Cooper renewed the attack and the enemy fighters retreated. Cooper had been deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq 23 times during the War on Terror.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Mark L. Donald
> Rank: Lieutenant (SEAL)
> Military branch: Navy
> Served in:Afghanistan
> Medals of valor: Navy Cross, Silver Star

When Lt. Mark Donald’s convoy came under heavy fire from rocket-propelled grenades and small arms on Oct. 23, 2003, in Afghanistan, he sprang into action. The Navy SEAL returned fire while pulling a wounded Afghan soldier to safety. Donald, a combat medic, then grabbed a wounded Marine wedged behind the wheel of a truck. Even as bullets ripped his clothes, Donald continued to treat the Marine’s wounds. After evacuating some of the wounded, Donald went looking for other wounded soldiers while evading machine-gun fire. He provided medical treatment until all the wounded were evacuated. After he left the military, Donald became a public speaker. He also is the author of the book “Battle Ready: Memoir of a SEAL Warrior Medic.”

Source: usarmyafrica / Flickr

Erich Phillips
> Rank: Sergeant
> Military branch: Army
> Served in: Afghanistan
> Medals of valor: Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star

Erich Phillips was a 23-year-old mortar platoon sergeant stationed at a mountainside outpost in Nuristan province in Afghanistan on the morning of Aug. 22, 2007, when insurgents launched a rocket attack against about two dozen members of his unit. The insurgent force was estimated to be three times their size and they almost overran the position. The platoon’s medic suffered a chest wound, and Phillips dragged him to safety. The unit fought off the attack, with half of them wounded in a three-hour battle, before A-10 Warthogs arrived and strafed the area to push back the enemy. Phillips received the Silver Star a year later for heroic actions in the same region of Afghanistan.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Paul D. Fiesel
> Rank: Master Sergeant
> Military branch: Army
> Served in: Afghanistan
> Medals of valor: Two Silver Stars

Army Master Sergeant Paul D. Fiesel earned two Silver Stars while serving in Afghanistan. He received his first one in December 2008 for leading a special-ops detachment and Afghan troops that relieved another special-ops team under fire from as many as 400 enemy fighters and helped withdraw wounded soldiers. He was awarded the second star following an engagement with the enemy in September 2011. Fiesel was on patrol with a spec-ops detachment when a four-man team from his unit came under heavy fire from enemy fighters armed with heavy machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. He led another four-man group that attacked the enemy, and rescued the trapped U.S. soldiers.

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