Archived material Access restricted Article
Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Sat 10/14/2006 View Fri 10/13/2006 View Thu 10/12/2006 View Wed 10/11/2006 View Tue 10/10/2006 View Mon 10/09/2006 View Sun 10/08/2006
1
2006-10-14 Iraq
SEAL Falls on Grenade to Save Comrades
Archived material is restricted to Rantburg regulars and members. If you need access email fred.pruitt=at=gmail.com with your nick to be added to the members list. There is no charge to join Rantburg as a member.
Posted by Steve White 2006-10-14 00:00|| || Front Page|| [4 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 "He never took his eye off the grenade, his only movement was down toward it ..."

There are few greater sacrifices anybody can make for their fellow soldiers or country. Rest In Eternal Peace Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael A. Monsoor. A "second class" soldier you never were.

Here is the link to his guestbook. Please take a moment to express your personal sentiments.
Posted by Zenster">Zenster  2006-10-14 00:18||   2006-10-14 00:18|| Front Page Top

#2 Words fail. This man is a genuine hero. God bless him and his family.
Amen.
Posted by Dunno 2006-10-14 00:33||   2006-10-14 00:33|| Front Page Top

#3 Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Monsoor

Garden Grove resident and SEAL dies in combat
Garden Grove resident Michael Monsoor was proud of his service and accomplishments, friends say.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael A. Monsoor was supposed to come back home from Iraq in about two weeks, in time for Halloween, his favorite holiday.

Friends were planning a Halloween and "welcome home" bash for the 25-year-old Navy SEAL, said Patrick Barnes, one of Monsoor's best friends.

Monsoor died Friday while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Ramadi, Iraq, the Department of Defense announced Tuesday. He was assigned to a West Coast-based command.

Barnes said his friend was an adventurer who enjoyed traveling in Europe while he was deployed in Italy and loved snowboarding, fast cars and motorcycles.

He was also "honest, straightforward and a great friend."

"He was selective about the friends he made," Barnes said, fighting back tears. "But when you became his friend, you became his brother."

A family member who answered the door at Monsoor's home in Garden Grove said the family was too distraught to comment.

Monsoor enlisted in the U.S. Navy in March 2001 and became a SEAL in January 2002, said Lt. Taylor Clark, a spokesman for the Naval Special Warfare Command.

Rear Admiral Joseph A. Maguire said in a statement that Monsoor "died conducting some of our military's most important missions."

"This sailor along with our two wounded teammates chose a life of significant meaning – to defend freedom and protect America and its allies from terrorism," he said.

"We hope that in time Michael's family is comforted in knowing that he died fighting for what he believed in and we will not forget his sacrifice."

Debbie Nelson, a neighbor and mother of one of Monsoor's friends, said Monsoor's was a "great boy, handsome and very polite."

"He was very proud of what he had achieved in the Navy," she said.

He grew up in Garden Grove, attended Dr. Walter C. Ralston Intermediate School and graduated from Garden Grove High School in 1999.

Monsoor was a strong, determined person who never gave up, his friend Danny Wright said.

"The first time he tried to become a SEAL, he didn't make it," he said.

Monsoor was crushed by his failure, Wright said.

"But he tried again and made it the second time," he said. "He was very proud of what he had accomplished."

Monsoor could be profound and serious at times and yet be funny around his friends, Barnes said.

"Last Halloween, he was one of the Super Mario Brothers," he said. "This year, we were supposed to dress up as sumo wrestlers."

Wright said Monsoor had sent him an e-mail two days before he died.

"He'd said he was proud of me," he recalled. "And he told me to continue pursuing my dreams. It was as if he was saying goodbye and wishing me luck with my life."

Monsoor is survived by his parents, two brothers, a sister, nieces and nephews. Services are pending.

RIP
Posted by RD 2006-10-14 02:05||   2006-10-14 02:05|| Front Page Top

#4 When they look up "American hero" in the dictionary, there will be a picture of Michael A. Monsoor.
Posted by Greaque Thinerong8160 2006-10-14 03:36||   2006-10-14 03:36|| Front Page Top

#5 I hope he'll give our best regards to Carlos Hathcock, Audie Murphy and Chesty Puller.
Posted by mac 2006-10-14 07:11||   2006-10-14 07:11|| Front Page Top

#6 I don't know where they come from.
Posted by Shipman 2006-10-14 07:41||   2006-10-14 07:41|| Front Page Top

#7 Maybe he'll join Staff Sergeant Paul R. Smith
Posted by Bobby 2006-10-14 08:18||   2006-10-14 08:18|| Front Page Top

#8 God bless him and his family.
Posted by 49 Pan 2006-10-14 09:47||   2006-10-14 09:47|| Front Page Top

#9 level Ramadi. Bastards
Posted by Frank G">Frank G  2006-10-14 09:57||   2006-10-14 09:57|| Front Page Top

#10 "When he shall die
Take him and cut him out in little stars
And he will make the face of heav'n so fine
That all the world will be in love with night
And pay no worship to the garish sun."
- Wm. Shakespeare

May Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael A. Monsoor's light shine eternal.
Posted by DigitalPatriot 2006-10-14 10:13||   2006-10-14 10:13|| Front Page Top

#11 Meanwhile, the media remains in pitched overdrive here on Foley, etc. The only thing they care about is body counts and retreat.

Thank God for soldiers and protectors like Michael Monsoor.
Posted by Captain America 2006-10-14 11:00||   2006-10-14 11:00|| Front Page Top

#12 God will take this man with open arms. Where do they find men like this?

Medal of Honor time boys, Medal of Honor.
Posted by Icerigger 2006-10-14 11:08||   2006-10-14 11:08|| Front Page Top

#13 

A photo of Michael sent home to his family just days before. I don't know how to insert the photo so maybe one of you guys can.

Thanks.
Posted by Icerigger 2006-10-14 11:12|| http://breakingnews.redstate.com/blogs/rick_moran/2006/oct/14/no_greater_love]">[http://breakingnews.redstate.com/blogs/rick_moran/2006/oct/14/no_greater_love]  2006-10-14 11:12|| Front Page Top

#14 I once received pointed instruction from a Special Forces MSG that you should never, ever jump on a live hand grenade, because it is almost invariably futile. He said "baseball rules" apply.

Even if allowed to cook off before throwing, you usually still have a precious 1 or 2 seconds where it is best to pick it up and "grounder" toss it away. This applies if it is right next to you.

If everyone else is standing, they should turn and do a two-step "slide into home plate" away from the grenade. This is because when a grenade detonates on the ground, it has a very distinct 45 degree blast cone upwards. Even if you are just outside of that cone, the severity of your injuries drops considerably.

I say this not to disparage the Petty Officer, but out of a sense of great irony, because his SEAL training taught him exactly the opposite.

That is, explosions under water behave entirely differently from explosions on land. Because water does not compress, the force of an explosion carries a much greater distance. For this reason, part of SEAL demolitions training gives them an abject lesson.

They are told to set up a charge in some sunken ship, then when they set it to explode, to "go around the corner" to get away from the blast. But this does not work under water and they end up getting severely concussed by the blast shockwave in the water, to teach them a lesson.

So the end result was that he probably relied on what he had seen in a movie, because he had never been trained otherwise. I say this because it is an all too common error by those who haven't been taught the behavior of hand grenades.

There is even an instructional thought problem, entitled "Six Marines and a grenade", which is used to describe different "stupid" things that soldiers of all varieties do with fair frequency, that result in them and their friends getting injured and killed.

The first lesson is not to play with a live hand grenade. The second is not to jump on a hand grenade that has fallen on the ground. The third is not to take it apart to find out why it has not exploded. The fourth is to not give away a "dud" to someone ignorant of its status, as a collectible. The fifth is to not play with a dud because you assume it is harmless. And finally, the sixth rule is to "not be unlucky."

Granted, in this case, the Petty Officer may have done the only thing he could have done in the circumstances. It will be best to assume so, as we will never know otherwise.
Posted by Anonymoose 2006-10-14 11:35||   2006-10-14 11:35|| Front Page Top

#15 Your right moose, but the desire to protect a brother usually outweighs any training. At that split second he was not thinking of himself but only of his friends. You can't train that out of a hero.
Posted by 49 Pan 2006-10-14 11:51||   2006-10-14 11:51|| Front Page Top

#16 Froggy, a SEAL, attended the furneral. A must read at Blackfive:

In the Presence of Greatness

http://www.blackfive.net/main/2006/10/in_the_presence.html
Posted by Sherry">Sherry  2006-10-14 14:36||   2006-10-14 14:36|| Front Page Top

#17 A photo of Michael sent home to his family just days before. I don't know how to insert the photo so maybe one of you guys can.

Icerigger--> #3
Posted by RD 2006-10-14 15:11||   2006-10-14 15:11|| Front Page Top

#18 A hero's steely glare.
Posted by J.D. Lux 2006-10-14 15:26||   2006-10-14 15:26|| Front Page Top

#19 J.D. Lux -- you are so right "A hero's steely glare."

Posted by Sherry">Sherry  2006-10-14 15:32||   2006-10-14 15:32|| Front Page Top

#20 that's heartbreaking. Rest in Peace.
Posted by anon 2006-10-14 15:34||   2006-10-14 15:34|| Front Page Top

#21 Anonymoose, you speak with authority. Our troops are the best trained, but there is always room for improvement.

Regardless, Michael Monsoor is a hero in every sense of the word. The man exemplified courage.
Posted by Graimble Thaviger8495 2006-10-14 22:06||   2006-10-14 22:06|| Front Page Top

06:16 Besoeker
23:57 anon
23:57 Zenster
23:56 Zenster
23:54 3dc
23:54 anon
23:52 Zenster
23:51 trailing wife
23:47 anon
23:45 Zenster
23:42 J.D. Lux
23:41 Zenster
23:37 Zhang Fei
23:35 Zenster
23:30 Shieldwolf
23:20 Zenster
23:10 Zhang Fei
22:54 Grunter
22:44 Ptah
22:40 Ptah
22:29 49 Pan
22:22 Frank G
22:20 DMFD
22:18 Frank G









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com