Michael
Smerconish | THE HONORABLE MICHAEL MURPHY
October
22, 2007
'MISSION accomplished."
That's the reaction of
Marcus Luttrell to the news that Lt. Michael Murphy would be posthumously
awarded the Medal of Honor. The presentation will be made to Murphy's parents
by President Bush today at the White House.
Murphy's life and death are
the stuff of storybooks. If only we could change the ending.
The recognition of Murphy's
gallantry is the final chapter for Operation Redwing and Seal Team 10. The story,
which Luttrell immortalized in his best-selling book "Lone Survivor,"
is a remarkable account of military heroism in the post-9/11 era. Indeed,
Murphy is the first recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions in Afghanistan
and the first SEAL since Vietnam to be honored.
Murphy was the ranking
member of a four-man team inserted into the Hindu Kush region of Afghanistan in
June 2005. The mission: locate a high-level Taliban operative with ties to
Osama bin Laden who was believed to be in a neighboring village.
Soon after the SEALs
arrived, three goatherds happened upon them. The herders were unarmed, but
Murphy and his comrades got a bad vibe and were faced with an unenviable
choice: Let the herders go and risk blowing the team's cover, or kill the herders?
As team leader, it was Murphy's decision. He let the herders live. An hour
later, the SEALs were surrounded by at least 100 Taliban.
A vicious gunfight ensued,
which Luttrell described for me:
"I guess it was about
an hour and change into the gun battle. Our communication ties had been severed
because of the number of men we were up against . . . there was pretty much no
way we were going to get out of there. They had us in a 360-degree pen, and
they were wearing us down. We were running low on ammo."
Murphy made a last-ditch
effort to save his comrades when he stepped into a canyon to make a satellite
call for help. He was shot and died in the firefight, with Petty Officers Danny
Dietz and Matt Axelson. Sixteen other men sent as reinforcements were killed
when their chopper was shot down. It was the deadliest day in Navy special
warfare history.
Marcus Luttrell watched his
friend Michael Murphy die.
"In the situation we
were in . . . he never lost his cool, and he got help for us," Luttrell said.
Lead Petty Officer Luttrell
was the only survivor, hence the title of his book. He had to drag his wounded
body several miles, until he found refuge with an Afghan villager. Luttrell was
awarded the Navy Cross by President Bush. Dietz and Axelson received that award
posthumously.
Luttrell saw tremendous
valor in Murphy, the stuff of Medals of Honor. "He gave up his own life to
try to sustain the lives of his men," he told me.
"He took it upon
himself to muscle out into the middle of this canyon we were in and call for
reinforcements. And when he did that, he didn't lose his life immediately
because of it. He took a couple of rounds to his back . . . and continued
fighting. But after that they had got a fix on his position and moved in on him
. . . It ultimately cost him his life."
NO ONE COULD be more proud
that Murphy's father, Daniel, himself a Vietnam veteran.
"I think the family
kind of takes it that there is now this public recognition of what we knew
about Michael all along," Murphy told me. "It was the manner in which
he lived his life and the manner in which he served his country . . . Now the
nation knows."
"Michael had a knack
and an ability to get out of the middle of scrapes. And Maureen" -
Michael's mother - "and I never worried about Michael protecting himself.
What Maureen and I always worried about was the fact that Michael would put
himself in a position, in helping someone else, to get hurt. And that's
basically what happened."
". . . Michael believed
that a life in service to others and helping others was the only life worth
living. And he lived that type of life every day. And so it doesn't surprise us
that he would put himself on the line for his friends. He had an intense
loyalty and devotion not only to his family and his country, but to his SEAL
community and his SEAL teammates. And since his death, that's been reflected in
how the SEAL community and his SEAL buddies have embraced the family."
Today, Daniel Murphy will
receive the Medal of Honor from President Bush in the name of his son.
"We're overwhelmed by this. You know, it's very easy to talk about our son
as a hero. It is very easy. He has so many good qualities . . . just a
wonderful man. The world is a lesser place without him in it."
Marcus Luttrell told me one
more incredible detail of an already stunning story. "Whoever he had on
the phone . . . I remember it like it was yesterday . . . he said, 'Thank you.'
"
In other words, Michael
Murphy, shot twice and probably knowing he was at death's door, maintained his
manners when ending the call he hoped would save his fellow SEALs.
So, Lt. Murphy, thank you. *
Listen to Michael
Smerconish weekdays 5:30-9 a.m. on the Big Talker, 1210/AM. Read him Sundays in
the Inquirer. Contact him via the Web at www.mastalk.com.