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    March 25, 2013, marks the 150th anniversary of the first Medal of Honor awarded. [...]

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  • MoH (Video and Transcript)

    Every day at the White House we receive thousands of letters from folks all across America. And at night, upstairs in my study, I read a few. [...]

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  • President Obama to award MOH

    On February 11, 2013, President Barack Obama will award Clinton Romesha, a former active duty Army Staff Sergeant, the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry. [...]

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  • Efforts to rename the...

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  • Stamford WWII Medal of Honor Hero

    In the darkness and pouring rain, city workers lowered a bronze statue of Homer Lee Wise -- the city's only Medal of Honor recipient -- onto its base at Veterans Park on Tuesday night [...]

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  • Senator Daniel Inouye, MoH..

    United States Senator, Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, died Monday. December 17, 2012 He was 88. [...]

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  • Spc. Ross A. McGinnis to be honored

    Spc. Ross A. McGinnis who posthumously received the Medal of Honor on June 2, 2008, will be honored on December 7, 2012 [...]

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  • MOH James L. Stone, 89 dies

    Colonel James L. Stone, Medal of Honor recipient, passed away Friday, November 9, 2012 [...]

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Official Marine Corps statement safeguards Corporal Dakota Meyer's MoH

MOH recipient Corporal Dakota Meyer
According to the DoD:

"In light of recent discussion surrounding the Medal of Honor recipient Dakota Meyer, the  United States Marine Corps has issued a statement regarding their choices and decisions in this matter.  The process by which a Medal of Honor recipient is chosen is organized and extensive.

Every recipient is selected and reviewed, and the Marines stand by their decision, and their Medal of Honor recipient, Corporal Dakota Meyer.

“We firmly stand behind the Medal of Honor (MOH) process and the conclusion that this Marine rightly deserved the nation’s highest military honor,” said Lt. Col. Stewart T. Upton in a press release below:



We are personally very disappointed in the McClatchy Newspaper’s decision to publish the article, "Marines Promoted Inflated Story for Medal of Honor Winner" alleging that the Marine Corps embellished Corporal Dakota Meyer’s story. We firmly stand behind the Medal of Honor (MOH) process and the conclusion that this Marine rightly deserved the nation’s highest military honor.

The rigorous award investigation process focuses on source information from direct eye-witnesses and other contemporaneously or near-contemporaneously recorded information. Investigators refer to these reliable sources and not to secondary sources such as newspapers, magazine articles, or books. Because of the nature of the events supporting awards for valor, it is normal for minor discrepancies to appear when reviewing the source information and collecting eyewitness statements. The integrity of the military awards system, however, is paramount in the minds of all Marine commanders; accordingly, awards for valor are not endorsed or approved without solid justification in the form of supporting documents and eyewitness statements.

This investigation process was applied to the award recommendation for then Cpl. Meyer’s MOH and its rigor resulted in an entirely appropriate and well-deserved award. The supporting documents for this award included numerous eyewitness statements, graphics, and a command inquiry by the Commander of Marine Corps Central Command and two Army AR-15-6 investigations, which contained many of the eyewitness statements as well as other official documents and radio logs.

Due to the distance and length of time the battle lasted and the fact that the majority of the participants were in a deadly fight for their lives and the lives of their comrades, the eyewitness accounts may vary in certain detail – variations that are expected. These Marines, Sailors, and Soldiers were engaged in a six-hour battle from the time the Coalition forces entered the Ganjgal Valley and were ambushed, until the time when the last of the Coalition forces left the valley. Many of the participants moved back and forth along the three kilometers of terraced valley floor on multiple occasions during the engagement. While a number of the witnesses were in close proximity to Cpl. Meyer and SSgt. Rodriguez-Chavez at various points in the battle, many other witnesses were farther away. The geography of this battle and the location of the participants meant that not every witness had equal and accurate visibility or situational clarity on every activity.

The narrative of Cpl. Meyer’s Heroic Actions was posted on the Headquarters Marine Corps webpage to allow the American public to read Cpl. Meyer’s personal account of the sequence of events and actions on this day. We supported this communication method in large part because of Sgt. Meyer’s personal desire to not retell with each interview, and thereby re-live, what he calls the "worst day of his life."

The accomplishments described in the MOH citation are valid, supported by two eyewitnesses as required, and confirm the merits of the MOH properly awarded to Cpl. Meyer.