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Medals Of Honor Recognize Harrowing Battle And A Dying Act

Army Command Sergeant Major Bennie G. Adkins receives the Medal of Honor during a ceremony at the White House. He describes the battle that earned him the medal as the toughest he saw in three tours of duty in Vietnam.
Alex Wong Getty Images
Army Command Sergeant Major Bennie G. Adkins receives the Medal of Honor during a ceremony at the White House. He describes the battle that earned him the medal as the toughest he saw in three tours of duty in Vietnam.

Medals Of Honor Recognize Harrowing Battle And A Dying Act

It was January 1970 and Army Specialist Four Donald P. Sloat was on patrol with his squad in Vietnam.

"The lead soldier tripped a wire. A boobie trap. A grenade rolled toward the feet of a 20-year-old machine gunner." That 20-year-old was Sloat. And as President Obama tells it, he had a choice. The pin on the grenade had been pulled. It could explode at any moment.

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The Medal of Honor, the nation's highest military award, was presented Monday to Sloat, posthumously, and Bennie Adkins, who also served in Vietnam. Adkins survived a harrowing battle and 18 body wounds.

"And at that moment [Sloat] could have run. At that moment he could have ducked for cover. But Don did something truly extraordinary. He reached down and he picked that grenade up," Obama said.

He turned to throw it, Obama said, "but there were Americans in front of him and behind him inside the kill zone. So Don held onto that grenade. And he pulled it close to his body and he bent over it. And then, as one of the men said, all of a sudden there was a boom."

Sloat was killed, but everyone else survived. His body absorbed the worst of the explosion. But for years, his familiy thought he had stepped on a land mine. Sloat's mother Evelyn learned the real story late in her life, and Obama says she made it her mission to have his actions recognized.

Evelyn passed away nearly three years ago, Obama said, but "she always believed, she knew, that this day would come. She even bought a special dress to wear to this ceremony."

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Don Sloat's brother Bill accepted the award Monday in their absence.

80-year-old Army Command Sargent Bennie Adkins needed a little help getting on the ceremony stage. He wore a decorated dress uniform and military boots as he accepted his Medal of Honor for heroism over four days he describes as the toughest battle he saw in three tours of duty in Vietnam.

"It was a horrible, horrible type of battle," he said at a press conference at Fort Benning, Georgia earlier this month. He told reporters that after the battle, he reflected on what had happened.

"When they treated me for 18 body wounds, someone was looking after me, and at that period of time, it was not myself," he says.

It was March 1966, during Adkins second tour as a green beret. He was at an isolated Special Forces camp when a large North Vietnamese force attacked.

"Bennie ran into enemy fire again and again to retrieve supplies and ammo, to carry the wounded to safety, to man the mortar pit holding off wave after wave of enemy assaults."

And then, as they waited for rescue on a hilltop in the jungle, surrounded by North Vietnamese soldiers, a tiger staled them through the night:

"We were all bloody and in this jungle the tiger stalked us and the north Vietnamese soldiers were more afraid of the tiger than they were of us, so they backed off some and we were gone," he says.

The tiger must have been on their side, he figures. After receiving his award Monday, Adkins didn't want to talk about himself, instead listing the names of his soldiers who were there with him.

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