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SgtJim
03-29-2011, 08:42 AM
story of Sgt. Nathaniel S. Gray, an infantry squad leader from Tupelo, Miss., assigned to Company B, 2nd Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division
all photos are hi-res, and got descriptions, just "mouse-over it"
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Combined Joint Task Force 101
Story and photos by Sgt. 1st Class Mark Burrell
from dvidshub
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Point man steers team clear of danger


KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan – "I can say that I've led this platoon into more ambushes than any
other point man here on this deployment," said U.S. Army Sgt. Nathaniel S. Gray with a toothy grin
and slow, southern accent.

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"I was point man for the first six, seven months here," he continued. "I walked us into a lot. I can smell it,
but I don't know where it's at. I know it's going to happen. Every time we were walking I was looking for
my next covered and concealed position. Ya know, I'd look at this rock, then that rock. Oh, there's another
rock, that's where I'm going. I just never knew when it was going to happen."

Gray, assigned to Company B, 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, Task Force No Slack, is now a squad
leader and has an uncanny knack for getting himself and his team out of tight spots.

Even before joining the Army, Gray found ways out of potentially hairy situations.

He grew up in Tupelo, Miss., a town about the same size as Asadabad, the capital of Kunar province,
Afghanistan, where he now patrols.

As a teenager, he watched war movies and idolized the men in those action roles who wore
Screaming Eagle patches on their shoulders.

"If you see TV or movies, who wouldn't choose the 101st?" Gray said. "If you see 'Hamburger Hill' with
those dudes charging up the side of a mountain, who wouldn't want to do that?"

After returning from his first combat tour in Iraq, he quickly joined the 101st Airborne Division and
deployed again to Iraq with 3rd Brigade Combat Team for 15 months.

Now, 10 months into a yearlong deployment to Afghanistan with 1st Brigade Combat Team,
Gray stares out of his makeshift fighting position into the Shigal Valley.



"You see something?" another Soldier asked. "Ah, it's just dead trees."

"Make sure you know where it's coming from before you shoot, know what I mean?," said Gray to the Soldier.

"I expect a rocket-propelled grenade to come from that ridgeline over there."

It was quiet for a few minutes as the Soldiers scanned the ridges with their weapons.

Then Gray said, "Actually, it's my sons' birthdays today."

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Jacob and Joseph, twins, turned 5 years old, March 16. Gray said he sent home a bow and arrow set
for their presents. He started laughing.

"Last time I was home, one of them was walking around the gas station we were at singing
the Pledge of Allegiance," Gray said. "I thought that was pretty cool."

One of the main reasons Gray has stayed in the Army is because of his two sons. He is able to care
for them, but they also look up to and admire him for being a Soldier.

"They want camouflage stuff, ya know they're 5," Gray said with a smile.
"They want the G.I. Joe backpack, and I think that's pretty cool."

Then he explained the difference between being a squad leader and a father.

"Over here, a squad leader is more difficult than taking care of kids," Gray explained.
"Here, you have to check to make sure their magazines are full, their (combat optics) are tied down,
you have to check everything. Small things have bigger consequences over here."

Since joining the Army, Gray has learned that it's the little things that count.

"The Army changed my life a lot," Gray said. "It kind of distilled something in me. I started doing the right thing.
I respect myself more and I respect others more."

After dodging as many more ambushes as he can in his three years left in the military, he plans on going to college
and walking into one more ambush: being swarmed by children.

"I want to be a kindergarten teacher," Gray said.

The fighting position on the mountain was quiet for a moment, and then erupted with muffled laughter from his troops.

"Everybody laughs, but that's what I want to do," added Gray. "I love kids."

A few days later, back home in Mississippi, Jacob and Joseph got a phone call. Their dad was on the line,
far away from them but reassuring them that he found a safe route off the mountain. Gray has a certain knack for that.

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fenix9885
03-29-2011, 05:04 PM
Gray sounds like a true American hero with that kind of bravery. Men like him are the backbone of our defense.

Although, I was a little confused about a few parts of the story. He said that he got his platoon into a lot of ambushes but he is now a squad leader. Did he get demoted or am I just reading it wrong? I can't imagine how alert you have to be in a place like that. The stakes are high and one small error and you or your friends go down. Thanks for sharing, dig these kinds of personal articles that give a real face to the war and show us all that there are regular guys, just like you and I, that are over there fighting and dying

Mel
03-29-2011, 05:22 PM
Great post SgtJim,Your post are one of a kind brother.