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bobdina
08-15-2010, 01:31 PM
Canadian trio cited for bravery in battle

By: Dene Moore

Posted: 14/08/2010 1:00 AM | Comments: 1





KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- They were out testing some new equipment, just outside the security fence that surrounds the massive NATO military base in Kandahar.

They were so close that they didn't even have flak vests on -- their "kit," as soldiers call it.

That's when the trio of Canadian soldiers heard an explosive boom, said Sgt. Marc-Andre Rousseau, one of the three who received a commendation Friday for their courage during the Aug. 3 insurgent attack on Kandahar Airfield.

After taking cover in a bunker, they heard another rocket-propelled grenade explode about 50 metres away, and a firefight break out involving a group of U.S. soldiers who were also in the area when the daylight attack occurred.

They quickly decided to act.

"I told them let's go, we're going to return fire," said Rousseau, a commander of the Combat Engineers in Kandahar and a member of the Royal 22e Regiment, based in Valcartier, Que.

"We ran outside the bunker. There, I looked to my right and we got a visual contact with the insurgents."

"So, we ran out from the bunker with no kit. 'Oh my God, they're right there'," recalled Rousseau, 27.

The attackers were about 75 metres away, firing on the Americans.

Sapper Kirk Farrell, a 29-year-old soldier from Petawawa, Ont., jumped in the driver's seat of their light armoured vehicle, and Cpl. Joseph Henry, 32, also a member of the Combat Engineers from Valcartier, took command. Rousseau climbed into the gun turret mounted on top of the vehicle.

"At the moment I'm aiming at the insurgents, the first guy blew himself up. That makes a big dust cloud," he said.

Rousseau said he knew the suicide bomber was too far from the rest of the insurgents to have killed them.

The other insurgents were obscured by the dust somewhere between the Canadians' vehicle and a hole in the fence from the suicide bomb.

Rousseau took aim at the dust cloud where he'd seen the attackers. He unleashed 10 rounds of incendiary ammunition, which explodes on contact.

When the dust lifted, between eight and 10 attackers were dead.

Royal Air Force Air Commodore Gordon Moulds, commander of Kandahar Airfield, presented the trio with certificates commending them for "courage, excellence and steadfastness in the face of danger

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/canada/canadian-trio-cited-for-bravery-in-battle-100677409.html

Scott
08-15-2010, 05:23 PM
fuck me thats bravery, thinking about their buddies more then their own safety.

Damm.