A Royal Marine has been recommended for the Victoria Cross after he
threw himself on to an exploding grenade to save the lives of his
comrades.
Lance Corporal Matthew Croucher stepped on a tripwire which triggered
the grenade during a night raid on a Taliban compound in Afghanistan.
He realised instantly that all four members of his patrol faced being killed by the blast.
Matthew Croucher insisted he must carry on fighting
Instead of fleeing he deliberately smothered the explosion, twisting on to his back to let his rucksack take the full force.
The explosion hurled him across the compound leaving him stunned,
bleeding from the nose and almost deaf, while kit from his shredded
backpack was sent flying through the air in flames.
But within minutes L Cpl Croucher, from Birmingham, was on his feet
again and demanding to be allowed to continue the patrol. He even
helped set an ambush - knowing that the Taliban would come and
investigate the blast - and shot dead an armed insurgent during the
subsequent firefight.
Stunned by his bravery, the 24-year-old's comrades urged commanders to
put him forward for Britain's highest honour for valour on the
battlefield, and his citation will be considered by the armed forces
honours and awards committee later this year.
If a VC is awarded he will become only the third man to earn it since
the Falklands Conflict 26 years ago - and the first surviving recipient
from the war in Afghanistan.
The incident happened during a pre- dawn raid last month when Marines
from 40 Commando raided a suspected bomb-making factory close to the
town of Sangin.
As a team of four crept through the maze of mud-walled homes, L Cpl
Croucher's foot brushed the trip-wire. He heard the distinctive click
of the grenade's pin and spotted the device at his feet through his
night-vision goggles.
His colleagues barely had time to react to his yelled warning, and were
still in the open when the grenade went off. By then he had thrown
himself on to the grenade, pulling up his legs in the hope of avoiding
fatal injuries.
He recalled: 'I thought, "I've set this bloody thing off and I'm going to do whatever it takes to protect the others".
'There have been a few times when they've saved my bacon. I figured
that if I could keep my torso and head intact I'd probably survive -
although I fully expected to lose a limb.'
L Cpl Croucher told the News of the World: 'All I could hear was a loud
ringing and the faint sound of people shouting, "Are you OK? Are you
OK?" It took 30 seconds before I realised I was definitely not dead.'
Senior officers stressed that the remarkable incident has been 'one
among many' during 40 Commando's six-month tour of duty in Helmand
Province.
The unit is due to return to Britain shortly after months of often
intense fighting, and will hand over to Paras from 16 Air Assault
Brigade.
Three years ago Private Johnson Beharry of the 1st Battalion the
Princess of Wales Royal Regiment received the VC for saving comrades
during two ambushes in southern Iraq.
And in 2006 Corporal Bryan Budd, 29, of 3 Para, earned a posthumous VC
for storming a Taliban machine gun post after he was injured in an
ambush in Afghanistan. He killed several enemy but died in the process.
If a VC is awarded he will become only the third man to earn it since the Falklands Conflict 26 years ago
Source: Daily Mail, UK. Mar. 31, 2008
Originally posted by aremeis:Victoria Cross hope for Marine who leaped on a grenade to save friends
A Royal Marine has been recommended for the Victoria Cross after he threw himself on to an exploding grenade to save the lives of his comrades.
Lance Corporal Matthew Croucher stepped on a tripwire which triggered the grenade during a night raid on a Taliban compound in Afghanistan.
He realised instantly that all four members of his patrol faced being killed by the blast.
Matthew Croucher insisted he must carry on fighting
Instead of fleeing he deliberately smothered the explosion, twisting on to his back to let his rucksack take the full force.
The explosion hurled him across the compound leaving him stunned, bleeding from the nose and almost deaf, while kit from his shredded backpack was sent flying through the air in flames.
But within minutes L Cpl Croucher, from Birmingham, was on his feet again and demanding to be allowed to continue the patrol. He even helped set an ambush - knowing that the Taliban would come and investigate the blast - and shot dead an armed insurgent during the subsequent firefight.
Stunned by his bravery, the 24-year-old's comrades urged commanders to put him forward for Britain's highest honour for valour on the battlefield, and his citation will be considered by the armed forces honours and awards committee later this year.
If a VC is awarded he will become only the third man to earn it since the Falklands Conflict 26 years ago - and the first surviving recipient from the war in Afghanistan.
The incident happened during a pre- dawn raid last month when Marines from 40 Commando raided a suspected bomb-making factory close to the town of Sangin.
As a team of four crept through the maze of mud-walled homes, L Cpl Croucher's foot brushed the trip-wire. He heard the distinctive click of the grenade's pin and spotted the device at his feet through his night-vision goggles.
His colleagues barely had time to react to his yelled warning, and were still in the open when the grenade went off. By then he had thrown himself on to the grenade, pulling up his legs in the hope of avoiding fatal injuries.
He recalled: 'I thought, "I've set this bloody thing off and I'm going to do whatever it takes to protect the others".
'There have been a few times when they've saved my bacon. I figured that if I could keep my torso and head intact I'd probably survive - although I fully expected to lose a limb.'
L Cpl Croucher told the News of the World: 'All I could hear was a loud ringing and the faint sound of people shouting, "Are you OK? Are you OK?" It took 30 seconds before I realised I was definitely not dead.'
Senior officers stressed that the remarkable incident has been 'one among many' during 40 Commando's six-month tour of duty in Helmand Province.
The unit is due to return to Britain shortly after months of often intense fighting, and will hand over to Paras from 16 Air Assault Brigade.
Three years ago Private Johnson Beharry of the 1st Battalion the Princess of Wales Royal Regiment received the VC for saving comrades during two ambushes in southern Iraq.
And in 2006 Corporal Bryan Budd, 29, of 3 Para, earned a posthumous VC for storming a Taliban machine gun post after he was injured in an ambush in Afghanistan. He killed several enemy but died in the process.
If a VC is awarded he will become only the third man to earn it since the Falklands Conflict 26 years ago
Source: Daily Mail, UK. Mar. 31, 2008
waa...this guy is like SAS material...jump on the grenade.
Ok guys, now you know why they make you carry those huge Field Packs?
I salute if its true
on the contrary, is this some propaganda thingy ?
It's true-- has been reported by BBC as well. What's even more interesting is that the BBC mentions that he is a reservist i.e. NSman :)
He's the Royal Marines. They're as good as the SAS.
Great soldiering.
Hey, a VC and he's still got a chest to pin it on. That's an achievement.