Afghan vet will receive Medal of Honor in May

April 17, 2014 at 12:29AM
Then Spc. Kyle White in a portrait taken immediately before his deployment to Afghanistan circa mid-2007. The Charlotte, N.C., man will receive the Medal of Honor for his valor fighting in Afghanistan's Nuristan province on May 13. (MCT)
Kyle White will be the seventh living recipient to have served in Iraq or Afghanistan to receive the military’s highest award. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

WASHINGTON – A Charlotte, N.C., man will receive the Medal of Honor for his valor fighting in Afghanistan's Nuristan Province, the White House has announced. President Obama will present the award to former Army Sgt. Kyle White on May 13 at a White House ceremony.

White, who works as an investment analyst in Charlotte, is getting the honor for heroic actions during combat in the mountainous terrain in Aranas, Afghanistan, on Nov. 9, 2007.

He was serving as a radiotelephone operator when his platoon was ambushed during a planned meeting with village elders. According to the Army's official account of the evening, an explosion from a rocket-propelled grenade knocked White unconscious, but he awoke to help save the lives of soldiers during a deadly four-hour firefight that left six Americans dead.

White suffered two concussions, got shrapnel in his face and was cut off from his platoon during the fight, according to the account. Yet he fought to stay awake and engaged the enemy. He sprinted several times into a 33-foot space, enemy rounds ricocheting around his feet, to get to a wounded Marine and drag him to safety. He used his rifle to keep the enemy at bay while treating another soldier who had been badly shot in the arm.

"During a long dark night, Specialist White's uncommon valor and perseverance saved lives," Lt. Col. William B. Ostlund, battalion commander, Task Force Rock, said in a 2008 statement. " … Extraordinary and consistently selfless actions by a young paratrooper."

The Medal of Honor is awarded to service members who distinguish themselves by gallantry above and beyond the call of duty. White is the seventh living recipient to be awarded the highest military award for actions in Iraq or Afghanistan.

Born in Seattle, White enlisted in the Army in February 2006 as an infantryman. After completing his training at Fort Benning, Ga., he was assigned to Vicenza, Italy, with the 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry, as a grenadier and rifleman, which included a combat tour to Afghanistan from 2007 to 2008.

For his service, White also has received the Purple Heart, Army Commendation Medal, National Defense Service Medal and Afghanistan Campaign Medal, among many others.

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about the writer

Franco Ordonez, McClatchy Washington Bureau

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