Monday, March 10, 2008

Danny Dudek's Story...








MAJ Dudek south of Hussainiyah in a Joint Security Station

"I truly didn’t expect anything to happen to me. As an Army Major, I studied the Counter Insurgency (COIN) Fight in Iraq in great detail. At COIN workshops, prior to our deployment, our Brigade’s senior leadership listened to Battalion Commander’s and civilian experts fresh from a year in Iraq’s most dangerous cities. As the Brigade Fire Support Officer in the newly generated Fourth Stryker Brigade Combat Team, I knew I was with the most proficient soldiers on the battlefield fielded with the latest equipment, automated systems and weapons including new wheeled armored vehicle called the Stryker. Nothing was going to happen to me. Anyways, I was on Brigade Staff and we rarely left the Forward Operating Base (FOB).
Well, on July 19th, 2007, I did leave the FOB and that was the last time for me. When we left our FOB in Taji, Iraq I was in the lead Stryker Vehicle in the back left hatch in a convoy of five Strykers that made up the Brigade Commander’s Personal Security Detachment (PSD). I rarely went out with the Colonel and this was the first time in the lead vehicle. I usually rode with the Brigade Operations Officer, about three vehicles back, whose vehicle internal intercom was a little more entertaining. My job that day was to call in artillery, based out of Taji, on dirt patches near locations that had a high frequency of Improved Explosive Device (IED) attacks. We called that type of artillery missions “terrain denial”.
Near the northwest corner of a large Shi’a town called Hussainiyah I called in the first fire mission and waited to hear the words “shot” come over the radio, meaning the guns at Taji fired the rounds and I should expect to see the rounds impact about a kilometer from the stretch of road we slowly moved along. I was facing to the left from my left side hatch with only head and shoulder exposed out of the vehicle waiting for my rounds to come...BOOM!
















I really don’t remember hearing it, the new Bose headset fit tightly around and under my helmet cut out the loud noise, but I remember the smell and seeing the smoke and laying flat on the inside of the Stryker. I was relaxed, not much pain at all expect for the needle like sensations from the inside of both my legs. I was listening to M4’s and 50cal main guns firing when I realized I couldn’t move my legs. I told the vehicle commander and waited knowing soon there would be someone to help me.Within the next hour, I’d been on a casualty evacuation (CASEVAC) bird back to Balad, talked to my wife on a phone and had surgery to address the fractures to my lumbar vertebrae (L3 and L4) and sacrum and to stop the swelling of my spinal cord. The IED was an explosively formed projectile (EFP) that came from the right side of the vehicle killing the soldier next to me with molten pieces of copper hitting my back armored plate and lower back below the plate.
Six months later, after a month at Walter Reed Medical Center and four months in the VA Hospital in Seattle, I would still not have sensation in my feet and ankles and muscle strength in my legs was far less than what I need to walk on my own. The care I received was incredible and the support I received from friends, family, the family readiness groups and the unit still in Iraq was even greater. I left the hospital walking with my new crutches with my wife wheeling my new wheelchair. In retrospect, I still see myself as lucky.
By February 2008, I was back in uniform and working with my units Read Detachment back on Fort Lewis. I’m still using my wheelchair to get around and crutches help me with short distances, but I feel I’m getting better every day. It remains my goal to stay in the active Army through my retirement eligibility in 2012. It may not be as an active artilleryman but there are many roles I can fill. There’s been nothing but positive support from friends and fellow soldiers on post. I still love serving in the military.">











MAJ Danny DudekField Artillery4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey Danny!

I use the Google Alert for 2nBN 23InfantryReg, 4th Stryker Combat Team,2nd Infanntry Div on gmail and bingo!...your blog popped up.

I'm follow the blogs of two young men from Ft Lewis who are at FOB Warhorse right now so the alerts are the first thing I check every day.

So glad you're recovering nicely, things are progressing well, and the Army has enough sense to realize they still need you!...

And I'm so sorry for the loss of your fellow soldier...

"My Strykers" have suffered some losses during this deployment and I feel so useless watching them try to deal with seeing their buddies die. They try so hard to be positive and are SO young, as most warriors are.

We (the readers) don't ususally hear about their loss until sometime later but I suspect I'm not the only one who registers "something wrong" in their writing...a click or two on the Coalition Casualties page usually verifies the suspicion.

I wonder how many of our deployed soldiers are aware of people like me and of the "lurkers" ... people who take time every day to make sure people we feel we've come to know are ok.

As a long-time military dependent(AF dau, Ar wife, Navy mom) I'm not a bit surprised at the support you received. You know now if you didn't before, that, when you sign on with the military you're joining a family, some of whom will be your friends in spite of time and space. I bet you heard from friends way back at the beginning of your career.

Dad receives email from friends he served with in WWII, Korea, and Vietnam -- a lot of old fart jokes and a lot of "hey, have you seen the F-22" kind of stuff. I think the warrior may be retired but he's still a warrior in his mind!

Getting hurt sucks big time but the look on your face speaks volumes about your attitude toward your recovery. I'm lookin' at a can-do man there...no doubt about it!

So you retire as an LC, or if you're a 30 year man as a Col or Gen. Not bad, not bad at all.!!!

And guess what - you've learned you can write! Should we be watching for your first novel?!

Way to go Major!!

A big THANKS for your service,
~P~