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Gary Gordon
Master Sergeant Gordon, United
States Army, distinguished himself
by actions above and beyond the call
of duty on 3 October 1993, while
serving as Sniper Team Leader,
United States Army Special
Operations Command with Task Force
Ranger in Mogadishu, Somalia.
Master Sergeant Gordon’s sniper team
provided precision fires from the
lead helicopter during an assault
and at two helicopter crash sites,
while subjected to intense automatic
weapons and rocket propelled grenade
fires. When Master Sergeant Gordon
learned that ground forces were not
immediately available to secure the
second crash site, he and another
sniper unhesitatingly volunteered to
be inserted to protect the four
critically wounded personnel,
despite being well aware of the
growing number of enemy personnel
closing in on the site.
After his third request to be
inserted, Master Sergeant Gordon
received permission to perform his
volunteer mission. When debris and
enemy ground fires at the site
caused them to abort the first
attempt, Master Sergeant Gordon was
inserted one hundred meters south of
the crash site. Equipped with only
his sniper rifle and a pistol,
Master Sergeant Gordon and his
fellow sniper, while under intense
small arms fire from the enemy,
fought their way through a dense
maze of shanties and shacks to reach
the critically injured crew members.
Master Sergeant Gordon immediately
pulled the pilot and the other crew
members from the aircraft,
establishing a perimeter which
placed him and his fellow sniper in
the most vulnerable position.
Master Sergeant Gordon used his long
range rifle and side arm to kill an
undetermined number of attackers
until he depleted his ammunition.
Master Sergeant Gordon then went
back to the wreckage, recovering
some of the crew’s weapons and
ammunition. Despite the fact that he
was critically low on ammunition, he
provided some of it to the dazed
pilot and then radioed for help.
Master Sergeant Gordon continued to
travel the perimeter, protecting the
downed crew. After his team member
was fatally wounded and his own
rifle ammunition exhausted, Master
Sergeant Gordon returned to the
wreckage, recovering a rifle with
the last five rounds of ammunition
and gave it to the pilot with the
words, “good luck.” Then, armed only
with his pistol, Master Sergeant
Gordon continued to fight until he
was fatally wounded. His actions
saved the pilot’s life.
Master Sergeant Gordon’s
extraordinary heroism and devotion
to duty were in keeping with the
highest standards of military
service and reflect great credit
upon, his unit and the United States
Army.
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