honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, September 11, 2009

Kane'ohe Marine awarded Bronze Star for valor in combat


By Eloise Aguiar
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Sgt. Ian S. Parrish received the Bronze Star with Valor for heroic achievement during combat operations in Afghanistan when he single-handedly destroyed an enemy fighting position in the Korengal Valley.

Photos by DEBORAH BOOKER | The Honolulu Advertiser

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Brig. Gen. James Laster congratulates Parrish after presenting the sergeant with the award. Parrish will be medically retired this month because of injuries he suffered in a subsequent firefight.

spacer spacer

MARINE CORPS BASE HAWAII — As the blast and smoke of five rocket-propelled grenades dazed members of the Afghan army and their Marine trainers, all Cpl. Ian Parrish could think of was making the enemy stop.

Parrish and the others were accustomed to attacks on Firebase Vimoto from enemy positions high across the Korengal Valley, a narrow gorge about 500 meters across.

But the firefight on Sept. 26, 2007, was particularly fierce, with enemy forces launching everything they had at Parrish and the corpsman with him in a bunker running low on ammunition.

At first, Parrish returned fire with an M-249 automatic weapon but switched to a MK-19 40 mm Grenade Launcher until it jammed.

The attack was annoying, he said.

"We were all sick of getting shot at," Parrish said yesterday at Marine Corps Base Hawaii at Kane'ohe Bay. "That's pretty much all that went through my head was this thing is giving us problems and it needed to be taken care of."

Parrish said five rocket-propelled grenades landed on his bunker, knocking him and the corpsman out of the fight for a few minutes.

Back into action with a heavy machine gun, he said he began to run out of ammunition.

At some point he was out of his bunker and returning fire when — from out of nowhere — an Army scout handed him an AT-4 rocket launcher that he aimed at the brightest flash from across the valley.

"It pretty much neutralized the machine gun that was keeping us down and about 10 minutes later, it ended," Parrish said.

For his actions, Parrish received a Bronze Star with Valor yesterday at the chapel at Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

The citation for the award recalled a much fiercer battle and said the troops came under heavy volume of effective enemy fire. Despite being dazed from the concussion and smoke of the grenade blasts, Parrish immediately returned fire, first from the automatic weapon and then the grenade launcher.

He exposed himself to enemy attack when leaving the bunker and crawled to a position to best launch the rocket that destroyed the target, the citation said.

"Cpl. Parrish displayed uncommon valor and courage throughout the fight by maintaining a heavy volume of machine gun fire on the enemy and knocking out the enemy position with an AT-4 rocket," the citation said.

Yesterday at the base chapel, Brig Gen. James Laster from Okinawa presented the Bronze Star to Parrish, who has since been promoted to sergeant and will be medically retired this month due to injuries he suffered in a subsequent firefight.

He'll return to his home in Plainwell, Mich., with his wife, Rachel, and 5-month old daughter, Haylee.

Laster said he was proud of Parrish and honored to be his commanding general.

"I'm very honored that he asked me to give him the award," Laster said after the ceremony. "On behalf of the President and our Commandant, we are all very appreciative of his sacrifice and his bravery."

Parrish, 25, was a tactical trainer and part of a 17-man team for the Afghanistan National Army with the Embedded Training Team 5-2 Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan out of Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

Marines are hand-selected for the duty and certified to be teachers and mentors. Their goal is to train Afghan soldiers so they can operate without U.S. troops, said Maj. Bart Battista, Parrish's commander in Afghanistan.

"They have to be very capable and independent operators and know how to do everything," Battista said. "As a corporal, he was giving advice to a commander on how to deploy his forces. That's the level of knowledge Sgt. Parrish has."

This was not the first time Parrish and his bunker partner, Corpsman Mark Cannon, had come under fire, Master Gunnery Sgt. Douglas Thurston said before the ceremony.

For the period the team was stationed in Afghanistan, July 2007 to April 2008, Thurston, Parrish's NCO, said he logged about 150 firefights for the team for which 34 medals were awarded.

"Out of the 150, (Parrish) and (Corpsman) Doc. Cannon were involved in about 75 of those (firefights)," he said. "So this one incident is one of many."

Six days later in another firefight, Cannon died and Parrish was wounded and evacuated, Thurston said.