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    Marine survives bullet to helmet

    A paratrooper in Panama survived a point blank AK round to his head while wearing a US kevlar helmet in 1989. Read on.

    William




    Casper native returns to Afghanistan fight an hour after being hit
    Marine survives bullet to helmet

    By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS - The Wall Street Journal | Posted: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 12:00 am

    MARJAH, Afghanistan -- It is hard to know whether Monday was a very bad day or a very good day for Lance Cpl. Andrew Koenig.

    On the one hand, he was shot in the head. On the other, the bullet bounced off him.

    In one of those rare battlefield miracles, an insurgent sniper hit Koenig dead on in the front of his helmet, and he walked away from it with a smile on his face.

    "I don't think I could be any luckier than this," Koenig said two hours after the shooting.

    The Casper native's brush with death came during a day of intense fighting for the Marines of Company B, 1st Battalion, 6th Regiment.

    The company had landed by helicopter in the predawn dark on Saturday, launching a major coalition offensive to take Marjah from the Taliban.

    The Marines set up an outpost in a former drug lab and roadside-bomb factory and soon found themselves under near-constant attack.

    Koenig, a lanky 21-year-old with jug-handle ears and a burr of sandy hair, is a designated marksman. His job is to hit the elusive Taliban fighters hiding in the tightly packed neighborhood near the base.

    The insurgent sniper hit him first. Koenig was kneeling on the roof of the one-story outpost, looking for targets.

    He was reaching back to his left for his rifle when the sniper's round slammed into his helmet.

    The impact knocked him onto his back.

    "I'm hit," he yelled to his buddy, Lance Cpl. Scott Gabrian, a 21-year-old from St. Louis.

    Gabrian belly-crawled along the rooftop to his friend's side. He patted Koenig's body, looking for wounds.

    Then he noticed that the plate that usually secures night-vision goggles to the front of Koenig's helmet was missing. In its place was a thumb-deep dent in the hard Kevlar shell.

    Gabrian slid his hands under his friend's helmet, looking for an entry wound. "You're not bleeding," he assured Koenig. "You're going to be OK."

    Koenig climbed down the metal ladder and walked to the company aid station to see the Navy corpsman.

    The only injury: A small, numb red welt on his forehead, just above his right eye.

    He had spent 15 minutes with Doc, as the Marines call the medics, when an insurgent's rocket-propelled grenade exploded on the rooftop, next to Gabrian.

    The shock wave left him with a concussion and hearing loss.

    He joined Koenig at the aid station, where the two friends embraced, their eyes welling.

    The men had served together in Afghanistan in 2008, and Koenig had survived two blasts from roadside bombs.

    "We've got each other's backs," Gabrian said, the explosion still ringing in his ears.

    Word of Koenig's close call spread quickly through the outpost, as he emerged from the shock of the experience and walked through the outpost with a Cheshire cat grin.

    "He's alive for a reason," Tim Coderre, a North Carolina narcotics detective working with the Marines as a consultant, told one of the men. "From a spiritual point of view, that doesn't happen by accident."

    Gunnery Sgt. Kevin Shelton, whose job is to keep the Marines stocked with food, water and gear, teased the lance corporal for failing to take care of his helmet.

    "I need that damaged-gear statement tonight," Shelton told Koenig. It was understood, however, that Koenig would be allowed to keep the helmet as a souvenir.

    Shelton, a 36-year-old veteran from Nashville, said he had never seen a Marine survive a direct shot to the head.

    But next to him was Cpl. Christopher Ahrens, who quietly mentioned that two bullets had grazed his helmet the day the Marines attacked Marjah. The same thing, he said, happened to him three times in firefights in Iraq.

    Ahrens, 26, from Havre de Grace, Md., lifted the camouflaged cloth cover on his helmet, exposing the holes where the bullets had entered and exited.

    He turned it over to display the picture card tucked inside, depicting Michael the Archangel stamping on Lucifer's head. "I don't need luck," he said.

    After his moment with Gabrian, Koenig put his dented helmet back on his head and climbed the metal ladder to resume his rooftop duty within an hour of being hit.

    "I know any one of these guys would do the same," he explained. "If they could keep going, they would."

    Reprinted with permission.

    #2
    miracle story just like this one

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-head-2mm.html

    Comment


      #3
      "On the one hand, he was shot in the head. On the other, the bullet bounced off him.

      In one of those rare battlefield miracles, an insurgent sniper hit Koenig dead on in the front of his helmet, and he walked away from it with a smile on his face."

      Actualy with the new kevlar/fiber helmets, this kind of thing has been happening quite often, and articles about soldiers being saved by their helmets are quite common.

      JL

      Comment


        #4
        Was it the newer shorter skirt up dated kevlar or the one that was introduced in the 80's?

        Are the German Issue kevlars any better or the same?

        W.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by PlaceOfBayonets View Post
          Was it the newer shorter skirt up dated kevlar or the one that was introduced in the 80's?

          Are the German Issue kevlars any better or the same?

          W.
          I am assuming he wore one of the newer Marine Light Weight Helmets(LWH). It is basically the USMC version of the MICH/ACH (an updated version of the PASGT).

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by NKOMO View Post
            I am assuming he wore one of the newer Marine Light Weight Helmets(LWH). It is basically the USMC version of the MICH/ACH (an updated version of the PASGT).
            Are the ballistic qualities the same or improved?

            W.

            Comment

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