• Hello, this board in now turned off and no new posting.
    Please REGISTER at Anabolic Steroid Forums, and become a member of our NEW community!
  • Check Out IronMag Labs® KSM-66 Max - Recovery and Anabolic Growth Complex

One badass dude!!!

fitter420

Registered
Joined
Aug 13, 2011
Messages
665
Reaction score
282
Points
0
Location
usa
I went out for a bit last nite and met a Vietnam Vet who is active in the W ounded Warrior project. We were bullshitting a bit and he brought this guy up to me. Man, I read this story and was blown away. The balls, honor, integrity ect. this guy had is awesome!

OF THE MONTH / SERGEANT ED EATON – THE INVINCIBLE SNIPER
Sergeant Ed Eaton – The Invincible Sniper
Badass of The Month43 Comments

While many view snipers as the hidden (safe) threats in war based on their forays in First Person Shooter video games and movies like Saving Private Ryan and Enemy at The Gates, the fact of the matter is that snipers like any other soldiers in war are very successible to danger – especially in the case of Sergeant Ed Eaton’s brave protection and rescue of comrade in arms Major Mike Perkins when he had fallen injured in a night assault during the Vietnam war 1969.

Mike and Ed were part of a helicopter night mission when the Viet Cong shot down the chopper resulting in most of the men injured with near fatal wounds. Mike got the worst of it being pinned down under the helicopter and unable to get out. Now remember that at this time the men were still under attack and Ed Eaton in his own words said that he had the least amount of injuries and felt it necessary to protect his fellow soldiers.
One Man versus Two Armies

Climbing atop the wreckage and using a combination of his busted sniper rifle and a machine gun, Ed used the Sniper’s night sights to spot two separate groups of Viet Cong descending upon them at up to 500 meters. Ed traded shots with the groups without hesitation to consider how open he was to their return fire but it was enough to slow their descent upon his location. The use of the two guns made the enemy believe that Ed was more than one man and after he got a gist of the flaw in his sniper rifle, he adjusted to its aim and began taking guys out one at a time.

When a pair of helicopters came through to rescue the men, Mike whose injuries were too much for the ride opted to stay and was given a grenade for suicide in case of capture. The choppers were about to leave when Ed asks to remain with his comrade because he did not want him dying alone out there with no hope for survival. The pair were left there on the battlefield with Ed holding off even more soldiers with limited ammunition as they descended upon him from their positions.

Thinking himself left for dead, Ed told Mike that the last two bullets were for himself and the injured friend but was rescued before it came down to that decision. Ed Eaton described his rescue on the commentary for the book Inside the Crosshairs: Snipers in Vietnam, by Michael Lee Lanning, on the website HistoryNet.com:

“In reference to the Hist channel story and as to how Maj. perkins and myself got out. Our Bn. Commander came in later. We thought for sure we were left alone but thank God; only thought it. I caught a ride on a Cobra that took me to a rice pattie where I was later picked up by a Dustoff.
As to Awards for this action. Mike while in a hosp. in Japan requested action to be taken on this matter. Our Bn. was in the process of leaving VN and I’m sure that in that hectic situation the paperwork was lost.”

I’m just an idealistic civilian but in terms of what I know about a Congressional Medal of Honor and the fact that Ed not only protected multiple men with no thought of his own life as he stood ground against invaders using multiple bullets from his broken guns, I am pretty damn sure that he is long overdue for his. Still this is not my call and I have the utmost respect and awe for a man that could black out and accomplish such a feat in saving multiple lives in the worst of circumstances and the fact that he and Mike Perkins are still alive to recant the tale.

If you want badass, how about a guy that can hold toe with an army using a broken sniper rifle and the cover of night? Not badass enough? How about the fact that he elected to stay behind to protect the last man injured from the invading horde? Ya that’s more than many of you could ever argue for the term badass and Ed Eaton is definitely it.
 
that badass of the month site is very cool. i posted it here some time ago. lots of heroes n a few just plain badass guys.


Badass of the Month
 
Check out this dude, pretty badass sniper also.

Simo Hayha had a fairly boring life in Finland. He served his one mandatory year in the military, and then became a farmer. But when the Soviet Union invaded his homeland in 1939, he decided he wanted to help his country.
Since the majority of fighting took place in the forest, he figured the best way to stop the invasion was to grab his trusty rifle, a couple of cans of food and hide in a tree all day shooting Russians. In six feet of snow. And 20-40 degrees below zero.
hayha2.jpg

Can you spot Hayha? Neither could the Russians.
Of course when the Russians heard that dozens of their men were going down and that it was all one dude with a rifle, they got fucking scared. He became known as "The White Death" because of his white camouflage outfit, and they actually mounted whole missions just to kill that one guy.
They started by sending out a task force to find Hayha and take him out. He killed them all.
Then they tried getting together a team of counter-snipers (which are basically snipers that kill snipers) and sent them in to eliminate Hayha. He killed all of them, too.
hayha3.jpg
Over the course of 100 days, Hayha killed 542 people with his rifle. He took out another 150 or so with his SMG, sending his credited kill-count up to 705.
Since everyone they had was either too dead or too scared to go anywhere near him, the Russians just carpet-bombed everywhere they thought he might be. Supposedly, they had the location right, and he actually got hit by a cloud of shrapnel that tore his coat up, but didn't actually hurt him, because he's the fucking White Death, damn it.
Finally on March 6th, 1940, some lucky bastard shot Hayha in the head with an exploding bullet. When some other soldiers found him and brought him back to base, he "had half his head missing." The White Death had finally been stopped...
hayha4.jpg
...for about a week. In spite of having come down with a nasty case of shot-in-the-face syndrome, he was still very much alive, and regained consciousness on March 13, the very day the war ended.


Read more: 5 Real Life Soldiers Who Make Rambo Look Like a Pussy | Cracked.com 5 Real Life Soldiers Who Make Rambo Look Like a Pussy | Cracked.com
 
Here is the documentary from the History Channel on him. Its long but here it is if you are interested!

YouTube Video
 
i love this thread. know what i'm watching when the day is done. :coffee:
 
These storys are pretty cool! Have to admit these where very good reads! :D would love to read more!
 
Wow what a amazing story and a true hero. Did he recieve any metals?
 
Wow what a amazing story and a true hero. Did he recieve any metals?
Yeah, but not Medal of Honor. They are still trying,and it should be a no brainer.

Here is an article about what he did get. What I like about this post is it doesnt matter what party you are, you just have to give respect to these guys.


Improve
Hes not on the list of recipients. The show also didnt really explain how they made it out alive.

Improved answer on February 19, 2011
I am a reporter for the Valley Herald Newspaper in Ed Eaton's hometown of Milton-Freewater, Oregon and I also went to high school with Ed.
After his story was on the History Channel I contacted Ed and wrote an article.
Here is part of the article that should answer your question. (Marcia Akes)

"Ed laid down next to me and started firing," remembers Perkins. "There are people who will die for you and with you," he adds.
With just a few rounds left and the Viet Cong close, the two men didn't hold out much hope; but Eaton finishes the story: "Our Battalion commander returned with his helicopter and two Cobra gunships. The gunships expended the last of their ammunition as Col. Peterson picked up Mike and the rest; overloading his helicopter to the point that I was left behind for a period. Shortly thereafter, the Cobras came back and one landed nearby allowing me to grab a ride on the outside ammo door of the helicopter. They then took me to a rice paddy about 30 minutes away where they dropped me off. By then I couldn't walk, due to the vertebrae fractures, and was feeling at my lowest when out of nowhere a Medevac Huey came in the dark night and took me to the base camp hospital; ending the nightmare."
Eaton had a broken back among other injuries so he spent a couple weeks in the hospital before he could walk again. He then returned to the field out of a sense of duty to his men. "It was one of the stupidest things I did," he notes; "because I didn't have to." (The Army had given him 90 days of light duty.)

For his bravery and being wounded several different times in Vietnam, the Army sniper was awarded 3 Purple Hearts, 3 Bronze Stars with Valor device (or "V device"), 4 Air Medals, and numerous Army Commendation Medals along with other miscellaneous medals. At this time, Col. Pete Peterson and Major Perkins are requesting the Army to properly award Eaton a Medal commensurate to his actions on April 3, 1969.
_______________
Note: There are comments associated with this question. See the discussion page to add to the conversation.
 
Back
Top