Medal of Honor awarded to army captain who tackled bomber in Afghanistan

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama awarded the Medal of Honor on Thursday to a soldier who rushed a suicide bomber in Afghanistan in 2012 and saved perhaps dozens of American and Afghan lives at a devastating cost to his own.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama awarded the Medal of Honor on Thursday to a soldier who rushed a suicide bomber in Afghanistan in 2012 and saved perhaps dozens of American and Afghan lives at a devastating cost to his own.

The soldier, Capt. Florent A. Groberg, has spent much of the last three years recovering from 33 surgeries, but he stood at attention in the East Room of the White House as the commander-in-chief bestowed on him the highest commendation available to members of the U.S. military.

“On his very worst day, he managed to summon his very best,” Obama said. “That’s the nature of courage — not being unafraid but confronting fear and danger and performing in a selfless fashion. He showed his guts, he showed his training, how he would put it all on the line for his teammates. That’s an American we can all be grateful for.”

Groberg, 32, who goes by Flo and retired from the Army this year to serve as a civilian in the Defense Department, was only the 10th living recipient of the Medal of Honor from actions during the war in Afghanistan. The ceremony came the day after Veterans Day as Obama sought to demonstrate concern for those who served even as he tries to wind down the war in Afghanistan.

Groberg enlisted in the Army in 2008 and served two tours in Afghanistan, the second as the head of a personal security detachment in the Fourth Infantry Division. On Aug. 8, 2012, he was escorting commanders on foot to a weekly security meeting at the provincial governor’s office in Asadabad, the capital of Kunar province.

Groberg threw himself at an approaching suicide bomber, who detonated. The explosion set off another bomb nearby, and four Americans died: Command Sgt. Maj. Kevin J. Griffin and Maj. Thomas E. Kennedy of the Army; Maj. Walter D. Gray of the Air Force; and Ragaei Abdelfattah, a Foreign Service officer with the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Pentagon officials said many more would have been killed had Groberg not acted.

© 2015 The New York Times Company