Saturday, March 22, 2014

Zackery Penner
US Navy Corpsman (Medic)
Awarded Silver Star

HM3 Zackery Penner, a Navy corpsman, presently stationed at the Pensacola Naval Hospital Pensacola, was awarded the Silver Star for his heroic actions on June 22 and 23, 2012, while serving with Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 8th Marines in Afghanistan. For his actions on those two days, Penner was awarded the Silver Star, the third highest military decoration for valor, on March 19, 2014 at a ceremony in Pensacola, Florida. There are only two awards higher - the Navy Cross and the Medal of Honor.

On June 22, 2012, with approximately 30 days left in country, Penner’s platoon encountered Afghan insurgents on the first day of a seven-day operation, and a Marine was severely wounded on a nearby rooftop. Without hesitation, Penner ran to the Marine while exposing himself to enemy fire that was only 50 meters away. 

With rounds impacting all around him, he treated and evacuated the Marine. Though the Marine did not survive from the wounds he sustained, Penner’s actions reflected the relationship and camaraderie shared between Marines and corpsmen. 

“Marines love their corpsmen, and I love being with Marines,” said Penner, who enlisted in the Navy immediately after graduating high school in Sacramento, Calif. “I wanted to be a corpsman because I wanted to help Marines.”

Penner got to help a Marine again the very next day. 

While on a partnered patrol with Afghan soldiers, insurgents attacked his squad with machine guns and precision fire weapons. 

When two members of the patrol sustained injuries, a Marine and an Afghan soldier, Penner ran more than 100 meters through enemy fire to reach the casualties and quickly established a casualty collection point behind a wall. When the squad began receiving enemy fire from the rear, Penner shielded the casualties from enemy fire with his own body until the evacuation aircraft arrived. Both casualties would ultimately not survive, but Penner again sustained no injuries despite putting himself in harm’s way. 

“It never crossed my mind that I wouldn’t be hurt,” said Penner. “It’s actually hard to remember the events of those two days in detail now because I just reacted.”

The relationship between Marines and their corpsmen was further demonstrated as a large number of Marines attended the ceremony including Maj. Gen. Raymond Fox, commanding general, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.

“The relationship the Marine Corps has had with corpsmen for a long time is what saves a lot of Marines,  and [Marines] cherish that relationship incredibly,” said Fox. “Every one of us should aspire to do what he did when called upon.” 

After returning from Afghanistan, Penner received orders to Navy Hospital Pensacola where he currently works in the emergency department. Initially, Penner planned on fulfilling his current enlistment and then leaving the Navy, but being stateside has given him a new perspective.

“The stress of working in the emergency room does not compare to the stress of combat,” said Penner. “Being stationed at a hospital stateside is a lot calmer.”

Penner is currently taking college classes and is now planning on continuing his career in the Navy. He is considering the Medical Enlisted Commissioning Program and hopes to eventually receive orders to a naval hospital in California to be closer to his family.

When asked about how he felt about receiving the Silver Star, Penner replied, “It’s humbling. I was in the right place at the wrong time, but any of the Marines would have done the same thing.”

NOAH'S NOTE: The United States Marine Corps is loaded with The Few, The Proud, but we have no medical services. However, we have no need for medical doctors and Corpsmen since we have the best attached to us from the United States Navy. Over the years, the doctors  and corpsmen have saved lives of many Marines on the battlefields. When the fighting got tough, it was common to hear Marines calling for a corpsman. They always come even through a line of gun fire to reach the wounded Marine. I remember during World War II, corpsmen were not allowed to be armed with a weapon and required to wear their helmet with a red cross painted on them. That became a perfect target for the Japs. The Marines are blessed to have a corpsman attached to every combat platoon and thanks to the Marines, they can fight on the battlefield like Marines. They do get Marine training when the Navy assigns them to the Marine Corps. The corpsmen are authorized to wear the Marine uniform while they are attached. Most, if not all, dress in Marine clothing.