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THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
Washington
The President of the United States takes pride in presenting the
NAVY CROSS posthumously to:
SERGEANT ANGEL MENDEZ
UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS
for service as set forth in the following:
CITATION:
For extraordinary heroism while serving as a Platoon Right Guide of the
Third Platoon, Company F, Second Battalion, Seventh Marines, in the
Republic of Vietnam on 16 March 1967. During Operation DE SOTO in Quang
Ngai Province, Company F, was conducting a search and destroy mission
when the rear elements of the company were taken under intense
50-caliber machine gun and automatic weapons fire from an estimated
hard-core Viet Cong battalion.
One half of the Second Platoon was pinned down in an open rice paddy and
all attempts to relieve the pressure on the beleaguered Marines had
proven futile. Sergeant (then Corporal) Mendez, unhesitatingly
volunteered to lead a squad into the face of the devastating and
extremely accurate machine gun fire to assist the pinned-down Marines in
returning to friendly lines with their two dead and two seriously
wounded.
The Viet Cong fire increased to a fever pitch as Sergeant Mendez calmly
and courageously moved out onto a paddy dike, completely exposed to the
intense fire, and commenced firing his M-79 at the enemy positions with
deadly accuracy. He fired round after round as he stood, bravely defying
the enemy, to give covering fire to his comrades.
Sixty meters across the rice paddy from Sergeant Mendez, his Platoon
Commander was seriously wounded and he fell, unable to move. Immediately
Sergeant Mendez raced through the hail of bullets to his Platoon
Commander's side. Shielding him with his body as he applied a dressing
to the wound, he picked up the Lieutenant and started to carry him to
friendly lines, which were more than seventy-five meters away.
Exhibiting exceptional courage he moved toward the lines as the Viet
Cong attempted to hit this double target. Twenty meters short of his
goal, he was hit in the shoulder and two of his comrades ran out to
assist him. Even though painfully wounded, Sergeant Mendez chose to be
the rear man, refusing to relinquish his hold on his Lieutenant's legs
as they carried him toward the hedgerow. He was shielding his Lieutenant
with his own body when he was mortally wounded. By his dauntless
courage, initiative and selfless efforts on behalf of another, Sergeant
Mendez saved his Platoon Commander's life and upheld the highest
traditions of the Marine Corps and of the United States Naval Service.
He gallantly gave his life for his country.
For the President,
The Secretary of the Navy
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