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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
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Better Late than Never.
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Capt Lance Gallardo
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Its never too late to correct the record or reconsider the type of award given at this level of heroism. We all know that much of the differences in combat awards for bravery or heroism is the lack of living witnesses, the writing skill of the original officer making the recommendation in the original recommendation and endorsing chain of command.

Finally we see these days, that politics and the command's view of the Soldier who earned the recommendation might influence the level of the award. None of that should matter, but it does and it has. Many people have been passed over for the MOH in decades past, WWI, WWII, Korea & Vietnam (even in the 1800s)because of controversy surrounding who they were, whether it was the color of their skin, their religion (Jews have been shortchanged when the country was more openly anti-Semetic), African-Americans, Hispanics, and soldiers who were seen as "politically incorrect."

Even the type of war, can affect the number of MOHs like the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars, have seen a paucity of MOHs, which were initially explained away as the nature and type of the combat that these Marines and Soldiers and Navy Seals were engaged in -total bullshit of course, but those were the excuses given by DOD as to why so few MOHs were handed out prior to about 2009-10 or so, when MOHs started being awarded in greater number for GWOT warriors. See http://www.stripes.com/news/us/despite-criticism-medals-of-honor-still-scarce-for-current-wars-1.107202
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Capt Seid Waddell
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What took them so long?
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