Master Chief Britt K. Slabinski to receive Medal of Honor

| May 8, 2018

According to WhiteHouse.gov Retired Master Chief Special Warfare Operator Britt K. Slabinski will get his Navy Cross stepped up to the Medal of Honor on May 24th for his actions on Roberts Ridge on March 2002. His citation for the Navy Cross reads;

For extraordinary heroism as Sniper Element Leader for a joint special operations unit conducting combat operations against enemy forces during Operation Anaconda, Sahi-Kot Valley, Afghanistan on 3 and 4 March 2002, in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. On the evening of 3 March, Senior Chief Petty Officer Britt Slabinski led his seven-man reconnaissance team onto the snow-covered, 10,000 foot mountaintop known as Takur Ghar, to establish a combat overwatch position in support of U.S. Army forces advancing against the enemy on the valley floor. As their helicopter hovered over the mountain it was met by unrelenting rocket propelled grenade (RPG) and small arms fire by entrenched enemy forces. As a result of several RPG hits, a member of Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski ‘s team was ejected from the helicopter into the midst of the fortified enemy positions. The badly damaged helicopter conducted a controlled crash, at which time Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski immediately took charge and established security on the crash location until the crew and his team were recovered to a support base. At this point, Senior Chief Slabinski fully aware of the overwhelming, fixed, enemy forces over the mountain, but also knowing the desperate situation of his missing teammate, now reportedly fighting for his life, without hesitation made the selfless decision to lead his team on an immediate, bold rescue mission. He heroically led the remainder of his SEAL element back onto the snow-covered, remote, mountaintop into the midst of the numerically superior enemy forces in a daring and valiant attempt to rescue one of their own. After a treacherous helicopter insertion onto the mountaintop, Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski led his close quarter firefight. He skillfully maneuvered his team and bravely engaged multiple enemy positions, personally clearing one bunker and killing several enemy within. His unit became caught in a withering crossfire from other bunkers and the closing enemy forces. Despite mounting casualties, Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski maintained his composure and continued to engage the enemy until his position became untenable. Faced with no choice but a tactical withdrawal, he coolly directed fire from airborne assets to cover his team. He then led an arduous movement through the mountainous terrain, constantly under fire, covering over one kilometer in waist-deep snow, while carrying a seriously wounded teammate. Arriving at a defensible position, he organized his team’s security posture and stabilized his casualties. For over fourteen hours, Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski directed the defense of his position through countless engagements, personally engaging the enemy and directing close air support onto the enemy positions until the enemy was ultimately defeated. During this entire sustained engagement, Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski exhibited classic grace under fire in steadfastly leading the intrepid rescue operation, saving the lives of his wounded men and setting the conditions for the ultimate vanquishing of the enemy and the seizing of Takur Ghar. By his heroic display of decisive and tenacious leadership, unyielding courage in the face of constant enemy fire, and utmost devotion to duty, Senior Chief Petty Officer Slabinski reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.

Category: Navy

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IDC SARC

BZ!

BlueCord Dad

HOOYAH Master Chief!! Well done!!

MCPO NYC USN Ret.

Britt is a fellow MCPO, outstanding leader, skilled operator, inspiration and damn good man!

I will be there.

MCPO OUT

mr. sharkman

MCPO,

I will be unable to attend due to medical/health issues.

Please, if the proper opportunity exists, take some photos (PERSEC edits as necessary) for us

Respectfully,

OldSoldier54

Well done, Master Chief!

Non Cedo Ferio

My friend , SPC Marc A Anderson, was killed in that action . He was with the 75th Ranger Regiment here at HAAF. I met him during Marne Focus in 2001. Even though I was an ADA guy at the time and he was a Ranger we hit it off. Both of US were lower enlisted and in our thirties he was a Former middle school teacher in. Florida joined the Army partly to help pay down student loans. He was a big guy too , hence his nickname. Big Marc. But much bigger was his heart. After he was killed I wrote a letter to his Dad telling him how sorry I was I could not make the funeral as I was in Fort Bliss at the time. And the impact he made on me the few short months we knew each other. His Dad called me up about a week later and he told me that Marc had left part of his SGLI to a promising former student of his. So that it might help her with paying for college. That’s he kind of guy he was. On March 4 2008 I was sitting in the waiting room at the Savannah VA. I noticed the guy next to me had a 75th tat. I told him it was the anniversary of my friends death. He asked who.i told him. He smiled showed me his KIA bracelet with Marc’s name on it. Turned out he served with Marc and was there at the base of Roberts Ridge that awful day. We talked about what a great guy he was. A mix of pride and sadness. This was the first of three Friends I had lost. But I thank God for the opportunity to to have known them all esp the hero and man, Marc Anderson

Mason

I’m sorry for your loss. He sounds like an amazing man. Thanks for sharing.

Jay

Wow. Thanks for sharing Non. Sounds like an outstanding man who impacted everyone around him.

HMCS(FMF) ret

BZ, Master Chief!

Fyrfighter

BZ in spades! Damn fine work Master Chief!

Ex-PH2

Well done. Very well done.

Mason

BZ Master Chief! A well deserved award. I always wondered who on Earth would need one of those 9 or 10 row ribbon bars at clothing sales. Now I know, they go to badasses like the Master Chief.

MCPO NYC USN Ret.

From 2001 through 2011 Britt conducted the “business” of our Nation with full force.

The book Roberts’ Ridge is an eye opener and only skims the surface of what Tier 1 units truly do and does a deep dive into the sacrifices of PO1 Roberts SGT Chapman and the Rangers on that snowy mountain of March 3 and 4, 2002.

Jay

Jeez, does he already have 5 Bronze Stars in that pic? Hot damn. There are men and then there are MEN! BZ Master Chief!

SFC D

Attention SEAL posers! This is the no-bullshit real deal right here! You hear that clanging sound?

Jay

http://www.newsweek.com/navy-seals-seal-team-6-left-behind-die-operation-anaconda-slabinski-chapman-912343

Good read on the actions of that night and the infighting between the Air Force and Navy. I believe both men performed extremely heroically that night and hate to see their efforts be minimized.

2/17 Air Cav

The SEALs need some good PR right now between the nine who tested positive for coke or meth recently and are to be shit canned and two others whose conflicting accounts of a Ranger’s 2017 death by strangulation in Mali remain under investigation. These upgrades are getting tiresome. Is it that the decision makers are so f’ed up on the front end or that they f’ed up playing Monday morning q’back?

J.R. Johnson

The Air Force was rightfully pissed about the Navy trying to block the upgrade of TSgt Chapman. It was an honest mistake thinking Chapman was dead (they may have mistook Roberts body for chapman in the dark). The Air Force never tried to blame the Navy, only prove that Chapman fought on, and tried to protect the Ranger helicopter when it came in. Slabinski also deserves the upgrade, and as I hear it he may be haunted by leaving Chapman, but he saved the rest. They all did what they could to make the best of a bad situation.

PJS

I’m not sure I agree with you. Leaving a guy behind,

MCPO NYC USN Ret.

Where you there?

PJS

Close enough

MCPO NYC USN Ret.

I will take that as a no, so you were not even close. And I appreciate your right to express your view, but the notion of leaving a man behind is lost with me and many others … they were in hell, neck deep in shit … and you were not there.

mr. sharkman

WTF is ‘close enough’ supposed to mean?

Are you a PJ? Are privy to what is normally a very private discussion?

If so then you’d know that such a topic should never appear in an open internet forum…

Knowing Slab, he’d welcome a face-to-face discussion with you, if you’ve got issues re: the op, awards, etc.

USMC 7577

So you weren’t there.

But let me guess: you know a guy, who knows a guy, who knows a guy, who knows a guy who heard that…

Patrick408

Great article about the mission thx for sharing Jay.
First thing that comes to my mine is the Fog of War seems appropriate in this case, either way two more recipients of the MOH well deserved imo

Jay

Indeed. Some want to hang his ass out to dry based off the article but my GOD….I dont know what I’d do/how I’d act in the same situation. Either way, they are MEN

RGR 4-78

Well Done!

Jeff LPH 3, 63-66

BZ Master Chief.

Atkron

Neil ‘Fifi’ Roberts, ABH1 (SEAL) was the man they were trying to save.

Disclaimer, I only know of his nickname because of Senior Chief Shipley.

ABH’s are better known as the yellow shirts you normally see on the flight deck.

Sparks

Damned well done Master Chief!

FatCircles0311

Medal of Honor (2010) by EA was about that battle. Pretty awesome game.

26Limabeans

Schools need to have a course titled:
MILITARY CITATIONS 101
With lots of homework.
No Math! That will bring them in.

HMC Ret

I am humbled by men and women such as this. It’s a certainty that he has hearing loss from the constant clanking. I’m proud to have worn the same uniform as this man for 23 years.

mr. sharkman

BZ Slab!

‘About damn time…’ 😉

Delaney

1st MOH ever awarded for extraordinary butthurt above and beyond the call of duty.

Pin all the medals on him you want, people know the truth.