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thedrifter
03-29-08, 06:22 AM
CAMP PENDLETON: Marine honored with Silver Star

By EDWARD SIFUENTES - Staff Writer

CAMP PENDLETON ---- Although he was bleeding from the neck and under enemy fire in Iraq last year, Marine commanders say Lance Cpl. Moses Cardenas managed to reach his wounded sergeant and pull him 100 yards to safety. View a video http://videos.nctimes.com/p/video?id=1795539

For those actions, the 20-year-old Cardenas received a Silver Star, one of the Marine Corps' highest honors, during a ceremony at Camp Pendleton on Friday.

The events took place in Iraq's Anbar province on Aug. 2. Cardenas said his platoon was on patrol when several men jumped out of a truck and started firing. In the battle, Sgt. Randy M. Roedema was shot twice and Lance Cpl. Christian Vasquez was killed.

Cardenas, a Marine scout, said he was taking cover behind a vehicle when he realized that Roedema was down. Then, he went after him. On his way, Cardenas took two shots that knocked him to the ground.

Asked why he risked his life to rescue a fellow Marine, Cardenas answered simply.

"He was my sergeant."

Though it seemed longer to him, the Fullerton native said the action took only a few minutes. Cardenas said he felt the sting of the bullets going into his neck and shoulder.

After hitting the ground, he got up, reloaded his rifle and kept shooting at the enemy, according to the award citation. He continued the assault until he reached his wounded leader.

"It didn't really register how dangerous it was, with all the adrenaline going," Cardenas said. "It's either they kill you or you kill them."

Cardenas, who retold his story to reporters Friday morning, said he was eventually able to pull Roedema to safety, and both were treated for their wounds. During the ceremony, he choked back tears and wore a black metal bracelet commemorating Cpl. Vasquez.

"After sleeping, training, laughing and working with them, you get really close, like brothers, even more than brothers," Cardenas said of the camaraderie among Marines.

Roedema, 25, and his family said they are grateful for what Cardenas did.

"I owe him everything in the world," he said.

The day the men were shot, Roedema's wife, Sharla, was 8 months pregnant with the couple's daughter, Juliannah, who is now seven months old.

"There is no telling what would have happened if (Cardenas) had not done what he did," Sharla Roedema said. "And I really do feel that (my husband) is here because of what he did."

Roedema said that during the fight he was shot in the back and buttocks. He was unable to walk for a month and was unable to bathe without assistance for three months, he said.

After the ceremony, dozens of members of Cardenas' unit, the 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, lined up to shake his hand and congratulate him.

"Outstanding, we're very proud of you," one of the Marines told Cardenas.

Nearby, Cardenas' parents, Raymundo Cardenas and Angelina Martinez, watched him proudly. His mother said she was just happy to have him back.

Martinez said that though she initially opposed his enlistment in the military, she has learned to accept it as his choice.

"To me the honor is that he is still alive," Martinez said in Spanish.

The Silver Star is the fifth-highest medal a Marine can receive. Cardenas, who joined the Marines in 2006, said he didn't realize how much of an honor it was to receive one until recently.

"A lieutenant was just telling me the magnitude of this award," Cardenas said. "Not a lot of people get it, and a lot of people have died for it."

Cardenas said he is scheduled for a second deployment to Iraq in September. He has two years left in his enlistment and has no plans to leave the Marines.

"I love this job," he said. "I've always been fascinated by the Marine Corps. I love it."

Contact staff writer Edward Sifuentes at (760) 740-3511 or esifuentes@nctimes.com. Comment at nctimes.com.

Ellie

thedrifter
03-30-08, 06:12 AM
Silver Star honors a life-saving Marine
Lance Cpl. Moses Cardenas, who grew up in Fullerton, pulled a wounded comrade to safety while under fire.
By Tony Perry
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

March 29, 2008

CAMP PENDLETON -- — The Marines from the 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion had been warned about the great danger of their assignment in Iraq: to eliminate insurgent strongholds in the desert stretches of the Euphrates River Valley.

On the hot, dry early morning of Aug. 2, 2007, they saw why. While patrolling south of the town of Rawah, one platoon was ambushed by a suicide car bomb, machine-gun fire and rocket-propelled grenades.

In the first burst, one Marine was killed and another critically wounded. But many of the Marines were not in good position to return fire. They needed reinforcements.

Lance Cpl. Moses Cardenas didn't wait.

He dashed across 50 yards of open terrain to reach a downed colleague, Sgt. Randy Roedema. Five insurgents fired at him as he ran.

Wounded twice in the neck, Cardenas was knocked to the ground, but he refused to retreat. He reached Roedema, who was bleeding profusely, unable to move.

Cardenas dragged him an estimated 100 yards to safety, stopping several times to fire his machine gun at the hidden enemy while using his body to shield his colleague. Once in a safe location, he ignored his own wounds and gave first aid to Roedema.

"He was my sergeant; I had to do something," Cardenas said.

For saving Roedema's life at the risk of his own, Cardenas, 20, who grew up in Fullerton, was awarded the Silver Star in a short but emotional ceremony Friday at Camp Pendleton.

Tears filled his eyes at the memory of Lance Cpl. Christian Vasquez, 20, of Coalinga, who was killed in the attack.

"We train together, laugh together, live together. You get close to your Marines, like brothers, more than brothers," said Cardenas. "When one dies, it hurts."

Like most firefights, the incident was brief, only a few minutes. All the insurgents were killed. "We were all firing. I hope I got one or two," Cardenas said.

At the end of the ceremony Roedema, 25, embraced Cardenas and thanked him once again. Four days after he was shot, Roedema's wife, Sharla, gave birth to their first child, Juliannah.

"I would never have seen her except for Lance Cpl. Cardenas," said Roedema. "We'll be in contact the rest of our lives. I owe him my life."

The unit, part of the 1st Marine Division, is set to return to Iraq in the fall. Roedema, of Denver, is leaving the Marine Corps, but Cardenas said he is looking forward to the deployment.

"I love this job," he said.

tony.perry@latimes.com

Ellie