AAFES employee receives award for actions after Iraq bombing
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Saturday, April 2, 2005
WASHINGTON
When the truck Sarah Latona was driving hit a roadside bomb just
south of Baghdad, it wasnt her military experience or disaster
training that kept her calm.
It was her
mom instinct.
I went
right into mommy mode, the 42-year-old Army and Air Force Exchange
Service employee said. It was just a horrible experience, but the
three soldiers with me were all young, and I just went right into
thinking I had to help them like a mother would.
So Latona,
who has a 16-year-old son, sped through the kill zone, grabbed a
wounded soldiers radio and called for backup, all while bleeding
from shrapnel wounds to her right eye, right arm and right leg.

Courtesy of AAFES
Sarah Latona, an Army and Air Force Exchange Service employee
injured while working in Iraq, poses during a ceremony in
Mountain Home, Idaho, after receiving the Defense of Freedom
Medal, the civilian equivalent of the Purple Heart.
|
Last week,
she became the first AAFES employee to be honored with the Defense of
Freedom Medal the civilian equivalent of the Purple Heart for
her heroic actions following that Oct. 9 attack.
Latona, who
had volunteered to work overseas to help the troops, joked that
standing before a large crowd during her awards ceremony was much
more stressful than driving trucks in Iraq.
And she is
flattered but somewhat embarrassed by all the attention.
I grew up
as a military brat, so I guess helping troops has been bred into
me, she said. Now everyone is calling me a hero, and I still
dont get it. Its just me still.
She had
already finished one uneventful 15-month tour in the Middle East
before her accident. The attack came just two weeks after her return,
during a trip between Camp Victory and exchange facilities in Kuwait.
Latona, who
served eight years in the Air Force and spent the last seven as a
civilian working for AAFES in Idaho, said at first she didnt
realize what had happened.
I heard
the soldiers screaming and I was like, oh my goodness, she said.
I kept driving the truck, but it stopped after only 150 feet.
After she
called for help, evacuation crews arrived within minutes. Officials
said she and the three soldiers survived thanks to her quick thinking.
Latona has
regained some of the sight in her injured eye and will undergo a
corneal transplant in June. She is expected to fully recover from all
her wounds in about two years, but has already returned to her job at
the AAFES military clothing store at Mountain Home Air Force Base,
Idaho.
Id go
back over [to Iraq] in a heartbeat, but my husband said I at least
have to wait until I fully recover, she said, laughing.
The Defense
of Freedom medal was created in 2002 to honor civilians injured and
killed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon. |