William D. Swenson

Officer

Birthday November 2, 1978

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Seattle, Washington, U.S.

Age 45 years old

Nationality United States

#58583 Most Popular

1978

William D. Swenson (born November 2, 1978) is a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army who was awarded the Medal of Honor in a ceremony on October 15, 2013.

He was the sixth living recipient in the War on Terror.

Swenson, Thomas Payne, Matthew O. Williams and Earl Plumlee are the only Medal of Honor recipients still on active duty.

2001

Swenson graduated from Seattle University, with a Bachelor of Science degree in political science, in 2001.

2002

Swenson was commissioned from Officer Candidate School as a United States Army infantry officer in September 2002.

His military education, mostly at Fort Benning, includes Basic and Advanced Infantry Officer Courses, Ranger School, and Airborne School.

He has deployed three times in the War on Terror, once to Iraq and twice to Afghanistan.

He has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal (with two oak leaf clusters), the Purple Heart (for having been wounded in action), and the Combat Infantryman Badge.

2009

On September 8, 2009, Swenson was part of an operation to connect the Afghan government with native elders in the Ganjgal Valley in Eastern Kunar Province in Afghanistan, near the Pakistan border.

According to the United States Army's detailed Official Narrative, the coalition force's 106-man column entered the valley and was ambushed at about 6 a.m. by as many as 60 insurgent fighters who soon surrounded the column on three sides, situated on terraced high ground.

Within an hour, communication to the front of the column, including four U.S. servicemen, was lost.

Meanwhile, Captain Swenson, who initially was positioned toward the rear of the column, called for air support, and with two comrades crossed 50 meters of open space under direct enemy fire to administer life-extending first aid to his severely wounded sergeant.

When the column was surrounded by enemy fighters that advanced within 50 meters, Swenson responded to Taliban demands for surrender by throwing a hand grenade, an act of defiance that rallied his comrades to repel the enemy advance.

Swenson and comrades moved his sergeant and other wounded to a helicopter for medical evacuation before returning to the enemy's "kill zone" for at least two more trips in an unarmored vehicle to evacuate additional wounded.

Returning even more deeply through the kill zone toward the location of the head of column in search of the four U.S. servicemen, Swenson's party first rescued and recovered several Afghan National Security Force wounded and dead.

Finally, Swenson and a small contingent recovered the four fallen U.S. servicemen who had been discovered by a search and rescue aircraft at noon.

The 6-7 hour firefight caused 15 coalition deaths, including the four U.S. servicemen; also, Swenson's sergeant, Kenneth Westbrook, died of his wounds after returning from Afghanistan.

Swenson's actions are believed to have directly contributed to saving more than a dozen Afghan lives.

Swenson was nominated for his actions as an Embedded Trainer in the Battle of Ganjgal near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border on September 8, 2009.

Being recommended for the Medal of Honor in December 2009 by a battalion commander, the paperwork was lost, causing a significant delay in the nomination process.

Prior to the paperwork being lost, General David Petraeus had recommended that the award be downgraded to a Distinguished Service Cross.

There are accusations in both the military and the press that the lost paperwork was punishment for Swenson loudly criticizing his senior officers for not sending fire support in an after-action investigation into the battle.

2010

At the time of the Battle of Ganjgal, Swenson was a captain in 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, detailed as an Embedded Trainer for the Afghan Border Police.

2011

Swenson left the army in February 2011 and lived in Seattle, Washington.

At the time, when Swenson received the Medal of Honor, he was unemployed, and had been since after he left the army.

He is reported to have repeatedly entered the "kill zone" in order to rescue wounded American and Afghan soldiers, much like his fellow serviceman Dakota Meyer who was awarded the Medal of Honor in 2011.

Swenson became the first living officer to receive the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War.

Footage of Swenson from a camera on a helicopter was the first time that part of an event which led to the awarding of the Medal of Honor was filmed.

Swenson's case was reopened in 2011 at the urging of Marine Corps General John R. Allen.

Dakota Meyer strongly advocated for Swenson's Medal of Honor in his book, Into the Fire: A Firsthand Account of the Most Extraordinary Battle in the Afghan War, writing that if it were not for Swenson, he (Meyer) would not be alive today.

2013

In October 2013, Swenson requested to return to active duty.

Swenson received the Medal of Honor from President Barack Obama on October 15, 2013.

2014

On March 14, 2014, he was accepted back onto active duty and served as a plans officer at the I Corps headquarters.

Later in 2014, Swenson was named "Alumnus of the Year" by Seattle University.

In May 2014, the Department of Defense reported that based on an investigation, Swenson's Medal of Honor recommendation was lost in the Army's email system.

2015

In 2015, along with Representative Duncan D. Hunter and others, Swenson advocated on behalf of Major Mathew Golsteyn, who had his Silver Star revoked following an investigation that initially led to no charges; however in December 2018, Golsteyn was charged with murder, being recalled to active duty to face the charge.

2016

In March 2016, Swenson was assigned to United States Army South.

2017

In December 2017, Swenson earned a Master of Arts in Security Studies Western Hemisphere from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.

2018

In August 2018, Swenson took the place of Major General James E. Livingston on the board of the National Medal of Honor Museum Foundation.

2019

Swenson was promoted to lieutenant colonel on October 31, 2019.