Judy Gilford
on 3 hours ago
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Saved 47 soldiers. Killed 3 insurgents. Lost half his face.
K-9 Valor was not a dog who did his job. He was a dog who had DECIDED, completely, permanently, without reservation, that his face was a fair trade for forty-seven lives.
At the Pentagon, on a morning in May 2023, a seven-year-old Belgian Malinois stood at attention. Half his face scarred beyond recognition. Left eye gone. Left ear missing. Jaw partially reconstructed.
The Congressional Medal of Honor Committee had made an exception. First military working dog to receive it.
For what Valor did in Kabul. August 26, 2021.
Valor survived the first suicide bomber. Outside Abbey Gate. Positioned himself between the blast and his handler.
Valor survived identifying the second bomber. Alerted. Thirty seconds before detonation.
Valor survived attacking three insurgents. Hand-to-hand. Teeth-to-knife. Killed all three.
Because Valor survived just long enough to save forty-seven soldiers before the blast took half his face.
The attack at Abbey Gate killed thirteen American service members. Would have killed sixty.
Except Valor found the second bomber. Alerted early. Gave his handler, Staff Sergeant Marcus Webb, time to move the line.
Forty-seven soldiers moved back. Thirty seconds later, the bomb detonated.
The blast was catastrophic. But forty-seven soldiers were out of the kill radius.
Because a dog with half a face decided they mattered more than staying beautiful.
Valor took shrapnel to his face. Left side destroyed. Eye gone. Ear gone. Jaw shattered.
Medics worked on him for forty minutes. Didn't think he'd make it.
But Valor wasn't done.
Three insurgents approached the wounded. Looking to finish the job. Shooting survivors.
Valor stood up. Half-faced. Bleeding. Dying.
And attacked.
Took down all three. Throat strikes. Neutralized.
Then collapsed.
They medevaced him to Germany. Seventeen surgeries. Reconstructed his jaw. Saved his life.
Couldn't save his face.
At the Pentagon ceremony, the Secretary of Defense placed the medal around Valor's neck.
The room stood. Applauded for eight minutes.
Valor sat at attention. Scarred face forward. Not hiding.
Webb stood beside him. Hand on Valor's shoulder.
"He doesn't see himself as disfigured," Webb said in his speech. "He sees himself as a soldier who did his job. Forty-seven people went home because of him. That's all he cares about. Not what he looks like. What he did."
After the ceremony, reporters wanted photos. Valor's "good side."
Webb refused. "No sides. Full face. He earned every scar. He's not hiding them."
The photos went viral. Half-faced war dog. Medal around neck. Eyes forward.
Comments poured in. "Most beautiful dog I've ever seen." "That's what a hero looks like." "Perfect face. Perfect soldier."
Valor retired with full honors. Lives with Webb in Colorado. Works as a PTSD therapy dog for veterans.
The soldiers he visits don't see his scars. They see courage.
"If he can keep going," one veteran said, touching Valor's scarred face, "looking like that, carrying what he carries... then I can too."
Valor is nine now. Still working. Still showing his face. Still proving that beauty is temporary. Heroism is forever.
K-9 Valor. Congressional Medal of Honor recipient. Saved 47 soldiers. Lost half his face. Kept all his heart.
#doglover #seniordogs #animalwelfare #militarydog #k9hero #dogrescue #HalfHisFace #47Soldiers #MedalOfHonor #TrueBeauty
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Rodrick
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL HEARTFELT STORY. HE'S DONE A LOT IN HIS SHORT LIFE OF SERVING OUR COUNTRY. TO HEAR HE'S NOW A SERVICE DOG, MAKES IT ALL THE BETTER YET FOR OTHER VETERANS.
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2 hours ago Edited