
Jessica
Lynch Gets Hero's Welcome
July 22, 2003
http://link.history.com/services/link/bcpid1184539009/bclid1213979358/bctid1209892902
On this
day in 2003, U.S. Army Private Jessica Lynch, a
prisoner-of-war who was rescued from an Iraqi
hospital, receives a hero's welcome when she
returns to her hometown of Palestine, West
Virginia. The story of the 19-year-old supply
clerk, who was captured by Iraqi forces in March
2003, gripped America; however, it was later
revealed that some details of Lynch's dramatic
capture and rescue might have been exaggerated.
Lynch, who was born April 26, 1983, was part of
the 507th Ordnance Maintenance Company from Fort
Bliss, Texas. On March 23, 2003, just days after
the U.S. invaded Iraq, Lynch was riding in a
supply convoy when her unit took a wrong turn and
was ambushed by Iraqi forces near Nasiriya.
Eleven American soldiers died and four others
besides Lynch were captured.
Lynch, who sustained multiple broken bones and
other injuries when her vehicle crashed during
the ambush, was taken to an Iraqi hospital. On
April 1, she was rescued by U.S. Special Forces
who raided the hospital where she was being held.
They also recovered the bodies of eight of
Lynch's fellow soldiers. Lynch was taken to a
military hospital in Germany for treatment and
then returned to the United States.
Lynch's story garnered massive media attention
and she became an overnight celebrity. Various
reports emerged about Lynch's experience, with
some news accounts indicating that even after
Lynch was wounded during the ambush she fought
back against her captors. However, Lynch later
stated that she had been knocked unconscious
after her vehicle crashed and couldn't remember
the details of what had happened to her. She also
said she had not been mistreated by the staff at
the Iraqi hospital and they put up no resistance
to her rescue. Critics--and Lynch
herself--charged the U.S. government with
embellishing her story to boost patriotism and
help promote the Iraq war.
In August 2003, Lynch received a medical
honorable discharge. She collaborated on a book
about her experience, I Am a Soldier, Too: The
Jessica Lynch Story, which was released later
that year. In April 2007, Lynch testified before
Congress that she had falsely been portrayed as a
"little girl Rambo" and the U.S.
military had hyped her story for propaganda
reasons. According to Lynch: "I am still
confused as to why they chose to lie and tried to
make me a legend when the real heroics of my
fellow soldiers that day were, in fact,
legendary." She added: "The truth of
war is not always easy to hear but it always more
heroic than the hype."
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