After extraordinary sacrifice, and years of delay, Alwyn Cashe gets his Medal of Honor
Staff Sgt. Douglas Dodge was dazed and sick to his stomach, still in shock after a roadside bomb blast slammed him and other soldiers against the ceiling of their 27-ton armored vehicle. He had regained consciousness and forced his way to safety, but his friends were still inside screaming and on fire.
Sgt. 1st Class Alwyn Cashe, who had been riding in the front of the Bradley Fighting Vehicle, appeared out of the darkness. He was wearing a helmet, body armor and boots, but little else. His camouflage uniform, sopped in fuel, had begun to melt away.
Dodge! Cashe yelled. Where are the boys?
The desperate moments that followed became the subject of a years-long Army investigation mired by internal conflict to determine whether Cashe, who reached into the burning vehicle at least six times to rescue those trapped, merited the militarys preeminent distinction for his courage and selflessness in Iraq on Oct. 17, 2005.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2021/12/15/alwyn-cashe-medal-of-honor/
https://taskandpurpose.com/news/alwyn-cashe-soldiers-interviews-medal-of-honor/