How One Army Ranger's Salute Brought 50 Soldiers To Tears
Hargis' Ranger unit "was conducting a mission to try to capture an HVT (High Value Target), in the Panjwai district of Afghanistan," according to the site Guardian of Valor.
Their post is based off multiple field reports of the incident:
As several members of the Ranger unit moved toward the man to begin questioning him, a woman wearing a suicide vest emerged from the house and blew herself up, killing several members of the unit instantly, along with [their] dog, and injuring others.
Hargis was flown to the nearest combat medical facility where he was stabilized. Prior to his follow-on flight to Germany, the unit's commander organized a hasty bedside ceremony to award Hargis the Purple Heart.
Later, Taylor Hargis, Josh's wife, received a letter and an image from the commander, describing what Josh did in response to the ceremony:
During the presentation the Commander published the official orders verbally and leaned over Josh to thank him for his sacrifice.
Josh, whom everybody in the room (over 50 people) assumed to be unconscious, began to move his right arm under the blanket in a diligent effort to salute the Commander as is customary during these ceremonies. Despite his wounds, wrappings, tubes, and pain, Josh fought the doctor who was trying to restrain his right arm and rendered the most beautiful salute any person in that room had ever seen.
I cannot impart on you the level of emotion that poured through the intensive care unit that day. Grown men began to weep and we were speechless at a gesture that speaks volumes about Josh's courage and character.
Guardian of Valor dubbed it the "Salute heard round the world," and the officer wrote to Taylor that he thought the picture should be posted "on every news channel and every news paper."
"I have it hanging above my desk now," he wrote, "and will remember it as the single greatest event I have witnessed in my ten years in the Army."
Today, Hargis and his wife are expecting their first child. And this past March, Hargis participated in Warrior's Walk, a 222-mile hike from Fort Bennet, Georgia, to the National Infantry Museum in Columbus, Georgia.