Apr 29, 2014 - Growing up in Erie, Penn., John Steinbaugh loved the outdoors, guns and hunting, he recalled, so becoming an infantryman seemed a natural fit. So, he joined the Army in 1987 as something to do out of high school. “The plan was to join the infantry, be there for 4 years, get out and go to college,” Steinbaugh said.While in the Army, he discovered the Special Forces. “When I joined Special Forces, I joined with the intention to be a weapons guy or something tactical similar to the infantry,” he said.
But Special Forces had a different plan for him. After the selection process, he was chosen to be a medic.
ABC US News | ABC Business NewsThe job of medics changed dramatically after 2001, he said, from a “total training environment” to a relative paucity of training. “No more fake deployment stuff. Everything you do is real combat for 12 years. I did that for 12 years of my life,” he said.
Steinbaugh spent 20 years in the Army as a Special Forces medic and had several deployments and rotations to Iraq and Afghanistan in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. read more>>>
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