Lt. Gen. Eric Fiel, commander of Air Force Special Operations Command, pinned both medals to Gilbreath and praised him for his "tremendous poise, self-control and courage under fire."
"Caleb looked death in the face and did not cower from the situation," Fiel said during the ceremony, which was attended by Gilbreath's family and friends, Pope Field commanders, members of the 3rd Special Forces Group and some of Gilbreath's students at the Combat Control School.
Air Force Staff Sgt. Cecil C. Gilbreath, a former member of the 21st Special Tactics Squadron, will be presented the medal by Lt. Gen. Eric Fiel, commander of Air Force Special Operations Command, during a ceremony on Pope Field.
Gilbreath is being recognized for his actions in Konduz province between Oct. 30 and Nov. 6, 2009, while working with Green Berets, according to AFSOC.
Gilbreath currently serves with the Combat Control School at Pope Field.
A citation that will accompany the Silver Star says Gilbreath "displayed extraordinary bravery during two significant battles."
A mortar round landed 20 feet from Gilbreath, and two rocket-propelled grenade rounds struck less than 15 feet away, but Gilbreath held his ground and exposed himself to enemy fire while identifying enemy positions, according to the citation. He then coordinated three bomb strikes that devastated the insurgents and halted the attack.
Three days later, Gilbreath's team was clearing a village occupied by an estimated 120 Taliban and foreign fighters, according to the citation.
"As bullets and shrapnel impacted his vehicle from all directions and the enemy closed on his team's position, Sergeant Gilbreath directed two immediate ... strafing runs against insurgent fighters just 30 feet from his position," the citation reads. "These attacks suppressed the nearest threats, but did little to deter the enemy force."
For the next hour, without regard for his own safety, Gilbreath called in eight more airstrikes, turning the tide of the battle and allowing his team to defeat the enemy without a single casualty, according to the citation.
Staff Sgt. Cecil Gilbreath, then of the 21st Tactics Squadron, was deployed with an Army Special Forces unit in Kunduz province when the troops came under fierce attack twice in four days.
The American troops and their Afghan counterparts were attacked Nov. 2, 2009, by 30 Taliban fighters using “a well-coordinated L-shaped ambush,” according to the Silver Star citation, parts of which were withheld for security concerns.
Two rocket-propelled grenades exploded within 15 feet of Gilbreath’s vehicle, and a mortar landed 20 feet away. Amid the fire, Gilbreath called in three “pinpoint bomb strikes that devastated the insurgents and halted the attack,” the citation reads.
Three days later, Gilbreath’s team was involved in a clearing operation of a village holding an estimated 120 Taliban and foreign fighters. The team came under heavy gunfire, and Gilbreath called in two “danger close” airstrikes on fighters about 30 feet away.
Gilbreath remained partially exposed to Taliban gunfire as he called in eight more airstrikes — which “methodically decimated the enemy.”
Gilbreath is now assigned to the Combat Control School at Pope. He will receive the Silver Star from Lt. Gen. Eric Fiel, the commander of Air Force Special Operations Command.
POPE ARMY AIR FIELD – A Pope Airman was awarded the Silver Star for his actions while under attack in Afghanistan two years ago.
Staff Sgt. Cecil Caleb Gilbreath risked his life while coordinating three separate attacks against enemy forces as they were closing in on his special forces team.
Gilbreath said he was just doing what he was trained to do.
"I did my job. I don't feel special. I feel like this is what I should've done and what anybody else that I train with, in any of the other Combat Control you saw siting in this room, would've done the same thing," Gilbreath said.
The Silver Star is awarded to a person in the Armed Forces who is cited for gallantry in action against an enemy of the United States while engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing foreign force.