Graham Ragsdale

Master Corporal Graham Ragsdale of the Canadian Forces was the commander of the Third Battalion Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry sniper team attached to the 101st Airborne of the U.S. Army during Operation Anaconda in the Shah-i-kot Valley, Paktia Province, Afghanistan in March, 2002. The sniper team recorded more than 20 priority target confirmed kills including the long distance record combat kill of 2430 metres set by Corporal Rob Furlong. Master Corporal Ragsdale with selfless disregard for his own personal safety operated his sniper team through extreme weather conditions at high altitude while under direct and indirect enemy fire aiding the success of the mission by identifying and neutralizing enemy targets and saving allied lives. He was awarded the U.S. Army Bronze Star with "V" for valour for his actions in combat and the Mention in Dispatches Oak Leaf by the Canadian Forces for valiant conduct and meritorious service.

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Biography

Graham Ragsdale was born to British immigrants from Nottingham, England and raised in Kincardine, Ontario, Canada. He joined the Canadian Forces after graduating from Secondary School and upon completion of parachute training he was posted as a paratrooper to 2 Commando of the now disbanded Canadian Airborne Regiment, Special Service Force (SSF) where he gained the reconnaissance, sniper, diver, machine gunner, communications, and mountain operations qualifications. After leaving the military to attend university he rejoined and was posted to 3 PPCLI where he gained the mortarman, leadership, jumpmaster, freefall parachute instructor, unarmed combat instructor, British pathfinder and sniper instructor qualifications. In 2000 he completed a tour of duty in the Former Yugoslavia with NATO's Stabilization Force (SFOR), and was then given the command role of battalion master sniper in charge of the sniper group that in 2002 was deployed to Afghanistan as part of the US Operation Enduring Freedom and Canadian Operation Apollo. Master Corporal Ragsdale lost the hearing in his left ear from a danger close explosion while being mortared in open ground on Operation Anaconda and following that tour he honourably released into the care of Veterans Affairs Canada. Master Corporal Ragsdale's C3A1 sniper rifle is on display at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, Canada.

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