HR-8973-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
What it does
This bill would authorize the President to award the Medal of Honor to Marine Sergeant Rafael Peralta for his actions on November 15, 2004, during the Second Battle of Fallujah in Operation Iraqi Freedom. It would waive the statutory time limits that normally bar Medal of Honor nominations submitted years after the qualifying act. The bill does not appropriate funds or create new programs — it solely removes the legal deadline as an obstacle to this specific award.
Who benefits
Sergeant Peralta's family and descendants, who would receive formal national recognition of his sacrifice. The Marines who served alongside Peralta and survived the engagement, whose eyewitness accounts would be officially validated. The broader Marine Corps and veteran community, who would see a long-disputed act of valor formally recognized. Mexican-American and immigrant communities, as Peralta was a Mexican-born legal permanent resident who enlisted in the Marine Corps — his recognition carries symbolic significance for those communities.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from this bill. Indirectly, those who believe the Department of Defense's prior review process — which declined to upgrade Peralta's Navy Cross to the Medal of Honor based on forensic questions about whether his action was conscious — may feel that Congress is overriding a legitimate administrative determination. Future Medal of Honor review processes could face pressure to revisit other previously denied cases.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that multiple eyewitness Marines who were present in the room consistently testified that Peralta consciously pulled the grenade beneath his body, and that their firsthand accounts outweigh after-the-fact forensic analysis used to deny the upgrade. They contend that Peralta — a legal permanent resident who volunteered to serve and was killed in one of the war's bloodiest urban battles — represents exactly the kind of extraordinary valor the Medal of Honor exists to recognize, and that administrative delays and procedural technicalities should not permanently foreclose that recognition.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the Department of Defense conducted multiple formal reviews, including forensic analysis, and concluded there was insufficient certainty that Peralta's action was a conscious, deliberate act rather than a post-mortem reflex — the standard required for the Medal of Honor. They contend that Congress bypassing the military's established review process in a single case sets a precedent for political override of expert military judgment, potentially undermining the integrity and consistency of the Medal of Honor award process for all future recipients.