Smith attended
Basic Training at
Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, in 1989, before being sent to Germany for his first duty station, where he joined the
9th Engineer Battalion. Later, he served during the
Gulf War. He deployed with B company in October 1996 as part of the 2nd
Brigade Combat Team, the covering force for
Operation Joint Endeavor and
Operation Joint Guardian; the battalion returned to
Schweinfurt in April 1997. in 2005 Meanwhile, some Iraqi soldiers had taken position in the tower overlooking the courtyard, just over the west wall. The Iraqis now had the Americans in the courtyard under an intense crossfire. Smith took command of the M113 and ordered a driver to position it so that he could attack both the tower and the trenches. He manned the M113's
machine gun, going through three boxes of ammunition. A separate team led by
First Sergeant Tim Campbell attacked the tower from the rear, killing the Iraqis. As the battle ended, Smith's machine gun fell silent. His comrades found him slumped in the turret hatch. His armored vest was peppered with 13 bullet holes, the vest's ceramic armor inserts, both front and back, cracked in numerous places (the M113 he was manning was not fitted with protective ACAV gun shields which had been standard since the Vietnam War, later in the Iraq conflict, modern gunshields were fielded). However, the fatal shot, one of the last from the tower, had entered his neck and passed through his brain, killing him. Before deploying to Iraq, Smith had written to his parents, saying "There are two ways to come home, stepping off the plane and being carried off the plane. It doesn't matter how I come home, because I am prepared to give all that I am to ensure that all my boys make it home." Smith was cremated and his ashes were scattered in the
Gulf of Mexico, where he loved to fish. He has a memorial marker in
Arlington National Cemetery Arlington, Virginia, and his marker can be found in memorial Section MD, lot 67. He also has a memorial at his high school outside of the school's
Navy Junior ROTC building. At the time of his death Smith had served in the United States Army for thirteen years, and for his actions during the battle, he posthumously received the
Medal of Honor. On April 4, 2005, exactly two years after he was killed, his eleven-year-old son David received the Medal of Honor on behalf of his father from President
George W. Bush, along with a Medal of Honor flag. ==Personal life==