This paper presents a case of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a 30-year old soldier of the Polish Military Contingent in Iraq who has narrowly escaped death three times. The first time was during a change of guard when he was unintentionally shot by his colleague from his personal weapon. The projectile penetrated the victim’s helmet, slid along its internal shell curvature and left the shell causing only a scratch on the scalp skin. This incident resulted in an acute stress reaction that vanished without any treatment. The soldier a month after the first incident experienced another traumatic incident. As a guard of honor he was “shot” in the same rear head area with the cap of a tube of cream, inadvertedly stepped on by a colleague. This incident caused a strong reaction to stress that could not be eliminated despite therapeutic activities undertaken by a psychologist and psychiatrist. The third event happened a couple of days later, during a rocket attack on the Diwaniyah base. Just before the attack the soldier was heading for the laundry but he returned from the laundry building as he forgot to take some of his dirty clothes. Right at that time a large-caliber projectile hit the laundry building, destroying it completely and killing an American civilian employee. After this incident the soldier was evacuated to the Clinic of Psychiatry and Combat Stress in Warsaw. Multi-form post-trauma stress disorders that developed in this soldier are described. The course of his comprehensive therapy during his two stays, totaling eight months in duration, in the Clinic are discussed. Also, a detailed description of the therapy using the method of controlled exposure to combat stressors in virtual reality (VR), supplemented with behavioral training consisting in a desensitization of an aversive reaction to contact with weapons at a shooting range, is presented. The comprehensive treatment activities resulted in an actual full remission of the PTSD symptoms. The soldier continues his service in a logistic support unit.