Attending the presidential address will be the highlight of the acclaim that followed last year's thwarted train attack, Staff Sgt. Spencer Stone told The Associated Press on Monday.
The previous highlight was meeting Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant, he said.
Stone plans to finish his commitment to the U.S. Air Force then use his veteran benefits to pursue a college degree.
After that, he said, he may consider a career in politics, though he described himself as a typical 23-year-old who frequently changes his mind.
Among the other possible future careers would be medicine or federal law enforcement, if his health allows it.
Stone suffered a severely cut thumb and a knife wound to his neck in August when he and two childhood friends from Sacramento, California, stopped a terror attack aboard a Paris-bound passenger train.
Stone, National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos and college student Anthony Sadler were vacationing in Europe when they tackled Ayoub El-Khazzani, a man who authorities said has ties to radical Islam and boarded the train with a Kalashnikov rifle, pistol and box cutter.
Stone was knifed on Oct. 8 in a fight near a bar in Sacramento shortly after nightclub patrons applauded him for his role in stopping the gunman.

