Category Archives: Infantry OCS

The Bronze Star: The showing-up-for-work-on-time medal

So few Americans serve in the military these days (roughly ten percent, if that much) that the usual journalistic ignorance of military terms and conventions (because very few journalists are among the ten percent) has spread to the general populace. For instance, the misunderstanding  about the Bronze Star Medal (BSM).

A lot of people seem to think it’s a valor award. Probably they get that from the news media crowing about some soldier they’re puffing (they either puff or criticize, they can’t seem to draw any line down the middle) as having been awarded a BSM. At least they now frequently refrain from saying the soldier “won” it, as if war was a “reality” show on the rube.

The BSM with a V is a valor medal, though still at the bottom of the scale of valor medals. My own from 1969 has no V, so it can’t be said to have been awarded for my heroism, of which there was none . I only answered the call of duty. The BSM is generally awarded (there are exceptions to everything) for having been assigned to a combat unit, though not necessarily for participating in combat. It’s a fairly mundane award.

“It’s the showing-up-for-work-on-time medal,” as an old friend of mine who also fought in Vietnam likes to say, though the “work” is combat. My friend has a Silver Star medal, which is a valor medal by itself and therefore requires no V.  And it’s a much bigger deal than a BSM, even one with a V, though it’s still third on the scale, below the Distinguished Service Cross and the Medal of Honor, the premier valor medal.

On Memorial Day

These are the men of 60th Company, OC 504-68, of Fort Benning, Georgia, who were killed in Viet Nam.

We graduates of that 1968 class at Infantry Officers Candidate School, commemorate these seven each Memorial Day.

One graduate:  1LT Jacob Lee Kinser, a Huey helicopter pilot.

Two Tactical Officers:  CPT Reese Michael Patrick and 1LT Daniel Lynn Neiswender, both infantry commanders.

Four class drop-outs:  CPL Sherry Joe Hadley, SP4 Reese Currenti Elia Jr., CPL Robert Chase, and SP4 Jeffrey Sanders Tigner, all infantry riflemen.

The liberal mainsteam media today despises the military and has a hard time concealing the fact, when they bother to do so. They generally mock those who serve as victims, or else get so smarmy about them that it’s obvious a trick is being played. So influenced, only about 1 percent of eligible Americans join.

Nevertheless, despite the sneers of the NYTimes and the old big three networks  “after more than a decade of war, remarkable men and women are still stepping forward.”

LTC George D. Wolfe, Jr. R.I.P.

“Retired Army Lieutenant Colonel George D. Wolfe Jr., of Ligonier, [PA], passed away at his home Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011. He was born Jan. 14, 1934, in Gettysburg, to the late Rev. George D. Wolfe and Vernie Warner Wolfe….

“George was a husband, a father, a grandfather, an uncle, a brother and a friend, but one role that he was especially proud of was that of Army Infantryman.

“He was a career serviceman and a highly decorated Vietnam War veteran. He served in many units and battalions, but the one closest to his heart was the 26th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division….Interment will follow at a future date in Ft. Benning, Ga….”

As a young captain, Wolfe commanded Infantry Officer’s Candidate School class 504-68 at Ft. Benning, of which I was a graduate in June, 1968. He had talked me out of quitting, when the daily stress of the six-month program finally wore me down.

Although I was commissioned in Armor, I fought in Vietnam as an Infantry lieutenant, and like Lieutenant Colonel Wolfe, I have always been proud of being an Infantryman.

Via The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

Reprise: The disappearance of American military service

A bit of Veterans Day insight, just one day late. Sorry about that:

I would not especially care to see the return of the Draft, which caught me just days after my college graduation in 1967 and sent me to war in 1969-70 and home again to job discrimination and psychological abuse.

The draft was inequitable then and likely would be again, but it would spread the burden among more of the educated than volunteering does now, to the detriment of those who do serve and, yes, even those who do not.

“The loss of the martial virtues weakens an entire culture. Whole generations begin to rate themselves too special, ‘with a special kind of hide to be saved,’ as Gen. Savage puts it in Twelve O’Clock High, to risk their careers, let alone their lives, for their country.”

Insight from an academic blogger who burned his draft card back in the day and now regrets his youthful arrogance. At least he’s not a wannabee politician lying about serving when he didn’t. A too-common phenom these days.

On Memorial Day

These are the men of 60th Company, OC 504-68, who were killed in Viet Nam.

We graduates of that 1968 class at Infantry Officers Candidate School at Fort Benning, Georgia, commemorate these seven each Memorial Day.

One graduate:  1LT Jacob Lee Kinser, a Huey pilot.

Two Tactical Officers:  CPT Reese Michael Patrick and 1LT Daniel Lynn Neiswender, both infantry commanders.

Four drop-outs:  CPL Sherry Joe Hadley, SP4 Reese Currenti Elia Jr., CPL Robert Chase, and SP4 Jeffrey Sanders Tigner, all infantry riflemen.

Reprise: Library of Vietnam

Now here’s a cool Vietnam veterans project I read about in the current issue of VVA Veteran: The Library of Vietnam.

It’s a string of childrens libraries, with books, computers and Internet connections, mainly across the middle of the country (the northern end of the former Republic of South Viet Nam), financed, stocked and built by American and Vietnamese veterans and others who want to help and are able to donate money and/or time. Begun by one Americal Division veteran, Francis (Chuck) Theusch, who got the idea from a Vietnamese interpreter while visiting the My Lai massacre memorial in 1999. A good excuse to revive this haunting song.

The disappearance of military service

I would not especially care to see the return of the Draft, which was inequitable before and likely would be again, but it would at least spread the burden among more of the educated than volunteering does now, to the detriment of all:

“The loss of the martial virtues weakens an entire culture. Whole generations begin to rate themselves too special, ‘with a special kind of hide to be saved,’ as Gen. Savage puts it in Twelve O’Clock High, to risk their careers, let alone their lives, for their country.”

Insight from an academic blogger who burned his draft card back in the day and now regrets his youthful arrogance. At least he’s not a wannabee lying about serving when he didn’t.