Tag Archives: Purple Heart

13 Americans Dead… The Suspect? President Obama

By Floyd G. Brown

Arlington Cemetary 300x224 13 Americans Dead... The Suspect? President Obama

Washington, D.C. is a town run largely by lawyers. Naturally, this leads to a ton of convoluted and unnecessary legislation. And this overabundance of legality often leads to twisted logic in our nation’s capital – and confusion for us.

Take the two hotly debated (and often misused) words: “coup” and “terrorism.”

You see, when the Egyptian military recently ousted President Mursi, most of the world called that a coup. But for reasons you’ll see in a moment, the Obama administration doesn’t see it that way.

Then there’s Major Nidal Hasan’s attack on Fort Hood, Texas on November 5, 2009 – which left 13 people dead and 30 injured. You’d probably file that one under an act of terror. But according to Obama, you’d be wrong.

Time to shed some light on this classic Washington head fake. Technically Speaking…

“Coup d’état” is a French word that made its way into the English language.  The Oxford Dictionary identifies it as a French expression, meaning a “stroke of state.”

Military historian Edward Luttwak says that “[a] coup consists of the infiltration of a small, but critical, segment of the state apparatus, which is then used to displace the government from its control of the remainder.”

So, when the Egyptian military grabbed power and imprisoned President Mohamed Mursi, headlines across the world (correctly) screamed “Coup in Egypt.”

Yet in the Obama administration, twisted words reign, and take on surreal meanings. And in this case, they’re simply insisting that the situation in Egypt isn’t actually a coup.

Why?

Well, the Foreign Assistance Act states that if the “duly elected head of government is deposed by military act or decree,” then the United States must stop providing aid.

But Obama desperately wants to continue pumping $1.55 billion in aid to Egypt. And as I explained back in June, Egypt is collapsing and ungovernable. Without the continued flow of aid, the collapse will accelerate, and Egypt’s government would likely vanish.

This is just another classic example of the Obama team’s complete disregard for the law. And if Obama says it’s not a coup, then it’s not. Period.

More Than Semantics

A similar twist of words is playing out in the Fort Hood case. Obama’s lawyers insist that Hasan isn’t a terrorist, and that his attack is “work place violence” rather than an act of terrorism.

Talk about splitting hairs.

According to the FBI, Hasan was an avid reader of Jihadi websites. He worshipped at Jihadi-influenced mosques. Hasan even self-identifies as a “soldier of Allah.” He openly supported suicide attacks against non-Muslims, and received religious and operational inspiration from Anwar Al-Awlaki.

You may remember Al-Awlaki – he was the American citizen and al-Qaeda promoter killed by a U.S. drone because he was deemed a terrorist.

Now the administration’s refusal to call the Fort Hood attack a terrorist attack is seriously impacting the lives of the survivors and victims.

For example, the Pentagon refuses to treat the injured and dead as casualties of war. Consequently, they’ve been denied the Purple Heart medal that’s bestowed on Americans injured in battle.

The U.S. House even …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Distinguished Warfare Medal Honoring Drone Pilots Canceled By Chuck Hagel

By The Huffington Post News Editors

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has canceled the creation of a controversial new medal that would have honored drone pilots and cyber warriors, after veterans organizations and members of Congress expressed outrage that it would outrank some battlefield medals like the Purple Heart.

The Distinguished Warfare Medal was approved in February by then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, intended to honor members of the military for achievements beyond the battlefield since Sept. 11, 2001. The backlash to the medal centered around the fact that it would have taken precedence over several traditional combat awards, which require that the recipient risk his or her life in order to receive them.

On March 12, Hagel said the Defense Department would be conducting a 30-day review of the medal.

Read More…
More on Chuck Hagel

From: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/15/distinguished-warfare-medal_n_3086660.html

Army veteran awarded Purple Heart 45 years after injury

A North Carolina veteran has been awarded a Purple Heart 45 years after he was wounded in Vietnam.

The Asheville Citizen-Times reported Friday that U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan, D-North Carolina, presented Dockie Brendle his third Purple Heart during a special afternoon ceremony at the Charles George VA Medical Center.

As a U.S. Army Specialist Fourth Class fighting in Vietnam on June 5, 1968, Brendle had been making his way to a .50-caliber machine gun he was hit by the blast from a rocket-propelled grenade. He returned home fully disabled from wounds to his head and chest, as well as two previous injuries.

The now 68-year-old Bryson City resident was supposed to have received his third Purple Heart award shortly thereafter, but the Army misplaced his paperwork.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/q1j-fvAeGEE/

MedAssets Recognizes Veteran U.S. Army Airborne Ranger Sean Parnell, Humanitarians Linda Egle, Jamie

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

MedAssets Recognizes Veteran U.S. Army Airborne Ranger Sean Parnell, Humanitarians Linda Egle, Jamie and Ali McMutrie for Dedicated Public Service

ATLANTA–(BUSINESS WIRE)– MedAssets (NAS: MDAS) today announced the recipients of the 2012 George Herbert Walker Bush Pacesetter Award and 2012 Norman Borlaug Humanitarian Award, which were presented during the 2013 MedAssets Healthcare Business Summit, held April 2-4 in Las Vegas.

The 2012 George Herbert Walker Bush Pacesetter Award honoree is Sean Parnell, a retired captain of the U.S. Army Airborne Rangers 10th Mountain Division, who served in combat during the war on terror in Afghanistan. The 2012 Norman Borlaug Humanitarian Award honorees are Linda Egle,founder of Eternal Threads and sisters Jamie and Ali McMutrie, founders of Haitian Families First.


2012 George Herbert Walker Bush Pacesetter Award Winner Sean Parnell

“Veteran Sean Parnell represents the American spirit of the George Herbert Walker Bush Pacesetter Award through his exemplary service during the war on terror, and advocacy on behalf of veterans’ issues,” said John Bardis, chairman, president and chief executive officer, MedAssets. “We are honored to highlight Sean’s story and efforts to make more Americans aware that we can do more to help our brave service men and women heal from what often are invisible wounds of war.”

A Pennsylvania native, Sean Parnell transitioned from college student to Army Ranger after the events of September 11, 2001. At age 24, he led a 40-man elite infantry, known also as the Outlaw Platoon, through 16 months of brutal combat while serving patrol in Afghanistan. His leadership and dedication to his men during an ambush led Sean to earn the Purple Heart and two Bronze Stars, including one for valor. In addition, 80 percent of his men earned Purple Hearts. Now retired and healing from post-concussion syndrome and post-traumatic stress disorder, Sean is sharing his experiences with the hope that other soldiers will be open to seeking help. As part of his own healing process, Sean wrote, “Outlaw Platoon: Heroes, Renegades, Infidels and the Brotherhood of War in Afghanistan,” a New York Times bestseller. He serves as a national ambassador for veterans issues and is working on a post graduate degree in clinical psychology to one day counsel and help soldiers heal from the psychological and emotional wounds suffered while serving in combat.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Defense Department says giving Purple Heart to Fort Hood survivors would hurt Hasan trial

Legislation that would award the injured from the 2009 Fort Hood shooting the Purple Heart would adversely affect the trial of Maj. Nidal Hasan by labeling the attack terrorism, according to a Defense Department document obtained by Fox News.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox News – Politics

Veterans Call For Universal Background Checks In New Ad

By The Huffington Post News Editors

WASHINGTON — A veterans group has a new ad making the case for universal background checks, arguing it doesn’t make sense that members of the armed forces have to pass background checks to carry guns that civilians are allowed to purchase with no questions asked.

The ad by VoteVets.org, which is currently running on social media, calls on Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) to support universal background checks for gun sales. The spot features Iraq War veteran and Purple Heart recipient Glenn Kunkel firing an AR-15 at a mannequin.

“I had to pass a background check to join the Marine Corps, before I could carry a weapon similar to this one in Iraq. Here at home, anyone can purchase this weapon, no questions asked,” says Kunkel in the ad.

Read More…
More on Video

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Tammy Duckworth, Iraq War Veteran And Congresswoman, Reflects On 10th Anniversary Of Conflict

By The Huffington Post News Editors

When images of joyous Iraqi voters with purple thumbs were broadcast around the world in January 2005, Tammy Duckworth watched with heartfelt tears from her hospital bed at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Just months earlier, the Army captain had been shot down over Iraq while flying a Black Hawk helicopter. Nearly a decade later, now-Rep. Duckworth (D-Ill.) walks the halls of Congress on Army-camo-and-American-flag prostheses.

Duckworth, the first female double amputee in the Iraq War, very nearly gave her life in a war she didn’t believe the U.S. should be fighting, but she says she is proud to have helped clear the way for Iraq’s first democratic election in more than half a century. The Iraq War also set her on a path to become an assistant secretary of veterans affairs under President Barack Obama, a powerful speaker at the 2012 Democratic National Convention and now a vocal Capitol Hill force on foreign policy, national defense and veterans’ issues.

Almost 10 years to the day Operation Iraqi Freedom began, the congresswoman, Illinois National Guard lieutenant colonel and Purple Heart recipient spoke with The Huffington Post to reflect on the lessons of the Iraq War, taught at such grave cost.

Read More…
More on Rape

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Distinguished Warfare Medal Honoring Drone Pilots Faces Bipartisan Backlash

By The Huffington Post News Editors

WASHINGTON — A new medal that would honor drone pilots and cyber warriors and outrank battlefield combat medals such as the Purple Heart and Bronze Star is facing backlash from veterans organizations and members of Congress, with a bipartisan group of 22 senators pressing the Pentagon to change the designation.

The newly created Distinguished Warfare Medal, approved last month by then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, will honor members of the military for achievements beyond the battlefield since Sept. 11, 2001.

The backlash to the medal centers around the fact that it will take precedence over traditional several combat awards, which require that the recipient risk his or her life in order to receive them.

Read More…
More on Chuck Hagel

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Vietnam War veteran to get new Purple Heart medal after theft

Vietnam War veteran living in South Dakota is set to get a replacement military medal after someone broke into his home and stole his Purple Heart.

Charlie Running Hawk, 66, of Rapid City, has been offered a replacement medal by members of South Dakota‘s Congressional delegation, The Rapid City Journal reported Thursday.

Running Hawk said he and his wife were away recently when their home was broken into and the suspect took his Purple Heart medal, $80 in change and some prescription pills.

A representative from U.S. Sen. Tim Johnson‘s office said veterans can usually get lost or stolen medals replaced at least once. Joe Roberts, a staff assistant in the senator’s Rapid City office, said he expects a replacement to arrive in three to six weeks.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Daughter of WWII soldier to receive long-lost Purple Heart

Hyla Merin grew up without a father and for a long time never knew why.

Her mother never spoke about the Army officer who died before Hyla was born. The scraps of information she gathered from other relatives were hazy: 2nd Lt. Hyman Markel was a rabbi’s son, brilliant at mathematics, the brave winner of a Purple Heart who died sometime in 1945.

Aside from wedding photos of Markel in uniform, Merin never glimpsed him.

But on Sunday, decades after he won it, Merin will receive her father’s Purple Heart, along with a Silver Star she never knew he’d won and a half-dozen other medals.

“It just confirms what a great man he was,” Merin said tearfully. “He gave up his life for our country and our freedom. I’ll put it up in my house as a memorial to him and to those who served.”

Merin’s mother, Celia, married Markel in 1941 when he already was in the military. They met at a Jewish temple in Buffalo, N.Y.

About four months ago, the manager of a West Hollywood apartment building where Merin’s mother lived in the 1960s found a box containing papers and the Purple Heart while cleaning out some lockers in the laundry room, Merin said.

The manager contacted Purple Hearts Reunited, a nonprofit organization that returns lost or stolen medals to vets or their families.

A search led to Merin, who lives in Westlake Village, a community straddling the Ventura and Los Angeles county lines.

She became “kind of emotional, because I don’t have a lot of pictures, I don’t have a lot of stories, and I’ve always been a crier,” she said. “My mother was always the stoic one, very strong.”

Markel was killed on May 3, 1945, in Italy’s Po Valley while fighting German troops as an officer with the 88th Division of the 351st Infantry Regiment, said Zachariah Fike, the Vermont Army National Guard captain who founded Purple Hearts Reunited.

“The accounts suggest that he was out on patrol and he got ambushed and he charged ahead and basically took out a machine gun position to save the rest of his guys,” said Fike, whose organization has returned some two dozen medals. “For that, he paid the ultimate sacrifice.”

He was awarded the Purple Heart and Silver Star posthumously, but for some reason the family never was told about the Silver Star and it was never sent to them, Fike said.

Merin’s mother never talked in detail to her daughter about Markel.

“It was a very difficult topic for her. When my father died, she was seven months pregnant with me,” Merin said.

Her mother briefly remarried when Merin was 10 but her stepfather died three years later, Merin said.

Her mother moved into the apartment in 1960 and may have placed the Purple Heart in the locker then, Merin said. Her mother lived there until 1975 before moving away, and Merin’s aunt lived there until 2005. Another aunt lived there until 2009.

They never spoke about what was in the locker, and the family must have missed the box when they …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

WWII veteran receives medals, 67 years overdue

More than 60 years after completing his military career, a Pennsylvania World War II veteran has finally received the medals he earned while serving in Europe.

John Warhola, 87, received eight of the medals he tried for years to get on Friday, thanks to the efforts of his granddaughter andRep. Bob Brady, D-Pa., MyFoxPhilly.com reports.

Warhola had already been awarded the Purple Heart and a good conduct medal, but he also earned several other medals that never came after his discharge 67 years ago.

“I thought I deserved them,” Warhola told MyFoxPhilly.com. “I fought for what I thought was the right thing to do at time.”

Warhola served a member of the 2nd Battalion of the 274th Infantry in the 70th Division, which played a major role in the battle to occupy the German village of Wingen, according to The Delaware County Daily Times.

Jennifer Bail, Warhola’s granddaughter, contacted Brady, who helped secure the medals. Bail surprised her grandfather by taking him to a Veterans of Foreign Wars convention to retrieve them.

Warhola was presented with the European Theater, Victory, Occupation, Combat Infantryman Badge, three Battle Stars, Bronze Star and a Presidential Unit Citation, according to The Times.

“It’s not too late, not for me,” Warhola told MyFoxPhilly.com. “It’s never too late.”

Click here for more from MyFoxPhilly.com.

Click here for more from The Delaware County Daily Times.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

First woman to lead in combat 'thrilled' with military's policy change

Former U.S. Army Capt. Linda L. Bray says her male superiors were incredulous upon hearing she had ably led a platoon of military police officers through a firefight during the 1989 invasion of Panama.

Instead of being lauded for her actions, the first woman in U.S. history to lead male troops in combat said higher-ranking officers accused her of embellishing accounts of what happened when her platoon bested an elite unit of the Panamanian Defense Force. After her story became public, Congress fiercely debated whether she and other women had any business being on the battlefield.

The Pentagon’s longstanding prohibition against women serving in ground combat ended Thursday, when Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced that most combat roles jobs will now be open to female soldiers and Marines. Panetta said women are integral to the military’s success and will be required to meet the same physical standards as their male colleagues.

“I’m so thrilled, excited. I think it’s absolutely wonderful that our nation’s military is taking steps to help women break the glass ceiling,” said Bray, 53, of Clemmons, N.C. “It’s nothing new now in the military for a woman to be right beside a man in operations.”

The end of the ban on women in combat comes more than 23 years after Bray made national news and stoked intense controversy after her actions in Panama were praised as heroic by Marlin Fitzwater, the spokesman for then-President George H.W. Bush.

Bray and 45 soldiers under her command in the 988th Military Police Company, nearly all of them men, encountered a unit of Panamanian special operations soldiers holed up inside a military barracks and dog kennel.

Her troops killed three of the enemy and took one prisoner before the rest were forced to flee, leaving behind a cache of grenades, assault rifles and thousands of rounds of ammunition, according to Associated Press news reports published at the time. The Americans suffered no casualties.

Citing Bray‘s performance under fire as an example, Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., introduced a bill to repeal the law that barred female U.S. military personnel from serving in combat roles.

But the response from the Pentagon brass was less enthusiastic.

“The responses of my superior officers were very degrading, like, `What were you doing there?”‘ Bray said. “A lot of people couldn’t believe what I had done, or did not want to believe it. Some of them were making excuses, saying that maybe this really didn’t happen the way it came out.”

Schroder’s bill died after top generals lobbied against the measure, saying female soldiers just weren’t up to the physical rigors of combat.

“The routine carrying of a 120-pound rucksack day in and day out on the nexus of battle between infantrymen is that which is to be avoided and that’s what the current Army policy does,” Gen. M.R. Thurman, then the head of the U.S. Southern Command, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

For Bray, the blowback got personal.

The Army refused to grant her and other female soldiers who fought on the ground in Panama the Combat Infantryman Badge. She was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for Valor, an award for meritorious achievement in a non-combat role.

Bray was also the subject of an Army investigation over allegations by Panamanian officials that she and her soldiers had destroyed government and personal property during the invasion that toppled Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega

Though eventually cleared of any wrongdoing, the experience soured Bray on the Army. In 1991, she resigned her commission after eight years of active duty and took a medical discharge related to a training injury.

Today’s military is much different from the one Bray knew, with women already serving as fighter pilots, aboard submarines and as field supervisors in war zones. But some can’t help but feel that few know of their contributions, said Alma Felix, 27, a former Army specialist.

“We are the support. Those are the positions we fill and that’s a big deal — we often run the show — but people don’t see that,” Felix said. “Maybe it will put more females forward and give people a sense there are women out there fighting for our country. It’s not just you’re typical poster boy, GI Joes doing it.”

Spc. Heidi Olson, a combat medic, received a Purple Heart for injuries she suffered when an IED exploded in Afghanistan last May.

“It makes it official now,” Olson said. “We don’t have to do the back door way of getting out into a combat zone.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

90-year-old veteran to reclaim Purple Heart earned in WWII

A North Carolina man who mailed his Purple Heart home from France almost 70 years ago is getting it back in a ceremony in Rutherfordton.

Ninety-year-old George Hemphill will reclaim the Purple Heart he earned during World War II in France at a ceremony Sunday. He mailed it home and assumed it was in a box of his medals that he didn’t open.

A Florida man bought it in an antiques store in Columbia, S.C., in 2000 and held on to it. His friend found Purple Hearts Reunited, a Vermont organization run by Capt. Zachariah Fike. Fike tracked down Hemphill, who also will get a Bronze Star in Sunday’s ceremony.

Hemphill says he’s flabbergasted that so many people worked to reunite him with his Purple Heart.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

North Carolina man getting Purple Heart back, 70 years later

When Army Cpl. George Hemphill returned to North Carolina from fighting in World War II, he tried to put the horrors of life as an infantryman behind him by not talking about what he had seen. That included not asking about the Purple Heart he had received and mailed home for safekeeping.

So imagine his confusion when he learned that a Florida man had purchased his medal in 2000 at an antique store in South Carolina with the hope of one day returning it to its rightful owner. And that a man in Vermont now had his Purple Heart and wanted to return it to him in a ceremony to honor his service.

“I’m just flabbergasted,” said Hemphill, 90, of Union Mills. “I don’t know what to think. They’re just going out of their way to give it back to me. I’m just grateful to them for all the work they’re doing. And the expense, it’s just something. I don’t know how to describe it.”

Hemphill will get his Purple Heart in a ceremony Sunday afternoon at the Rutherfordton Community Center. Capt. Zachariah Fike of Burlington, Vt., who runs the nonprofit Purple Hearts Reunited, will present the award to Hemphill, along with a Bronze Star that Hemphill never knew the military had granted him.

Fike has returned 20 of the awards since he started Purple Hearts Reunited in 2009, each time either to the family members of the recipient or to a museum if no family members survived. Sunday will mark the first time he’s reunited a Purple Heart with a living recipient.

“Returning these medals brings closure to the families. I absolutely love doing it,” said Fike, noting donations don’t nearly cover his expenses of buying the Purple Hearts and travel to present them. “I’ve spent quite a bit of money on this project. I would do it 10 times over because it’s the right thing to do.”

Hemphill received his Purple Heart after being hit by shrapnel Sept. 11, 1944, from enemy sniper fire that blinded him for three weeks. While still in a field hospital, he mailed the Purple Heart to his mother and didn’t ask about it again.

For decades, he thought it was in a box of medals that his mother kept. He later gave the box to his daughter, Donna Robbins, who didn’t know what medals he had won because her father wouldn’t discuss the war with his only child.

The Purple Heart, however, never got to Hemphill’s mother. Its exact whereabouts are unknown until October 2000, when Robert Blum of Pensacola, Fla., paid about $70 for it in an antique store in Columbia, S.C. He kept it safe for more than a decade when he couldn’t find the owner.

A friend told him about Fike, who tracked down Hemphill. Blum mailed it to Vermont — insured and registered to make sure history didn’t repeat itself.

“The best part of this story is that if I had found him right away, I would have just mailed it to him,” said Blum, who planned to attend the ceremony Sunday. “It would have been over and done with. By going through Capt. Fike, he’s getting all the awards. Now the man is getting everything he really deserves.”

Hemphill also only began opening up about his time in combat last year with his daughter. Talking about his experience “brings out memories we try to forget,” Hemphill said. “When you’ve seen what I’ve seen … I’m not the hero. The heroes are still over there — the ones that didn’t come back. They’re the real heroes.”

He didn’t want a ceremony — and when he lost that fight, he didn’t want anyone to know about it, said Robbins, Hemphill’s daughter.

“He said people will think he’s putting on airs,” Robbins said. “But I told him the Purple Heart means the world to us. I have a son, and he wants to keep the medals forever.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

WWII veteran awarded Purple Heart 70 years later

A World War II gunner who survived when his B-17 bomber was shot down over Germany in 1943 has been officially awarded a Purple Heart medal in St. Cloud.

Ninety-two-year-old Lawrence Huschle was held as a prisoner of war for nearly two years after the plane crash. Initially, the government couldn’t verify that Huschle’s plane was shot down or that he was treated for injuries suffered in battle.

Huschle’s brother, Ray, began working to make the verification 20 years ago. The St. Cloud Times says that when Ray died, Huschle’s grandson, Troy Huschle, stepped in and with testimony from another survivor of the 1943 crash successfully filed paperwork for the award.

About 200 soldiers joined Huschle’s family and friends for the award ceremony Sunday at the armory.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

88-year-old World War II veteran's Purple Heart and other medals stolen from home

An 88-year-old World War II veteran says he is devastated after eight medals he was given for his military service, including a Purple Heart, were stolen from his home.

Retired 1st Sgt. Clyde Kellogg says he is begging the perpetrator to bring his medals back.

“They don’t have any financial value what so ever,” Kellogg told Fox5. “It’s devastating to have lost something I’ve treasured for over 65 years.”

Kellogg was just 18 when he joined the military, and experienced some of the toughest combat of the war when he stormed the beaches of Guadalcanal.

Kellogg was shot in the throat and spent a year in the hospital battling malaria. He earned a Purple Heart, Bronze Star, Presidential Unit Citation, World War II victory medal, three riflery medals and a good-conduct medal while serving.

Kellogg tells Fox5 he believes he was home when the medals were stolen, and that he has an idea of who may have took them.

He says he just wants his medals back, and the thief can drop them off no questions asked.

Click for more from Fox5.

Source: Fox US News