bobdina
05-18-2009, 03:07 PM
Rep.: MoH is held back
By Matthew Cox
mcox@militarytimes.com
Former Marine and congressman Duncan Hunter put the Army’s chief of staff on the hot seat at a May 14 hearing, accusing the Pentagon of “hijacking” the Medal of Honor from service members who lived through their heroic acts.
“There has not been a living recipient to earn the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War,” said Hunter, R-Calif., the son of former House Army Services Committee chairman Duncan Hunter.
“There have been Medal of Honor recommendations that have gone all the way up the chain and have been stopped back here in D.C. when everybody on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan concurs” on the recommendations, he said.
Hunter asked Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey if the criteria for the Medal of Honor have changed to require the recipient to have died while performing the courageous act.
“The criteria have not changed,” Casey told Hunter. He added that he has seen no effort to “downgrade or downplay the valor of our soldiers.” Since Sept. 11, 2001, five Medals of Honor have been awarded. All the awards were posthumous.
“The question is why,” Hunter said, speaking for soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. “Are we not as brave, are we not as courageous, are there no more acts of valor?” Referring to living soldiers, Casey said he has “read about some hugely heroic acts, and in my own mind they haven’t risen to the level of the Medal of Honor.” “The right answer is that the criteria has probably changed ... you have to be dead,” Hunter said. “I have never heard that state*ment” before, Casey said.
“We are trying to track down where the Medals of Honor are being hijacked,” Hunter said.
Casey assured Hunter he would look into the issue, saying, “I’d like to find out about this myself.”
By Matthew Cox
mcox@militarytimes.com
Former Marine and congressman Duncan Hunter put the Army’s chief of staff on the hot seat at a May 14 hearing, accusing the Pentagon of “hijacking” the Medal of Honor from service members who lived through their heroic acts.
“There has not been a living recipient to earn the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War,” said Hunter, R-Calif., the son of former House Army Services Committee chairman Duncan Hunter.
“There have been Medal of Honor recommendations that have gone all the way up the chain and have been stopped back here in D.C. when everybody on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan concurs” on the recommendations, he said.
Hunter asked Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey if the criteria for the Medal of Honor have changed to require the recipient to have died while performing the courageous act.
“The criteria have not changed,” Casey told Hunter. He added that he has seen no effort to “downgrade or downplay the valor of our soldiers.” Since Sept. 11, 2001, five Medals of Honor have been awarded. All the awards were posthumous.
“The question is why,” Hunter said, speaking for soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. “Are we not as brave, are we not as courageous, are there no more acts of valor?” Referring to living soldiers, Casey said he has “read about some hugely heroic acts, and in my own mind they haven’t risen to the level of the Medal of Honor.” “The right answer is that the criteria has probably changed ... you have to be dead,” Hunter said. “I have never heard that state*ment” before, Casey said.
“We are trying to track down where the Medals of Honor are being hijacked,” Hunter said.
Casey assured Hunter he would look into the issue, saying, “I’d like to find out about this myself.”