WASHINGTON(AP)
From his five years in a North Vietnamese prison camp to his
tenure as the Navy's liaison to the Senate, John McCain's
Navy record boils down to a series of unadorned paragraphs that
bestow upon him some of the nation's top military honors.
The Navy recently released McCain's military record _ most
of it citations for medals during his Navy career _ after a Freedom
of Information Act request by The Associated Press.
McCain was awarded a Silver Star Medal for resisting
"extreme mental and physical cruelties" inflicted upon
him by his captors from late October to early December 1967, the
early months of his captivity, according to the citation. The North
Vietnamese, according to the Navy, ignored international agreements
and tortured McCain "in an attempt to obtain military
information and false confessions for propaganda
purposes."
McCain, now the Republican Party's likely presidential
nominee, was taken prisoner in October 1967 after he was shot down
while on a mission over Hanoi. He wasn't freed until March
1973, after the United States signed peace agreements with the
North Vietnamese. His captors tortured him and held him in solitary
confinement. Still, he declined an offer of early release until
those who had been at the prison longer than him were let go.
That decision earned McCain a Navy Commendation Medal. Although
McCain was "crippled from serious and ill-treated
injuries," he steadfastly refused offers of freedom from those
holding him prisoner. "His selfless action served as an
example to others and his forthright refusal, by giving emphasis to
the insidious nature of such releases, may have prevented a
possibly chaotic deterioration in prisoner discipline," the
citation says.
McCain attended the U.S. Naval Academy from 1954 to 1958, and
was commissioned as an ensign in June of that year. He retired in
April 1981 with the rank of captain. In that time he received 17
awards and decorations. Besides the Silver Star Medal, McCain also
received the Legion of Merit with a combat "V" and one
gold star, a Distinguished Flying Cross and a Bronze Art Medal with
a combat "V" and two gold stars.
Several citations mention his achievements either as a prisoner
or as a lieutenant commander flying bombing runs off the deck of
the USS Oriskany. Some are signed by then-Secretary of the Navy
John Warner, who would become a colleague of McCain's in the
Senate.
The citations refer to his "accurate ordnance
delivery" and his "aggressive and skillful
airmanship." He earned his Bronze Star the day before he was
shot down, for participating in a mission over an airfield in Phuc
Yen, 11 miles north of Hanoi.
The citation for his Distinguished Flying Cross sums up
McCain's misfortune the following day:
"Although his aircraft was severely damaged, he continued
his bomb delivery pass and released his bombs on the target. When
the aircraft would not recover from the dive, Commander McCain was
forced to eject over the target."
Years later, as his Navy career approached its end, McCain
received the Legion of Merit Medal. By then, his missions were in
the halls of Congress as a liaison to the Senate from the
Navy's Office of Legislative Affairs.
He was praised for providing Navy leaders "with sage advice
and sound judgment for enacting critical legislation during a
period of severe fiscal constraint."
The following year, he ran for Congress from Arizona, and
won.
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On the Net:
http://www.npc.navy.mil/NR/rdonlyres/330F85C7-5982-4B09-A46A-373964430AFB/0/Document.pdf
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