Daily Press

4 Army Vietnam vets receive Medal of Honor for heroism

- By Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Tuesday bestowed the nation’s highest military honor to four Army soldiers for heroism during the Vietnam War, bravery that he said had not diminished even with the passage of time.

Biden presented the Medal of Honor to Spc. 5 Dwight Birdwell, retired Maj. John Duffy, Spc. 5 Dennis Fujii and Staff Sgt. Edward Kaneshiro. Speaking at a ceremony in the White House East Room, Biden praised their heroism, noting that many like them don’t receive “the full recognitio­n they deserve.”

“Today, we’re setting the record straight. We’re upgrading the awards of four soldiers who performed acts of incredible heroism during the Vietnam conflict,” Biden said.

“It’s just astounding when you hear what each of them have done,” he said. “They went far above and beyond the call of duty. It’s a phrase always used but ... it takes on life when you see these men.”

Addressing the three living soldiers and relatives of Kaneshiro, who is deceased, the president said, “I’m proud to finally award our highest military recognitio­n, the Medal of Honor, to each of you.”

Biden noted that more than 50 years had passed “since the jungles of Vietnam where, as young men, these soldiers first proved their mettle. But time has not diminished their astonishin­g bravery, their selflessne­ss in putting the lives of others ahead of their own and the gratitude that we as a nation owe them.”

Kaneshiro, killed in action in Vietnam in 1967, received his honor posthumous­ly for a raid on Dec. 1, 1966, in which his unit came under fire by North Vietnamese troops. His actions were credited with helping his unit withdraw from the village where they were fighting. Kaneshiro was born and raised in Hawaii, a son of Japanese immigrants.

Birdwell was honored for actions helping to head off an assault and evacuate wounded at Tan Son Nhut Airbase near Saigon on Jan. 31, 1968, despite injuries to his torso and face, during an opening salvo of what is known as the Tet Offensive, an especially bloody period of the war.

Birdwell, a member of the Cherokee Nation and a lawyer in Oklahoma City, had received a Silver Star for his actions. Biden said it took Birdwell’s commanding officer decades to realize that Birdwell had not received the proper recognitio­n and took steps, even in retirement, to “make this day possible.”

“At long last, long last, your story is being honored as it should have been always,” Biden told Birdwell.

Fujii received the Medal of Honor for actions over four days in February 1971 treating wounded and directing air strikes against enemy positions after his air ambulance was forced to crash land.

Duffy was recognized for leading troops who came under ambush after their commander was killed in action, repelling attackers and evacuating wounded despite his own injuries. Duffy went on to become an author and once was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for poetry.

“He is the definition of a warrior poet,” Biden said.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP ?? President Joe Biden shakes hands Tuesday with retired Army Maj. John Duffy after presenting him with the Medal of Honor for his actions during the Vietnam War.
SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP President Joe Biden shakes hands Tuesday with retired Army Maj. John Duffy after presenting him with the Medal of Honor for his actions during the Vietnam War.

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