Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senator, vet advocate Cleland dies at 79

- JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Max Cleland, who lost three limbs to a hand grenade in Vietnam and later became a groundbrea­king Veterans Administra­tion chief and U.S. senator from Georgia until his reelection bid was derailed by an attack ad questionin­g his patriotism, died on Tuesday. He was 79.

Cleland died at his home in Atlanta from congestive heart failure, according to his personal assistant Linda Dean.

Cleland was an Army captain in Vietnam when he lost his right arm and two legs while picking up a fallen grenade in 1968. He blamed himself for decades, until he learned that another soldier had dropped it. He also spent many months in hospitals illequippe­d to help so many wounded soldiers.

Fellow veterans cheered when President Jimmy Carter appointed Cleland to lead the Veterans Administra­tion, a post he held from 1977 to 1981. The VA and the wider medical community recognized post-traumatic stress disorder — what had been previously been dismissed as shell-shock — as a genuine condition while Cleland was in charge, and he worked to provide veterans and their families with better care.

Cleland’s 2002 Senate loss generated enduring controvers­y after the campaign of Saxby Chambliss aired a commercial that displayed images of Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein and questioned the Democrat’s commitment to defending the nation. Sen. John McCain was among those who condemned the move by his fellow Republican.

President Joe Biden saluted his Senate colleague Tuesday as someone with “unflinchin­g patriotism, boundless courage, and rare character.”

“His leadership was the essential driving force behind the creation of the modern VA health system, where so many of his fellow heroes have found lifesaving support and renewed purpose of their own thanks in no small part to Max’s lasting impact,” Biden said in a statement.

President Bill Clinton praised Cleland as an extraordin­ary public servant, saying, “I will be forever inspired by the strength he showed in supporting normalizat­ion with Vietnam after having made profound personal sacrifices during the war.”

A native of the Atlanta suburb of Lithonia, Cleland suffered grievous injuries on April 8, 1968, near Khe Sanh, as he reached for the grenade he thought had fallen from his belt when he jumped from a helicopter.

“When my eyes cleared I looked at my right hand. It was gone. Nothing but a splintered white bone protruded from my shredded elbow,” Cleland wrote in his 1980 memoir, “Strong at the Broken Places.”

Cleland had been an accomplish­ed college swimmer and basketball player, standing 6-foot-2 and developing an interest in politics. Returning home a triple-amputee, Cleland recalled being depressed and worried about his future, yet still interested in running for office.

“I sat in my mother and daddy’s living room and took stock in my life,” Cleland said in a 2002 interview. “No job. No hope of a job. No offer of a job. No girlfriend. No apartment. No car. And I said, ‘This is a great time to run for the state Senate.”’

Cleland won a state Senate seat and then ran a failed 1974 campaign for lieutenant governor before Carter named his fellow Georgian to lead the VA. Carter on Tuesday called Cleland “a true American hero who was no stranger to sacrifice.”

“We are grateful for his commitment to the citizens of the United States, but also for the personal role he played in our lives,” Carter said on behalf of himself and his wife Rosalynn.

Cleland left Washington after Carter lost re-election, and in 1982 was elected Georgia’s secretary of state, a post he held for a dozen years. Then he won the Senate seat of the retiring Sam Nunn, but held it for only one term. Polls showed he had been leading in his re-election effort before the devastatin­g Chambliss ad.

“Accusing me of being soft on homeland defense and Osama bin Laden is the most vicious exploitati­on of a national tragedy and attempt at character assassinat­ion I have ever witnessed,” Cleland said at the time.

Cleland wrote in his second memoir, “Heart of a Patriot,” that he lost his fiancee, his income, and his sense of purpose when he left the Senate. He ended up back at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he himself was diagnosed with PTSD, decades after the explosion.

“I was totally wounded and wiped out — hopeless and overwhelme­d,” Cleland wrote. “Just like I had been on that April day in 1968 when the grenade ripped off my legs and my right arm. Emotionall­y, spirituall­y, physically and mentally, I was bleeding and dying.”

Cleland recovered and served as a director of the Export-Import Bank; later, President Barack Obama named him secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission.

In the conclusion to his first memoir, Cleland explained that book’s title, saying that through crises and defeats, “I have learned that it is possible to become strong at the broken places.”

 ?? ?? Cleland
Cleland

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States