Los Angeles Times

Chairman of Joint Chiefs

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John Vessey, a career soldier who helped oversee President Reagan’s military buildup, has died.

Retired Army Gen. John W. Vessey, who rose through the ranks in a 46-year military career to become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and help oversee President Reagan’s military buildup, has died. He was 94.

Vessey enlisted as a private in the Minnesota National Guard in 1939, fought in World War II and the Vietnam War, and was the nation’s top military officer when he retired to his home state of Minnesota in 1985. He died Thursday of natural causes, according to his daughter, Sarah Vessey.

After being named chairman of the Joint Chiefs in 1982, Vessey helped oversee the military expansion that Reagan championed when he took office just over a year earlier.

“It was probably the greatest peacetime modernizat­ion of the American military establishm­ent that ever took place,” Vessey recalled in 2004. “We improved every facet of the armed forces, from the recruiting and retention, the selection of individual­s, to the way they lived, but most importantl­y to the way they fought.”

Vessey said the Soviet Union had been making a “big push” to solidify its position in Europe, deploying SS20 intermedia­te-range nuclear missiles and strengthen­ing its ground forces in East Germany, “dabbling” in West European elections at a time when NATO was shaky, and stepping up its espionage.

By the time Vessey retired in 1985, he said, NATO was strong, the United States had deployed Pershing II and cruise missiles in response to the Soviets, and negotiatio­ns to both countries’ intermedia­te-range missiles were just about complete.

“He was smart and combined good common sense with good military judgment, and he knew how to get things done,” Lawrence Korb, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a Washington think tank, said in a 2006 interview. Korb worked with Vessey while serving as an assistant secretary of defense from 1981 to 1985. “He was a person of integrity.”

Even in retirement, Vessey heard from presidents and the Pentagon looking for help.

Reagan sent Vessey to Vietnam in 1987 to account for Americans missing in action and bring back any still alive. His other tasks included reuniting separated families and getting former South Vietnamese leaders out of prison camps, Amerasian children out of Vietnam and the Vietnamese out of Cambodia.

“In typical Ronald Reagan optimistic fashion, he said, ‘Well, it ought to take you about three months,’ ” Vessey recalled with a laugh. “Six years later, I told Bill Clinton that I had checked off all of those things and would like to be relieved.”

Vessey’s work to resolve the fate of the MIAs was “terribly important” because the issue had become a “rallying cry” for people who thought the United States had pulled out of Vietnam too soon or that the Pentagon was covering something up, Korb said.

In retirement, Vessey also chaired the advisory board of the Center for Preventive Action, an arm of the Council on Foreign Relations that seeks to prevent conflicts before they erupt; consulted for the Defense Science Board, Army Science Board and the Sandia National Laboratory; and led a campaign to grow the endowment funds of colleges affiliated with the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.

Although Vessey wielded his influence in military and foreign policy circles away from the public spotlight after he retired, he made news in 2006 when he opposed a push to weaken protection­s under the Geneva Convention­s against torture of prisoners, particular­ly as they applied to suspected terrorists.

He wrote to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), expressing concern that doing so “would undermine the moral basis” that had traditiona­lly guided U.S. conduct in war, and that “could give opponents a legal argument for the mistreatme­nt of Americans being held prisoner in time of war.”

Another retired chairman of the Joint Chiefs, former Secretary of State Colin Powell, called Vessey’s comments “powerful and eloquent” in his own letter to McCain. Those letters became ammunition in the congressio­nal debate over the use of coercive interrogat­ion techniques in the war on terror.

“He never strayed from his morals or values or faith, and he was an extraordin­ary patriot,” Sarah Vessey said of her father.

Born in Minneapoli­s in 1922, Vessey enlisted in the Minnesota National Guard at age 17, when the threat of Nazi Germany was looming over Europe. He was called to active duty and fought in Northern Africa and Italy, where he received a battlefiel­d commission as a second lieutenant at the battle of Anzio in 1944.

He married his wife, Avis, after he shipped home. He made the Army his career, serving mostly in field artillery units stateside and abroad. His postings included several in West Germany.

During the Vietnam War, Vessey was a lieutenant colonel in the battle of Suoi Tre, where U.S. forces held off a fierce attack from much larger North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces in 1967. Vessey was awarded the Distinguis­hed Service Cross, the Army’s secondhigh­est medal, and his unit received a Presidenti­al Unit Citation.

He was promoted to brigadier general in 1971. He earned his fourth star in 1976 and was put in charge of U.S. and U.N. forces in South Korea.

Vessey showed his character after his opposition to President Carter’s proposal to withdraw from South Korea cost him a promotion to Army chief of staff, Korb said. Instead, Vessey became vice chief of staff of the Army in 1979 under the younger Gen. Edward C. Meyer.

“You never heard him complain or not defer to the real chief,” Korb said.

Vessey was building a lake home in Minnesota when Reagan asked him to defer retirement and named him the 10th chairman of the Joint Chiefs. The general was never a self-promoter and never lobbied for the job, Korb said.

Congress didn’t strengthen the chairman’s role until 1986, Korb said, so while Vessey was nominally in charge, he had to lead by consensus. Vessey “had the perfect temperamen­t” for that, Korb said.

Vessey and the Joint Chiefs advised against the 1982 deployment of Marines to Lebanon, which ended after 241 Marines were killed in a suicide attack on their barracks in Beirut in 1983. However, he directed the swift and successful 1983 U.S. interventi­on in Grenada.

“Jack Vessey always remembered the soldiers in the ranks; he understood those soldiers are the background of any Army,” Reagan said at a ceremony when Vessey finally did retire in 1985. “He noticed them, spoke to them, looked out for them. Jack Vessey never forgot what it was like to be an enlisted man, to be just a GI.”

Vessey then settled on Little Whitefish Lake near Garrison, Minn., keeping a promise to his wife that they’d return before the snow fell.

“He and my mom were so happy to be back,” Sarah Vessey said.

The couple had two other children: John III and David.

In 1992, President George H.W. Bush awarded Vessey the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award, paying tribute to his efforts to account for those missing in action.

Bush called him “the ultimate never-say-die soldier, the last fourstar combat veteran of World War II to retire.”

 ?? Charles Tasnadi Associated Press ?? ‘HE KNEW HOW TO GET THINGS DONE’ As chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. John W. Vessey, right, with Sen. Edward Kennedy in 1983, helped President Reagan fulfill his promise to expand the military amid the Soviet Union’s push to bolster its...
Charles Tasnadi Associated Press ‘HE KNEW HOW TO GET THINGS DONE’ As chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. John W. Vessey, right, with Sen. Edward Kennedy in 1983, helped President Reagan fulfill his promise to expand the military amid the Soviet Union’s push to bolster its...

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