Biden to award MoH

| September 2, 2023

The White House announced Friday that a former Vietnam Cobra pilot would be awarded the Medal of Honor next week for his actions rescuing four GIs during a firefight on June 18, 1968. Think about that a little – he managed to get four guys from imminent danger using a two-seater attack chopper with no passenger capacity. Huh?

On the night of June 18, 1968, Taylor took off in his attack helicopter to rescue four men on a long-range reconnaissance team that had become surrounded and was in danger of being overrun by enemy troops. He had to figure out a way to get them out, otherwise “they wouldn’t make it.”

David Hill, one of the men Taylor saved that night, said Taylor’s actions were what “we now call thinking outside the box.”

Hill and the three others were on a night mission to track the movement of enemy troops in a village near the Saigon River when they were found by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops. An intense firefight ensued and soon they were running out of ammunition. They radioed for help.

Taylor and a pilot in an accompanying helicopter started firing their ships’ Miniguns and aerial rockets at the enemy, making low-level attack runs and braving intense ground fire for about half an hour.

But with both helicopters nearly out of ammunition and the enemy continuing to advance, Taylor surveyed the team’s intended escape route to a point near the river and concluded that the men would be overrun if they tried to get there.

Taylor directed his wingman to fire the rounds left in his Minigun along the team’s eastern flank and then head back to base camp, while Taylor fired his remaining rounds on the western flank. He used the helicopter’s landing lights to distract the enemy, buying time for the patrol team to head south and east toward a different extraction point he had identified.

The four team members rushed toward the helicopter and clung to the exterior — it only had two seats — and Taylor whisked them away to safety. He was on the ground for about 10 seconds.

“I finally just flew up behind them and sat down on the ground,” Taylor said during a telephone interview this week. “They turned around and jumped on the aircraft. A couple were sitting on the skids. One was sitting on the rocket pods, and I don’t know where the other one was, but they beat on the side of the ship twice, which meant haul a- -. And we did!”

Taylor was engaged by enemy fire at least 340 times and was forced down five times, according to the Army. He received scores of combat decorations, including the Silver Star, a Bronze Star and two Distinguished Flying Crosses. AP

Hard to believe a Cobra could lift two crew, four riders, and those gigantic…

Can’t help but compare his three-row rack with the North-Korean general look it seems the kids have nowadays….by the time they do one overseas tour they list to port from the weight of all the bling. Mr. Taylor reminds me of the old paratroop soldier’s joke about “Only four jumps? Where did you  jump?” “Sicily, Salerno, Normandy, and Holland”.

 

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Skivvy Stacker

And Cotton Eye Joe will probably say;

“Well, you know, my son Biden was killed in Vietnam, and he had the Medal of Congress….and was dear and had the oil cancer…after his mother was killed by a drunk truck. But we’re not here to remember me. Or you…or Corn Pop….or you. Or me. So, I want to be here to see that we have made sure that 9mm guns have the ability to blow out your lungs.
And so, we’re here to give a medal to…you know…that thing.”

QMC

I fully expect a self reference rambling from lunchbox Joe and his derring do as a Green Beret Navy SEAL Civil Rights leader in ‘67 Vietnam and an epic battle against Ho Chi Corn Pop.

ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, NYTimes, and Washington Post will praise his ability to relate to all of us through story telling.

USAF E-5

sad part is, you’re right!

Odie

He does walk around with a giant pair, thats for sure.

Can somebody explain why it takes so long to award these types of medals? It seems to me that his superiors would be in their 40s or 50s at the time, and would be near impossible to be available for corroborating the story.

Regardless, it’s good to know there are men like this who walk among us.

MarineDad61

Odie,
Many Medals of Honor for the CIVIL WAR
were handed out AFTER 1900.

And as you can see here…
NEW Civil War Medals of Honor in the 21st century,
in 2001 (by Clinton) and 2014 (by Obama).

It appears to be a DEM thing.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_Civil_War_Medal_of_Honor_recipients

Mason

I’ve covered it in many of my Valor Friday articles here and there. Most of the time, it’s either due to a lack of proper documentation at the time (i.e. new testimony has come to light, documentation received from the enemy, etc.) or it was originally recommended for the MoH but someone with stars on their collar downgraded it.

I predict we will see A LOT of award upgrades for Iraq and Afghanistan in the next couple decades. There has been pretty obvious gatekeeping of high valor awards. The mystique of the MoH in particular has gotten so large that someone like John Chapman was denied the award for almost 20 years.

From earlier conflicts, the Civil War in particular, many awards were made decades (even more than a century) after the acts. There’s a combination of factors. WWI, WWII, and Korean awards were also congressionally mandated for review to correct any racially motivated award downgrading.

timactual

They try to preserve that MoH mystique by making it difficult to get. Sometimes they don’t make it difficult enough. There was a company commander in Vietnam who received it for calling in napalm & air strikes on his own position. They had to rescind it after belatedly discovering that although he did call in air strikes on his own company, he was several hundred yards away at the time. Another case involved someone who either received the medal or was about to receive it for jumping on a live grenade to save his comrades. Turns out it was his own grenade, and it wasn’t live.

SFC D

Way over the max testicular takeoff weight. Didn’t the Brits do something similar in Afghanistan with an Apache and a couple of ratchet straps?

Sparks

Well done Captain Taylor. Damned well done indeed Sir.

Green Thumb

Balls of steel.

Skivvy Stacker

I’d say titanium.

26Limabeans

Not to “lighten the load” but whoever worked on that Cobra
did a damn fine job.

Prior Service

Cobras are pretty narrow. How did he ‘man-spread’ in there? We sure this really happened?

KoB

Hardcore! Army Aviation.

SALUTE!

President Elect Toxic Deplorable Racist SAH Neande

I honor Cpt Taylor and his receiving the MoH.
But to have it be awarded to him by a Chinese traitor and all around no-witted dementia patient?
My sympathies to Cpt Taylor.

Messkit

“Hard to believe a Cobra could lift..6..people”

It used the same engine as the Huey, but with shorter, wider blades, Technically, giving it more lift for the rockets, Minigun, and 20/30mm cannon.

As for the huge brass accessories, he was out of ammo, increasing the lift capability!