Charles Kettles to receive Medal of Honor

| June 22, 2016

Charles Kettles

Last October, we talked a bit about Lieutenant Colonel Charles Kettles and his Distinguished Service Cross being upgraded to the Medal of Honor. Today, we hear from the White House that the President will award Kettles the Medal on July 18th;

Lieutenant Colonel (Ret.) Kettles will receive the Medal of Honor for his actions while serving as a Flight Commander assigned to 176th Aviation Company (Airmobile) (Light), 14th Combat Aviation Battalion, Americal Division. Then-Major Kettles distinguished himself in combat operations near Duc Pho, Republic of Vietnam, on May 15, 1967. He led a platoon of UH-1Ds to provide support to the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, during an ambush by a battalion-sized enemy force. After leading several trips to the hot landing zone and evacuating the wounded, he returned, without additional aerial support, to rescue a squad-sized element of stranded soldiers pinned down by enemy fire. He is credited with saving the lives of 40 soldiers and four of his own crew members.

From his DSC citation;

…while serving with 176th Aviation Company (Airmobile) (Light), 14th Combat Aviation Battalion, Americal Division. Major Kettles distinguished himself by exceptionally valorous actions on 15 May 1967 while serving as aircraft commander of a helicopter supporting infantry operations near Duc Pho. An airborne Infantry unit had come under heavy enemy attack and had suffered casualties. Major Kettles immediately volunteered to carry reinforcements to the embattled force and evacuate their wounded from the battle site. Although friendly artillery had pounded the hostile positions, the enemy was well entrenched and fighting fiercely. Major Kettles led a flight of helicopters into the landing zone through a savage barrage. Small arms and automatic weapons fire raked the landing zone and inflicted heavy damage to the ships, but Major Kettles refused to leave the ground until all the craft were loaded to capacity. He then led them out of the battle area. He later returned to the battlefield with more reinforcements and landed in the midst of a rain of mortar and automatic weapons fire which wounded his gunner and ruptured his fuel tank. After leading more wounded aboard, he nursed the crippled craft back to his base. He then secured another ship and led a flight of six helicopters to extract the Infantry unit. All but eight men had been loaded when Major Kettles directed the flight to take off. Completely disregarding his safety, he maneuvered his lone craft through a savage enemy fusillade to where the remainder of the Infantrymen waited. Mortar fire blasted out his windshield, but he remained on the ground until the men were aboard. The enemy concentrated massive firepower on his helicopter and another mortar round badly damaged his tail boom, but he once more skillfully guided his heavily damaged ship to safety.

Category: Real Soldiers

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Hondo

Sanity from the Five Sided Asylum across the river from the Open Air Brothel on the Potomac? Perhaps the millennium is indeed at hand.

Congratulations, LTC Kettles.

MustangCryppie

Where’s the wheelbarrow that he uses to carry his balls? Wow! Just wow!

Congratulation, sir!

USAF E-5

So that’s 49 years for the Politics to catch up with the Valor. I heard my old man say that the Silver Star was the Award they gave to guys who deserved the Medal, but successfully managed to piss off enough senior brass to prohibit the award. He would know. Anyway, I hope it doesn’t take 49 years for Alwyn Cashe to get his.

68W58

Amen to that regarding SFC Cashe, FWIW MG Taluto (42nd ID Commander at the time-he had approval authority over Cashe’s brigade from 3rd ID) says that he made a mistake by not forwarding Cashe’s medal recommendation (either recommend approval of higher award or recommend upgrade to a higher award-I can’t remember) instead of just approving the Silver Star.

OldSoldier54

“… I hope it doesn’t take 49 years for Alwyn Cashe to get his.”

Me, too.

HMC Ret

Ditto

Doc Savage

That man clanks when he walks down the street…..balls of brass and big as church bells.

Well done Sir.

Should the sad day ever come when you pass, I hope you are an organ donor….you could provide courage filled balls to all of Washington DC

MrBill

…and enough left over to compel Gersh Kuntzman to fire an actual bazooka. 😉

Out-fricking-standing, Colonel. Congratulations.

OAE CPO USN Ret

Gash, errr, Gersh would die from a testosterone overdose if he received a transplant from the Colonel.

Thunderstixx

Dammit you two.
SPEW ALERT next time…
My computer hates Sun Drop…

Graybeard

A hero receives his honor.

I’m not a big fan of BHO or his Admin, but he does recognize true valor.

MustangCryppie

A quick question for my Army cohorts from a squid. I thought that red was for artillery. Why would an aviator be wearing red?

Hayabusa

At the time, if I recall correctly, Aviation was not a separate branch within the Army. So Aviators were simply officers who had been trained as pilots, and wore the insignia of whatever branch they originally came from.

Someone correct me if I am wrong.

Hondo

You are correct. Aviation as a separate branch within the Army was re-authorized on 12 April 1983. (I say re-authorized because it had arguably previously existed as the Army Air Corps/Army Air Forces.)

Prior to that re-authorization, commissioned Army aviators retained their basic branch affiliation after completing flight school.

Six Minutes!

The aviation branch didn’t form until ’83. Pilots came from combat arms branches as well as Military Intelligence, Transportation and others

MustangCryppie

Thanks to you and Hondo. I am now edumacated.

IDC SARC

BZ!

HMCS(FMF) ret.

^^^WORD x 100^^^

SFC D

I guess we know what’s on his wallet.

https://youtu.be/6_tbKQ0wS34

Ex-PH2

I hope he had enough kids to pass on those genes.

Doc Savage

A guy like that can sneeze and impregnate females in a five block radius…..

Silentium Est Aureum

Yeah, not a guy you want to piss off, for sure.

At while almost a half century after the fact, at least he’s still around to receive it.

Too many aren’t.

USAF Ret

//SARC//

Is the rumor true that he learned to fly Hooeys from Jerry?

//END OF SARC//

There is not enough brasso to polish that set.

Skippy

HOOAH !!!!!!!!!!!
????????????

Semper Idem

Congratulations, LTC Kettles. Always nice to see our heroes get the recognition they deserve.

FatCircles0311

Is he gonna get back pay?

He should.

Zip Martin

I couldn’t help myself from reading the DSC citation twice. Unbelievable. Where do we find such men? God bless you, LTC Kettles.

1SG Eazy E

That is badass! I will give it to the Army aviators…. they will fly into some shit and stay until the end. Unlike some select USAF pilots in AFG who flew over our CAS missions at about 800 mph…. “you flew over too fast.. over” “I’ll try again”….Ugh

HMC Ret

I am humbled by such men and women. ‘Where do we find such men (and women)?’

Thunderstixx

In Vietnam as well as every other fight our country has ever been in…
“Uncommon Valor was a common virtue”…
The stories from Vietnam prove exactly how brave our young men and women really are.
Hooah Sir.

Old 1SG, US Army (retired)

Well deserved! Great to see an American hero recognized for going way above and beyond…

Hooah!