Airman killed in Laos awarded Medal of Honor after 42 years

Staff report
Posted : Friday Sep 3, 2010 18:32:22 EDT

Chief Master Sgt. Richard Etchberger Died March 11, 1968, while saving fellow airmen

Chief Master Sgt. Richard L. Etchberger, who was killed in action in 1968 in Laos, will posthumously be awarded the Medal of Honor Sept. 21, the White House announced Friday.

Etchberger will be honored with the nation’s highest award for valor for his actions on March 11, 1968.

According to the announcement, Etchberger displayed “immeasurable courage and uncommon valor” when he deliberately exposed himself to enemy fire in order to place three surviving wounded comrades into rescue slings so they could be airlifted to safety. When it was his turn to be rescued, Etchberger was fatally wounded by enemy ground fire.

Etchberger’s sons, Cory and Richard Etchberger and Steve Wilson, will join President Barack Obama at the White House to honor their father.

Etchberger served in the Air Force from 1951 to 1968.

Born in Hamburg, Penn., on March 5, 1933, Etchberger was inspired to join the military by his brother Bob, who joined the Navy in 1946, according to the White House announcement.

Upon enlisting, Etchberger qualified as a radar operator and later an auto track radar specialist, according to the CMSgt Richard L. Etchberger Memorial Committee’s website.

During his career, Etchberger served assignments in Mississippi, Utah, Morocco, North Dakota, Philippines, Illinois and Vietnam.

On March 11, 1968, Etchberger and his crew were overrun by the enemy during a bombing mission, according to the memorial committee website. His entire crew was either dead or wounded, and Etchberger continued to fire on the enemy to keep them away from his position. He also was able to direct air strikes and call for air rescue. When the helicopters arrived, Etchberger placed himself in the line of fire to save his wounded comrades. He was wounded when it was his turn to be airlifted to safety; Etchberger died before reaching the hospital, according to the website. The mission left 12 Americans either dead or missing in action.

Previous story:

Airman may get MoH for secret Laos mission

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Air Force hero’s actions in Laos finally recognized after 42 years

Cached:  http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/09/03/medal.of.honor/?hpt=C1

By Larry Shaughnessy, CNN Pentagon Producer
September 3, 2010 5:10 p.m. EDT

Master Sgt. Richard Etchberger will be given the Medal of Honor, according to the White House.

Washington (CNN) — President Obama will award the Medal of Honor, the military’s highest award for bravery, to Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Richard Etchberger for his valor in saving the lives of three wounded comrades at a then-secret base in Laos in 1968, the White House announced Friday.

After Etchberger saved his fellow airmen, he was shot and killed by enemy fighters.

His heroics were kept a secret for years because the United States wasn’t supposed to have troops in Laos during the Vietnam War. President Lyndon Johnson rejected a nomination for Etchberger to receive the Medal of Honor at the time because of the political trouble it could have stirred up.

Etchberger was part of a secret U.S. Air Force radar base in northern Laos, just 120 miles from Hanoi in North Vietnam. The base’s purpose was to guide U.S. bomber crews on their missions over North Vietnam and parts of Laos that were under communist control.

Laos was officially neutral during the war, but its leaders were upset that North Vietnamese troops and Viet Cong guerrillas were moving through Laos to attack U.S. troops in South Vietnam. So the Lao government allowed construction of the U.S. radar site provided it was kept secret, according to Tom Keany, an Air Force B-52 squadron commander during the Vietnam War and currently a military historian with the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

In March of 1968 North Vietnamese troops attacked the site, called Lima Site 85, with a force of 3,000 soldiers against fewer than a couple dozen U.S. airmen and about a thousand Laotian soldiers.

Eventually, American helicopters were sent in to evacuate the Air Force personnel, but by then eight Americans had been killed and several more wounded. It is considered by some the deadliest ground attack against Air Force troops in the entire Vietnam era.

According the White House, Etchberger deliberately exposed himself to enemy fire “in order to place his three surviving wounded comrades in the rescue slings permitting them to be airlifted to safety.”

It took an act of Congress in 2008 for Etchberger to be reconsidered for a Medal of Honor so long after the war had ended. In most cases, the medal recommendation must be made within two years of the act of heroism for which it is to be awarded.

Rep. Earl Pomeroy of North Dakota helped push for the reconsideration. Etchberger was a native of Bismarck, North Dakota.

“Chief Etchberger was denied the Medal of Honor because he was serving his country on the wrong side of a geographic barrier,” Pomeroy said in written statement. “Heroism knows no boundary. While it’s regrettable that this medal is coming forty years after Mr. Etchberger’s death, I am honored to be part of the effort that recognized this true hero.”

The ceremony for Etchberger, which will include his three sons, is scheduled for September 21 at the White House.

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