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Calif. lawmaker pushes for valor award review
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T-Monay820 Offline
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Post: #1
Calif. lawmaker pushes for valor award review
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Sep 10, 2009 21:18:27 EDT

A panel of Medal of Honor recipients would have a say in the process of issuing military awards for valor under a compromise being pushed by a California lawmaker.

Rep. Duncan D. Hunter, R-Calif., a freshman congressman who served two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, believes a panel of people who have already received the military’s highest medal for gallantry and valor could look over the paperwork of nominations for awards to determine if they are appropriate, given the heroic act that led to the nomination.

“In some cases, many cases, I think a panel of 10 or so people who have received the Medal of Honor would look at citations and recommend an ‘up-award,’ such as taking a Navy Cross and making it a Medal of Honor,” Hunter said Wednesday. “In some cases, they might recommend reducing an award.”

A panel would not have the final word but simply would advise Defense Secretary Robert Gates of their recommendation on the appropriate medal — which could be ignored.

“The key thing, though, is that they would have their own experience on which to judge decisions,” Hunter said. “They would be able to make comparisons about why they received the medal to the citation, and would know if this act is deserving of a higher award.”

Hunter’s suggestion comes as part of a year-long effort he has made to get a full review of the criteria used for valor awards. In particular, he wants a review to look at why no Medal of Honor has been awarded to a living service member since Vietnam.

“I don’t have a quota in mind, like there needs to be five Medals of Honor handed out in the next two years, but I think it is worth looking at why there has not been one to a living person in 40 years,” he said.

Hunter said his call for a review, approved by the House of Representatives as part of its version of the 2010 defense authorization bill, has received criticism from some lawmakers for pushing politics into the awards process.

Hunter said that is not his intent. “Congress really has nothing to do with it and should not have anything to do with it,” he said.

He is pitching the idea of a Medal of Honor review panel to colleagues on the House Armed Services Committee, who are in negotiations with the Senate Armed Services Committee over final details of the 2010 defense policy bill. A final bill is expected to come from those talks by about Oct. 1, the start of the fiscal year.

Exactly how many people would serve on a panel and how they would be selected has not been decided, Hunter said.

“I don’t want politics involved in this at all, so I would be happy if the Medal of Honor Society picked the panel members,” he said. “I just think it would be good to have an independent review.”
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I think this is a very good proposal, but may be a bit premature if his reasoning is the small number of MOHs over the last 8 years.

Someone may have said it on here, but one reason I've heard that there are no living recipients of the MOH is because they don't rush those citations through as quickly as those 5 that have currently been awarded. These awards supposedly help the healing process some (though everyone knows that an MOH would be traded for the dead in a heartbeat) as a validation of the person's character in the highest manner. We can probably expect to see living recipients in the next few years as the citations begin to reach the highest levels of review.

It will be interesting to see what kind of support this gets.
09-11-2009 12:37 AM
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RaiderATO Offline
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Post: #2
RE: Calif. lawmaker pushes for valor award review
Seems kinda like everything I hate about certain Hall of Fame voting processes.

BUT, I know little about the current process, or the proposed, or military service in general.

The fewer given, the better. IMO. There should be a pretty high level of personal honor for everyone in the military and I bet the most deserving are, by far, the least wanting/needing of recognition.
09-11-2009 03:36 AM
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Tripster Offline
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Post: #3
RE: Calif. lawmaker pushes for valor award review
.

I have always asked my self why a bunch of Crusty Old Civilian Draft Dodgers get to hand out these most highly Coveted Medals of Honor.

I am glad to see someone finally put people that have been there and done that in charge of this most important oversight committee.

Most people do not know that it is a Federal Crime to own an Actual Awarded Medal of Honor if you are not the Awarded Recipient of the Medal or a Surviving Family member.

These are NOT handed out lightly and it is truly good to see actual Soldiers be the Keepers of the Flame on this one !!!!!!!

.
09-11-2009 12:46 PM
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