By C. Todd Lopez, Army News Service
WASHINGTON -- The White House announced today that retired
Army Capt. Gary Michael Rose will receive the Medal of Honor at a White House
ceremony on Oct. 23.
President Donald Trump will present the medal, which
commemorates Rose's heroic actions in Laos during a four-day mission, Sept.
11-14, 1970.
Rose served as a medic during the Vietnam War. As part of
the Army's Special Forces, Rose took part in missions in nearby Laos that were
meant, in part, to engage with North Vietnamese Army troops who had amassed
there, and to possibly prevent them from returning to the larger fight back in
Vietnam.
Laos, a landlocked nation in the center of the Southeast
Asian peninsula, shares a 1,300-mile border with Vietnam, to the east. While
conflict raged on in Vietnam, North Vietnamese forces used Laos to their own
advantage -- forcing the American military to also enter the country at times
to stop the progress of the NVA through its jungles.
During one mission in Laos, called "Operation
Tailwind," which began, Sept. 11, 1970, Rose, then a sergeant, along with
one other Vietnamese medic, was responsible for providing medical care to a
company-sized element of special forces troops made up of 16 American Soldiers
and 120 Montagnards.
Under Rose's care, all 16 American Soldiers returned alive
from that mission, though many were injured in some way. A total of three
Montagnard soldiers would be killed by the time that four-day mission had
ended.
One of the most unexpected parts of that mission happened
when all involved thought the task was all but over. Four helicopters had been
dispatched to bring the team home from their mission in Laos.
Rose said that the entire company was able to board just the
first three helicopters, leaving the fourth unused. Rose, along with about 30
others who were involved in Operation Tailwind, boarded the third helicopter to
head home.
On the way back to safety, that third helicopter crashed to
the ground, injuring many on board, and killing one Montagnard soldier.
Rose knew the helicopter might explode as a result of that
crash. He ignored his own injuries -- which included not just those that
resulted from the crash, but also injuries sustained earlier in the mission
from a rocket-propelled grenade -- and re-entered the crashed helicopter to
pull soldiers to safety.
Shortly after that crash, the fourth helicopter, which was
empty, arrived to pick them up and bring them home.
Rose said he is honored to be selected for the Medal of
Honor, but maintains that it is the entirety of Soldiers within the Military
Assistance Command Studies and Observations Group, the unit in which he served,
that the medal is actually for.
"There were only about 2,000 people who were ever in
MACSOG from 1965 to 1972," Rose said.
"I can tell you that our raids and our reconnaissance
into Laos tied up some 40,000 to 50,000 NVA troops originally sent going south
to fight American units."
Rose pointed to the 58,000 names on the Vietnam Memorial
Wall in Washington, D.C. He said he thinks there might have been more names on
the wall if MACSOG Soldiers hadn't prevented NVA troops amassed in Laos from
moving south to become involved in the fighting.
"That medal, to me, recognizes finally the service of
all the men in all those years that served in MACSOG. It's a collective medal
from my perspective," he said, which represents "all the courage and
honor and dedication to duty that those men served."
Rose said he is also excited to visit Washington, D.C., and
the White House, and to meet with the president.
"How many people get the chance to meet the president
of the United States?" he asked. "I am going to have the privilege of
being able to meet the president of the United States with my dear wife, in the
Oval Office, I have been told. And that is something I will treasure until the
end of my days."
Rose grew up in southern California, and enlisted in the
Army in 1967. He attended basic training at Fort Ord. After, he was sent to
Fort Gordon, Georgia, for advanced individual training, where he learned to be
a mortarman. But while there, he caught the eye of Special Forces recruiters,
who recruited him and later trained him to be a combat medic.
After his tour in Vietnam, Rose opted to pursue a commission
in the Army. His career took him to, among other places, Thailand, Vietnam,
Laos, and Panama. Also during his Army career, he met and married his wife,
Margaret. The two have been together for over 45 years now. Rose served 20
years in the Army, and retired in 1987, as a captain.
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