Bush Awards Medal of Honor to Vietnam War Hero
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    Cool Bush Awards Medal of Honor to Vietnam War Hero

    By Linda D. Kozaryn
    American Forces Press Service

    WASHINGTON, July 8, 2002 -- Forty years ago, Army Capt.
    Humbert Roque 'Rocky' Versace wanted to become a priest and
    work with Vietnamese orphans. He'd been accepted into a
    seminary, but his dream was not to be fulfilled.

    Two weeks before he was due to return home, Versace, 27,
    was captured on Oct. 29, 1963, by Viet Cong guerrillas who
    spent the next two years torturing and trying to brainwash
    him. In return, he mounted four escape attempts, ridiculed
    his interrogators, swore at them in three languages and
    confounded them as best he could, according to two U.S.
    soldiers captured with him.

    The witnesses said the unbroken Versace sang "God Bless
    America" at the top of his lungs the night before he was
    executed on Sept. 26, 1965. His remains have never been
    recovered.

    Nominations starting in 1969 to award Versace the Medal of
    Honor failed; he received the Silver Star posthumously
    instead. Language added by Congress in the 2002 Defense
    Authorization Act ended the standoff and authorized the
    award of the nation's highest military decoration for
    combat valor.

    Today, President Bush and the nation recognized Versace for
    his courage and defiance. Bush said the Army captain was "a
    soldier's soldier, a West Point graduate, a Green Beret who
    lived and breathed the code of duty, and honor and country.

    "Last Tuesday would have been Rocky's 65th birthday," the
    president said. "So today, we award Rocky the first Medal
    of Honor given to an Army POW for actions taken during
    captivity in Southeast Asia.

    "In his defiance and later his death," Bush said, "he set
    an example of extraordinary dedication that changed the
    lives of his fellow soldiers who saw it firsthand. His
    story echoes across the years, reminding us of liberty's
    high price and of the noble passion that caused one good
    man to pay that price in full."

    Versace's brother Steve accepted the award during a White
    House ceremony witnessed by family members and many of the
    friends and supporters who had worked for years to have
    Versace's Silver Star upgraded.

    Versace grew up in Norfolk and Alexandria, Va., and
    attended Gonzaga College High School. He graduated from
    West Point in 1959 and became a member of the Ranger Hall
    of Fame at Fort Benning, Ga., and a member of Army Special
    Forces.

    Bush said a fellow soldier recalled that Versace "was the
    kind of person you only had to know a few weeks before you
    felt like you'd known him for years." As an intelligence
    adviser in the Mekong Delta, he befriended many local
    citizens. "He had that kind of personality," the president
    said.

    "One of Rocky's superiors said that the term 'gung-ho' fit
    him perfectly," he noted. "Others remember his strong sense
    of moral purpose and unbending belief in his principles. As
    his brother Steve once recalled, if he thought he was
    right, he was a pain in the neck. If he knew he was right,
    he was absolutely atrocious."

    The Vietnamese tortured prisoners to persuade them to
    confess to phony crimes. Versace gave only his name, rank
    and serial number as required by the Geneva Convention. "He
    cited the treaty chapter and verse over and over again,"
    the president said. "He was fluent in English, French and
    Vietnamese and would tell his guards to go to hell in all
    three."

    Versace knew what he was doing, Bush said. "By focusing his
    captors' anger on him, he made life a measure more
    tolerable for his fellow prisoners, who looked to him as a
    role model of principled resistance."

    Sempers,

    Roger

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  2. #2
    To Read on the Medal of Honor he is a Web Site to learn more...

    http://www.homeofheroes.com/profiles...s_versace.html

    Sempers,

    Roger

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