An official website of the United States government
Here's how you know
Official websites use .mil
A
.mil
website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
Secure .mil websites use HTTPS
A
lock (
lock
)
or
https://
means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
Skip to main content (Press Enter).
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
Leadership
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
Area of Responsibility map
Organization Chart
Components
Previous Commanders
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
Indo-Pacific health alliance for security - IPhsa
Women, Peace and Security
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
About USINDOPACOM
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
Media
RESOURCES
Newcomers
Wellness Resources
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Quality of Life
Careers
Useful Links
Resources
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Contact
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia - News
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia YAP Infrastructure
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF-Micronesia
JTF - RED HILL
Search
Home
Media
NEWS
Home
Media
NEWS
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
Area of Responsibility map
Organization Chart
Components
Previous Commanders
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
Indo-Pacific health alliance for security - IPhsa
Women, Peace and Security
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
RESOURCES
Newcomers
Wellness Resources
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Quality of Life
Careers
Useful Links
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia - News
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia YAP Infrastructure
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF - RED HILL
George Washington’s Starry Night
31st MEU | F-35B Lightning II Ordinance Load
Korea Viper 26.1 | 4th Marines Conduct Live Fire Range
11th MEU Marines, Sailors Conduct Ship to Shore Movement
6-37 Field Artillery Regiment conducts Live Fire Exercise
31st MEU | VMM-265 (Rein.) conducts Flight Ops aboard USS Tripoli (LHA 7)
Mine Warfare Exercise (MINEX) 3JA
7th Communication Battalion Marines conduct jungle endurance obstacles at Jungle Warfare Training Center
USS Tripoli Conducts F-35 Lightning Flight Operations
Wayne E. Meyer Conducts Flight Operations
Air Refueling: Power beyond the horizon
Nimitz Sailors Conduct Flight Operations
C CO 4-9 Infantry Conducts Live Fire Exercise at Rodriguez Live Fire Complex
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
U.S. Air Force, Army complete airdrops during JPMRC 26-01
MAG-12 Marines run 250 miles commemorating Marine Corps’ 250th birthday
Pantons depart Kunsan for Super Squadron Phase 2
USS Asheville (SSN 758) returns to homeport
Champion Brigade Wet Gap Crossing
Australia, India, Japan and U.S. Forces Participate in Exercise Malabar 2025
A U.S. Air Force F-35A Lightning II assigned to the 4th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron, deployed to Kadena Air Base, conducts aerial refueling with a KC-135 Stratotanker assigned to the 909th Air Refueling Squadron during a local exercise over the Pacific Ocean, Nov. 17, 2025
F-15Es Complete Historic Forward Operations from Diego Garcia
U.S. Marines Conduct HIMARS Live-Fire on Combined Arms Training Center, Fuji
31st MEU | 1st LAR conducts a Live Fire Range
F-35 Refueling Operations over the Pacific
31st MEU | Parachute Operations
Bushido Guardian 25: Trilateral exercise kicks off in the Pacific
U.S. Marines with 3rd Marine Logistics Group conduct aerial deliveries during Resolute Dragon 2
RD25 | 12th LCT’s Akuma Co Participates in a Force-on-Force Day 1
Orient Shield 25: Tactical Maneuver Training
U.S. Marines, Sailors, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force members refuel AH-64 Apaches with MV-22B Ospreys
U.S. Marines, Sailors, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force members refuel AH-64 Apaches with MV-22B Ospreys
Navy and Marine jets fly at MCAS Iwakuni
Freedom Edge 25
RD 25 | 12th LCT and 8th Division Execute a Bilateral Live-Fire Range
U.S. Marines, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force operate forward arming, refueling point
RD25 | 12th Littoral Combat Team Mortar Range
U.S., Japan, Republic of Korea navies sail during Exercise Freedom Edge in U.S. 7th Fleet
Every Jump Matters: 31st RQS enhances rescue readiness at Yokota
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Joint Army AH-64E Apache Helicopter Exercise
U.S., Japan forces fly together during Resolute Dragon 25
VMM-262 arrives at JMSDF Kanoya Air Base
Team Andersen honors 9/11’s 24th anniversary, remembers the fallen
Marines with MWSS-172, HMH-462 fly in formation
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Flight Operations
3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 3rd Marine Division conducts Combat Rubber Reconnaissance Craft training with USS Ohio (SSGN 726)
MRF-D 25.3: VMM-363’s MV-22B Ospreys arrive to USS Miguel Keith
III MEF Support Battalion executes live-fire machine gun range
Super Garuda Shield 25: U.S., Dutch, Japanese forces conduct close quarter battle drills
Super Garuda Shield 25- Airborne Jump into Baturaja, Indonesia
HSC-14 conducts flight ops in Dutch Harbor during Northern Edge 2025
Garuda Shield holds it's annual exercise between the Indonesian National Armed Forces and U.S. Military
2ID and ROK Army Conduct Combined Wet Gap Crossing Training for UFS25
Aurora Borealis appears over Abraham Lincoln during exercise Northern Edge 2025
Super Garuda Shield 25 Stinger live-fire exercise
Boxer Flight Operations
George Washington Conducts Flight Operations
Abraham Lincoln participates in exercise Northern Edge 2025
Boxer Conducts Flight Operations
Ulchi Freedom Shield 25: 2CAB Refueling Operations
USINDOPACOM Stories
Two Army Veterans Receive Medal of Honor in 2017
27 December 2017
From Crystal Marshall
Download
WASHINGTON -- This year, the only two Medal of Honor recipients were both Army veterans, who were receiving the medals for courageous, sacrificial actions in combat during the Vietnam War. Here are the stories of Spc. Five James McCloughan and Capt. Gary M. Rose, presented again to commemorate their courageous, sacrificial actions that earned them the highest military honor in the land.
JAMES C. MCCLOUGHAN
On July 31, President Trump awarded the Medal of Honor to former to former Spc. 5 James McCloughan during a White House ceremony July 31, for gallant actions in the Vietnam War.
McCloughan, a medic, was one of 89 Soldiers in Company C, 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment, 196th Infantry Brigade, Americal Division who fought on Nui Yon Hill, near the city of Tam Kỳ, from May 13 to 15, 1969.
Within minutes of landing there on May 13, about 2,000 enemy soldiers had the unit surrounded and two of the unit's helicopters were shot down, Trump related during the ceremony. Seeing a badly wounded Soldier lying in an open field, McCloughan blazed through 100 meters of enemy fire to carry the Soldier to safety.
When North Vietnamese forces ambushed the unit a short time later, McCloughan again rushed into danger to rescue his wounded men. As he cared for two Soldiers, shrapnel from an enemy rocket-propelled grenade "slashed open the back of Jim's body from head to foot. Yet, that terrible wound didn't stop Jim from pulling those two men to safety, nor did it stop him from answering the plea of another wounded comrade and carrying him to safety atop his own badly injured body. And so it went, shot after shot, blast upon blast," the president said.
As the darkness of night approached, McCloughan continued to crawl through rice paddies, dodging bullets, to rescue wounded Soldiers and bring them to a medevac helicopter. When McCloughan's lieutenant, seeing the extent of the medic's own injuries, ordered him to get into the medevac as well, McCloughan refused, saying "You're going to need me here."
McCloughan would later say, "I'd rather die on the battlefield than know that men died because they did not have a medic," Trump related.
Over the next 24 hours, without food, water or rest, McCloughan fired at enemy soldiers, suffered a bullet wound to his arm and continued to race into gunfire to save more lives, the president said.
"Though he was thousands of miles from home, it was as if the strength and pride of our whole nation was beating inside of Jim's heart," the president said. "He gave it his all and then he just kept giving."
In those 48 hours, Jim rescued 10 American Soldiers and tended to countless others, Trump said, adding that of the 89 in the company, their strength had dwindled to 32 by the end of the fighting.
Following the war, McCloughan taught sociology and psychology at South Haven High School in Michigan, and coached football, baseball, and wrestling for 38 years.
McCloughan was joined at the White House ceremony by members of his family, eight other Medal of Honor recipients, and 10 Soldiers who served with him during that epic battle, five of whom McCloughan personally saved.
CAPT. GARY MICHAEL ROSE
More than 47 years after his heroic actions in the nation of Laos, during the Vietnam War, Capt. Gary Michael "Mike" Rose was recognized with the Medal of Honor by President Trump at the White House on Oct. 23.
During the Vietnam War, Rose served as a combat medic with the Military Assistance Command Studies and Observations Group, part of Special Forces. He was recognized for actions during a four-day period that spanned Sept. 11 through 14, 1970, in Laos. The mission he was part of, called "Operation Tailwind," had for many years been classified.
Operation Tailwind was meant to prevent the North Vietnamese Army from funneling weapons to their own forces through Laos, along the Ho Chi Minh trail. The operation inserted 136 men by helicopter, including 16 American Soldiers, deep inside Laos.
"Once they landed in the clearing, they rushed to the jungle for much needed cover," Trump said. "Soon, another man was shot outside their defensive perimeter. Mike immediately rushed to his injured comrade, firing at the enemy as he ran. In the middle of the clearing, under the machine gun fire, Mike treated the wounded Soldier. He shielded the man with his own body and carried him back to safety."
That was just the start of the four-day mission, Trump said. There was much more to come.
As the unit moved deeper and deeper through the dense jungle, dodging bullets and explosives, Rose continued to tend the wounded during the four-day mission, even at the risk of extreme danger to himself.
Rose was himself injured, Trump said. On the second day, Rose was hit with a rocket-propelled grenade, which left shrapnel in his back, and a hole in his foot.
"For the next 48 excruciating hours, he used a branch as a crutch and went on rescuing the wounded," Trump said. "Mike did not stop to eat, to sleep, or even to care for his own serious injury as he saved the lives of his fellow Soldiers."
When the unit evacuated by helicopter on the fourth day, Rose's helicopter crashed due to a failed engine. After being thrown from the helicopter, Rose rushed back to the scene to pull his fellow Soldiers out of the burning wreckage.
At the conclusion of Operation Tailwind, thanks to the efforts of Mike Rose, all 16 American Soldiers were able to return home.
During those four days in Laos, "Mike treated an astounding 60 to 70 men," Trump said. And of the mission, which proved to be a success, "their company disrupted the enemy's continual resupply of weapons, saving countless of additional American lives."
In addition to members of his family, 10 of Rose's brothers-in-arms from the operation also attended the ceremony.
"To Mike and all the service members who fought in the battle: You've earned the eternal gratitude of the entire American nation," Trump said. "You faced down the evils of communism, you defended our flag, and you showed the world the unbreakable resolve of the American armed forces. Thank you. And thank you very much."
(Editor's Note: This article is part of a series reflecting on the top Army events of 2017. This article is a compilation of two different articles, whose links are below: "President awards Medal of Honor to former combat medic," by David Vergun, and "Medal of Honor awarded to Capt. Gary M. Rose for actions in Laos," by C. Todd Lopez.)
News Archive
2025 (728)
2024 (956)
2023 (807)
2022 (1167)
2021 (1044)
2020 (1072)
2019 (1152)
2018 (1102)
2017 (1338)
2016 (1447)
2015 (1383)
2014 (892)
2013 (32)
2012 (4)
Guidance-Card-Icon
Dept-Exclusive-Card-Icon