Paul Bucha, Medal of Honor Recipient With a Political Voice, Dies at 80

Paul Bucha, a Medal of Honor recipient who saved fellow American soldiers from slaughter during the Vietnam War and who in later years became both a public endorser and a critic of presidential candidates, died on July 31 in West Haven, Conn. He was 80. The death, at a veterans’ hospital, was caused by complications
Paul Bucha, Medal of Honor Recipient With a Political Voice, Dies at 80

Paul Bucha, a Medal of Honor recipient who saved fellow American soldiers from slaughter during the Vietnam War and who in later years became both a public endorser and a critic of presidential candidates, died on July 31 in West Haven, Conn. He was 80.

The death, at a veterans’ hospital, was caused by complications of Alzheimer’s disease, his daughter Heather Whaley said.

In 1965, Mr. Bucha (pronounced BYU-kah) graduated from West Point in the top 5 percent of his class and as an All-American swimmer. Two years later he was sent to Vietnam as an Army captain.

,

He was soon appointed commander of the last rifle company to be formed during an Army expansion — one that left him with a collection of the least coveted recruits: men who had flunked basic infantry tasks, former prisoners and “guys with master’s degrees in Elizabethan literature,” Mr. Bucha later recalled to the National Purple Heart Honor Mission, a veterans group.

,

The bloody Tet offensive of 1968 began soon afterward, and his unit was charged with helping to repel the attack by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces. By March, the group was down from 164 men to 89.

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Armagh edge Galway in nail-biting final to win All-Ireland title
Read More

Armagh edge Galway in nail-biting final to win All-Ireland title

Armagh edge Galway in nail-biting final to win All-Ireland title Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Aidan Forker followed in his manager Kieran McGeeney's footsteps by captaining Armagh to All-Ireland glory Matt Gault BBC Sport NI at Croke Park Published 28 July 2024 Armagh claimed just the second All-Ireland Football title in the county's history
Neighbours relieved after missing girl, six, who was seen ‘heading towards the River Thames’ alone in her pyjamas is found safe and well after frantic overnight search by police
Read More

Neighbours relieved after missing girl, six, who was seen ‘heading towards the River Thames’ alone in her pyjamas is found safe and well after frantic overnight search by police

The neighbours of a missing six-year-old girl who was seen 'heading towards the River Thames' alone in her pyjamas have spoken of their relief after she was found safe and well. The youngster identified as Eudine was reunited with her mother — also called Eudine — and her older brother at their home on the Thamesmead estate