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Cold War Victory Medal

 
Wikipedia: Cold War Victory Medal
Cold War Victory Medal
ColdWarMed.jpg
Cold War Victory Medal
Awarded by
(1) United States National Guard
(States of Alaska and Louisiana)
(2) Commemorative medal for veterans
and retirees by purchase from private vendors
Type Medal
Eligibility 2 Sep 1945 - 26 Dec 1991
Status National Guard and commemorative medal for honorable service during Cold War
Statistics
First awarded 1 Feb 2000
Last awarded currently to those who served from 2 Sep 1945 - 26 Dec 1991
Precedence
Next (higher) U.S. marksmanship, training and development awards (Note: Veterans may wear commemorative medal on public holidays. However, it is not authorized for wear on active duty uniform. The medal may be worn only on civilian attire and only after other authorized awards.)
U.S. National Guard
Alaska Air Medal
Louisiana War Cross
Next (lower) Alaska Commendation Medal
Louisiana Emergency Service Medal

The Cold War Victory Medal is both an official medal of the National Guard and an unofficial military medal of the United States. It is awarded by the State of Louisiana and in ribbon form only by the State of Alaska. In the medal's unofficial capacity it can be purchased by any member of the United States military, or civilian employees of the federal government, who served in their positions honorably during the years of the Cold War, specifically September 2, 1945 to December 26, 1991.

Contents

Background and history

In accordance with section 1084 of the National Defense Authorization Act[1] for fiscal year 1998, Congress commended the members of the Armed Forces and civilian personnel who contributed to the historic victory in the Cold War, and authorized and instructed the then-Secretary of Defense, William Cohen, to prepare a certificate recognizing the Cold War service of qualifying members of the Armed Forces and civilian personnel of the Department of Defense and other government agencies. The certificate became known as the Cold War Recognition Certificate available by request of the individual by all members of the armed forces and qualified federal government civilian personnel who honorably served the United States anytime during the Cold War, which is defined as September 2, 1945 to December 26, 1991.

In October of 2001, Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act ("NDAA")[2] for fiscal year 2002, which is signed into law on December 28, 2001 by President George W. Bush. In the NDAA that was approved by both houses and signed into law by the president, was a Sense of the Congress resolution that the Secretary of Defense should consider authorizing the issuance of a Campaign medal, to be known as the Cold War Service Medal, to each person who while a member of the Armed Forces served satisfactorily on active duty during the Cold War. The then-Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, did not create such a medal.

The official US Navy web page states: "The Department of Defense will not be creating a Cold War Service medal" and that any commemorative medals made by private vendors are unauthorized on the military uniform.[3] At present the Cold War Victory Medal remains strictly commemorative and is unofficial other than for members of the Louisiana National Guard.

The Cold War Victory Medal is also referred to as the Cold War Commemorative Medal, Cold War Service Medal, or simply as the Cold War Medal. There are no devices or attachments authorized for the Cold War Victory Medal.

Design

The Cold War Victory Medal was designed by Nadine Russell, the Chief of Creative Heraldry at the Army's Institute of Heraldry and the designer of many campaign and service medals, including the Southwest Asia Service Medal, the Armed Forces Service Medal, and the Military Outstanding Volunteer Service Medal. [4]

National Guard awards medal

The medal is worn as a National Guard award and issued by the Louisiana National Guard. The Adjutant General of the State of Louisiana currently authorizes the decoration as the "Louisiana Cold War Victory Medal". Eligible members, including active duty members, of the Louisiana National Guard are authorized to wear the medal in uniform while in the state of Louisiana and not on federal property in that state (e.g. Fort Polk).[5]

Various commemorative versions of the medal

The Cold War Victory Medal is also a civilian medal which may be privately purchased but is not distributed by the United States government. As such, the decoration is not presently authorized for wear on active duty military uniforms. However, the medal has been officially adopted by the Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States and is thus frequently worn by U.S. military retirees, veterans and civilians on public holidays, parades and veterans functions. In this regard, the order of precedence of the Cold War Victory Medal is immediately after the lowest authorized U.S. award.

There are various versions of the medal privately struck by many different vendors. However, the only version which has been officially adopted by the Military Order of Foreign Wars has been the Cold War Victory Medal designed by Nadine Russell of the Institute of Heraldry.

Bills introduced in Congress to enact authorization to wear medal

Over the years bills have been introduced in five separate Congresses for the authorization of a Cold War Victory Medal or Cold War Service Medal. To date bills have successfully passed both houses but get stripped out in committee. All medal bills have been vehemently opposed by the U.S. Department of Defense. On April 12, 2007 senators Hillary Clinton and Susan Collins announced they were reintroducing legislation in the Senate that will authorize the Secretary of Defense to issue the Cold War Service Medal to Cold War Veterans.[6] Similar bills were introduced in the House of Representatives in past Congress and in the House passed a bill in the 109th Congress. However, all bills have died because a few United States Senators have used parliamentary procedure to block an up or down vote on the floor of the Senate.

Bills in the United States Senate

Congress Cold War Medal Bill number Sponsor Co-Sponsor Notes
111th Congress (2009-2010) S.2743 Olympia Snowe(ME) Jim Webb (Va), Blanche Lincoln (AR), Mary Landrieu (LA), Robert Menendez (NJ)
110th Congress (2007-2008) S.AMDT. 2163 to H.R.1585 Hillary Clinton(NY) Susan Collins(ME), Blanche Lincoln(AR)
S.1097 Hillary Clinton(NY) Susan Collins(ME), Chuck Schumer(NY), Mary Landrieu(LA), Olympia Snowe(ME)
S.1763 Hillary Clinton(NY) Blanche Lincoln(AR), Olympia Snowe(ME)
109th Congress (2005-2006) S.AMDT.4212 to S.2766 Hillary Clinton(NY) None
S.1351 Hillary Clinton(NY) Blanche Lincoln(AR), Dick Durbin(IL) Tim Johnson(SD)
108th Congress (2003-2004) S.1841 Hillary Clinton(NY) Blanche Lincoln(AR), Dick Durbin(IL) Mark Pryor(AR)
H.R.3388 See H.R. 3388 below David Vitter(LA) David Vitter Co-Sponsored H.R. 3388 as Congressman from Louisiana's 1st district and is currently a US Senator from Louisiana.[7]
107th Congress (2001-2002) H.R.2165 See H.R. 2165 below Lindsey Graham(SD) Lindsey Graham Co-Sponsored H.R.2165 as Congressman from South Carolina's 3rd district and is currently a US Senator from South Carolina.[8]
106th Congress (1999-2000) S.AMDT.474 to S.1059 Phil Gramm(TX) Kay Bailey Hutchison(TX), John Ashcroft(MO), Paul Coverdell(GA), Trent Lott(MS)
105th Congress (1997-1998) S.AMDT.743 to S.936 Larry Craig(ID) None

List of 13 Senators who have supported the enactment of the medal

State Senator 106th Congress (1999-2000) 107th Congress (2001-2002) 108th Congress (2003-2004) 109th Congress (2005-2006) 110th Congress (2007-2008) 111th Congress (2009-2010)
AR Blanche Lincoln S.1841 S.1351 S.1763 S.AMDT. 2163 to H.R.1585 S.2743
AR Mark Pryor S.1841
IL Dick Durbin S.1841 S.1351
LA Mary Landrieu S.1097 S.2743
LA David Vitter[9] H.R.3388[10]
ME Susan Collins S.1097 S.AMDT. 2163 to H.R.1585
ME Olympia Snowe S.1097 S.1763 S.2743
NJ Robert Menendez S.2743
NY Chuck Schumer S.1097
SC Lindsey Graham[11] H.R.2165[12]
SD Tim Johnson S.1351
TX Kay Bailey Hutchison S.AMDT.474 to S.1059
VA Jim Webb S.2743

Bills in the U.S. House of Representatives

Congress Cold War Medal Bill number Sponsor Co-Sponsor Notes
111th Congress (2009-2010) H.R.4051 Steve Israel(NY-2) Brian Higgins (NY-27), Bill Pascrell (NJ-8), Glenn Thompson (PA-5)
110th Congress (2007-2008) None None None
109th Congress (2005-2006) H.R.2568 Rob Andrews(NJ-1) Rick Boucher(VA-9), Jo Ann Davis(VA-1), Phil English(PA-3), Bob Filner(CA-51), Virgil Goode(VA-5), Bart Gordon(TN-6), Maurice Hinchey(NY-22), Sheila Jackson-Lee(TX-18), Randy Kuhl(NY-29), Thaddeus McCotter(MI-11), Dennis Moore(KS-3), Jerry Moran(KS-1), Todd Platts(PA-19), Nick Rahall(WV-3), Silvestre Reyes(TX-16), Rob Simmons(CT-2), Bart Stupak(MI-1)
108th Congress (2003-2004) H.R.5112 Steve Israel(NY-2) None H.R.5112: To provide for a certificate recognizing employees of defense companies for contributions to the national defense during the Cold War.
H.R.3388 Thomas Tancredo(CO-6) Phil English(PA-3), Jim Gerlach(PA-6), Bart Gordon(TN-6), Mark Green(WI-8), Jim Leach(IA-2), Thaddeus McCotter(MI-11), Mike Michaud(ME-2), Dennis Moore(KS-3), Jim Moran(VA-8), Marilyn Musgrave(CO-4), Jim Ryun(KS-2), John Shimkus(IL-19), David Vitter(LA-1), Joe Wilson(SC-2)
H.R.3201 Rob Andrews(NJ-1) Rick Boucher(VA-9), Ben Chandler(KY-6), Jim Gerlach(PA-6), Mike Honda(CA-15), Jim McDermott(WA-7), Jim McGovern(MA-3), Todd Platts(PA-19)
107th Congress (2001-2002) H.R.3417 Ron Paul(TX-14) Virgil Goode(VA-5)
H.R.2165 Floyd Spence(SC-2) Cass Ballenger(NC-10), Roscoe Bartlett(MD-6), Gus Bilirakis(FL-9), Kevin Brady(TX-8), Steve Buyer(IN-4), Ed Bryant(TN-7), Howard Coble(NC-6), Randy Cunningham(CA-51), Jim Gibbons(NV-2), Lindsey Graham(SC-3), Van Hilleary(TN-4), David L. Hobson(OH-7), Nancy Johnson(CT-6), Sam Johnson(TX-3), Ken Lucas(KY-4), Ray LaHood(IL-18), Jim McGovern(MA-3), Cynthia McKinney(GA-4), Michael Oxley(OH-4), Joseph R. Pitts(PA-16), Jim Ryun(KS-2), Jim Saxton(NJ-3), Edward Schrock(VA-2), Rob Simmons(CT-2), John Spratt(SC-5)
106th Congress (1999-2000) H.R.2440 Rick Lazio(NY-2) None

List of 35 Representatives who have supported the enactment of the medal

State Representative 107th Congress (2001-2002) 108th Congress (2003-2004) 109th Congress (2005-2006) 110th Congress (2007-2008) 111th Congress (2009-2010)
CA-15 Mike Honda H.R.3201
CA-51 Bob Filner H.R.2568
FL-9 Gus Bilirakis H.R.2165
IL-19 John Shimkus H.R.3388
IN-4 Steve Buyer H.R.2165
KS-1 Jerry Moran H.R.2568
KS-3 Dennis Moore H.R.3388 H.R.2568
KY-6 Ben Chandler H.R.3201
MA-3 Jim McGovern H.R.2165 H.R.3201
MD-6 Roscoe Bartlett H.R.2165
ME-2 Mike Michaud H.R.3388
MI-1 Bart Stupak H.R.2568
MI-11 Thaddeus McCotter H.R.3388 H.R.2568
NC-6 Howard Coble H.R.2165
NJ-1 Rob Andrews H.R.3201 H.R.2568
NJ-8 Bill Pascrell H.R.4051
NY-2 Steve Israel H.R.5112 H.R.4051
NY-22 Maurice Hinchey H.R.2568
NY-27 Brian Higgins H.R.4051
PA-5 Glenn Thompson H.R.4051
PA-6 Jim Gerlach H.R.3201 H.R.3388
PA-16 Joseph R. Pitts H.R.2165
PA-19 Todd Platts H.R.3201 H.R.2568
SC-2 Joe Wilson H.R.3388
SC-5 John Spratt H.R.2165
TN-6 Bart Gordon H.R.3388 H.R.2568
TX-3 Sam Johnson H.R.2165
TX-8 Kevin Brady H.R.2165
TX-14 Ron Paul H.R.3417
TX-16 Silvestre Reyes H.R.2568
TX-18 Sheila Jackson-Lee H.R.2568
VA-8 Jim Moran H.R.3388
VA-9 Rick Boucher H.R.3201 H.R.2568
WA-7 Jim McDermott H.R.3201
WV-3 Nick Rahall H.R.2568

References

  1. ^ PUBLIC LAW 105–85 Sec. 1084, 111 STAT. 1920, 1998 National Defense Authorization Act NOV. 18, 1997.
  2. ^ PUBLIC LAW 107–107 Sec. 556, 115 STAT. 1118, 2002 National Defense Authorization ActDec. 28, 2001.
  3. ^ "Cold War Medals". United States Navy. 2002-02-01. http://www.navy.mil/navydata/navy_legacy_hr.asp?id=154. Retrieved 2007-10-19. 
  4. ^ Stanley, Charles, Victory medal eludes Cold War warriors, The Times (November 11, 2007)
  5. ^ "The State of Louisiana National Guard Cold War Victory Medal". Cold War Veterans Association. 2007. http://www.coldwarveterans.com/louisiana_ng_medal.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-19. 
  6. ^ Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (2007-04-12). "Senators Clinton, Collins and Representative Andrews Announce Reintroduction of Legislation to Establish Military Service Medal to Honor Cold War Veterans". Press release. http://www.senate.gov/~clinton/news/statements/details.cfm?id=272264&&. Retrieved 2007-10-19. 
  7. ^ "H.R. 3388:Cold War Victory Medal Act". GovTrack. 2003-10-29. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h108-3388. Retrieved 2008-03-20. 
  8. ^ "H.R. 2165:To amend title 10, United States Code, to authorize the award of a Cold War service medal to members of the Armed Forces who served honorably during the Cold War era". GovTrack. 2001-06-13. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h107-2165. Retrieved 2008-03-20. 
  9. ^ "H.R. 3388:Cold War Victory Medal Act". GovTrack. 2003-10-29. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h108-3388. Retrieved 2008-03-20. 
  10. ^ "H.R. 3388:Cold War Victory Medal Act". GovTrack. 2003-10-29. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h108-3388. Retrieved 2008-03-20. 
  11. ^ "H.R. 2165:To amend title 10, United States Code, to authorize the award of a Cold War service medal to members of the Armed Forces who served honorably during the Cold War era". GovTrack. 2001-06-13. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h107-2165. Retrieved 2008-03-20. 
  12. ^ "H.R. 2165:To amend title 10, United States Code, to authorize the award of a Cold War service medal to members of the Armed Forces who served honorably during the Cold War era". GovTrack. 2001-06-13. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h107-2165. Retrieved 2008-03-20. 

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