Posted on 01/27/2009 3:54:38 PM PST by jazusamo
Lest anyone doubt the significance that veterans and the armed forces place upon the medals they earn, for the second time in as many weeks a local veteran will receive recognition for bravery in wars decades ago.
This Thursday is 87-year-old Joseph Moser's turn. The Whatcom County resident will receive the Distinguished Flying Cross at McChord Air Force Base on Thursday for his actions 65 years ago over Germany.
Moser, originally a farm kid from Ferndale, on July 30, 1944 more than three weeks after the Normandy invasion earned the award as a first lieutenant piloting a P-38 fighter on a highly successful but dangerous bombing mission over a heavily fortified target. It was one of 43 missions Moser flew in the war.
Two weeks later, Moser, who served with the 474th Fighter Group, was shot down over Germany and became a POW, but in a rare move, was first sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp.
Moser's long-overdue recognition comes just as a book authored by Moser and Gerald R. Baron, "A Fighter Pilot in Buchenwald: The Joe Moser Story," is hitting book stores.
According to the book, Moser was one of 168 Allied POWs who were sent to the camp until late October 1944.
The airmen were subject to the same horrors as the nearly quarter of a million others in the camp until the German Luftwaffe discovered their presence, and engineered their transfer to Stalag Luft III, a POW camp.
At Stalag Luft III, Moser was one of the POWs in building 104, famous for the "great escape" of allied POWs that had occurred several months before Moser and others arrived.
Air Force officials said Moser learned in the early 1990s that he had earned the DFC when he read about it in a friend's squadron diary. Attempts by his family to acquire it for him, however, went no where until Baron learned of it while interviewing Moser for the book.
Baron, through some Rotary Club connections, got the ear of Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Rick Arnold, who probably deserves some kind of recognition himself for making things happen.
At least 30 of Moser's family and friends are expected to attend the ceremony at McChord's annual awards banquet at the base's clubs and community center. Two former members of the squadron, Bob Milliken and Al Mills, are slated to attend.
When Baron told Moser he would finally receive the award, Moser, according to Air Force
officials, said, "I thought he was pulling my leg I didn't really believe it. It still hasn't really sunk in it's quite an honor."
Earlier this month, meanwhile, a former Marine, Richard Beard, 62, of Bellevue, who fought in Vietnam from 1965-1966, received a Purple Heart in ceremonies at the Marine Home Site Training Center at Fort Lewis.
Beard was a private first class in 1965, serving with the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment when he was wounded on Sept. 11 of that year on a hillside south of Danang by a mine. Beard served into early 1966 before he went home.
The discrepancy was discovered a year ago at a reunion when the corpsman who treated Beard learned of it and contacted Marine Corps officials.
Thank you, Joseph Moser. My Dad was a combat veteran in N. Africa, Sicily, Italy & Germany and was comforted to see American planes turning the entire sky above them black (there were so many of them) and providing them cover and protection. You all were and are real men with true grit. Brave men. Brave men.
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